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草榴社区 Special Collections Processes Raylawni Branch Collection

Thu, 10/12/2023 - 11:21am | By: Dawn Smith

Special CollectionsRaylawni Branch, a professional nursing educator and an officer in the United States Air Force Reserves, is considered a pioneer of the Civil Rights Movement, becoming in 1965 one of the first two African American students to enroll at The University of 草榴社区 Mississippi (草榴社区).

Throughout her life, she collected materials and photographs documenting her efforts in the Civil Rights Movement, and generously donated this collection to 草榴社区鈥檚 University Libraries Special Collections. 

Through the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) grant, Abubaker Zahoor, a doctoral student in creative writing at the University, has worked to preserve this important collection. The collection features Branch鈥檚 correspondence, academic documents, certificates and licenses, publications, Civil Rights ephemera, and materials from Branch鈥檚 career in nursing, the military, and academia. Notable items from the collection include an entrance ticket, seating plan, and map for President Obama鈥檚 inauguration ceremony, as well as Clyde Kennard鈥檚 application for clemency.

The oldest of 10 children, Branch was born in Hattiesburg, living in the Mobile Street area, and then raised in Hattiesburg, Prentiss, and Mount Carmel in Mississippi. She also lived in Chicago from the age of six to 14. By the time she completed the eighth grade, her family had moved 11 times. They returned to Hattiesburg after the death of her father, and she graduated from L.J. Rowan High School.

After a year at 草榴社区, Branch moved to New York and became active in the Vietnam War protest movement. She later received her bachelor鈥檚 degree in nursing from the University of Miami and joined the Air Force Reserves, earning the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. In 1987, Branch returned to Hattiesburg and earned her master鈥檚 degree in community health nursing, with a minor in education, from 草榴社区 in 1993.

During the Civil Rights Movement, Branch participated in many different activities and organizations. She was a part of the March on Washington and integrated the Greyhound and Trailways bus stations in Hattiesburg. She was also the first African American ever hired at the Big Yank clothing factory, as well as the local telephone company. Branch went on to become an instructor of nursing at Pearl River Community College in Poplarville, Mississippi.

The Raylawni Branch collection was selected to be processed with support through a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC). The NHPRC is a statutory body affiliated with the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) whose mission is promotion of the preservation and use of the country鈥檚 documentary heritage essential to understand the nation鈥檚 democracy, history, and culture.

Lorraine A. Stuart, head of Special Collections and Curator of Historical Manuscripts and Archives, is leading the two-year grant project. The purpose of the grant is to increase access to collections and will support processing, digitization, and development of finding aids for existing collections significant to the history and culture of Mississippi. The grant is also providing multiple opportunities for hands-on materials preservation and presentation experiences for the University鈥檚 Library and Information Sciences and Humanities graduate students.

草榴社区 Special CollectionsZahoor previously worked in Special Collections, processing the Oseola McCarty collection. When he saw an opportunity to return, he happily accepted. His work on the Branch collection included standard processing, sorting materials, creating a cohesive arrangement plan, and organizing materials in a logical manner that will benefit those using the collection for research.

Zahoor, a student from Pakistan, said 鈥淲orking on the Branch collection enabled me to vicariously participate in her fascinating journey that attests to the power of individual will and determination, and serves as a reminder that communities based on principles of justice, freedom, and cooperation are essential to our individual and mutual flourishing.鈥

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