Leon County

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              2 Archival description results for Leon County

              2 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
              Meek-Eaton Archival Collection MS_0010 · Collection · 1941 - 1987

              Location: AC.8.B.1.2.1 - AC.8.B.1.2.2

              This file documents the life, professional career, and institutional impact of Dean Maxwell S. Thomas, a highly respected educator, administrator, and advocate for students at Florida A&M University. Spanning the years 1941 to 1987, with concentrated materials dating from 1973 to 1983, the collection provides a comprehensive view of Thomas’s contributions to higher education, his involvement in key university initiatives, and his broader engagement with community and professional organizations.

              Born on June 24, 1907, in Ocala, Florida, Dean Maxwell S. Thomas served as Dean of Mechanical Arts at Florida A&M University and was widely recognized for his leadership, commitment to student development, and dedication to institutional advancement. The materials within this collection reflect his extensive professional network and influence, including correspondence with university presidents, faculty, and external organizations. His work with entities such as the Orange Blossom Classic Committee and the FAMU Foundation is well represented, illustrating his role in shaping both academic and extracurricular aspects of the university. In addition to documenting his professional achievements, the collection also captures personal dimensions of his life, including biographical materials, handwritten notes, and correspondence addressed to his wife, Jacqueline Holloway-Thomas, particularly letters of condolence following his passing in 1983.

              The collection consists of manuscripts, photographs, publications, reports, correspondence, organizational records, programs, and printed materials that collectively highlight Thomas’s contributions to Florida A&M University and the broader educational landscape. These materials include annual and financial reports, institutional evaluations, program development documents, and publications that reflect the evolving priorities of the university during the mid- to late-twentieth century. News articles and obituaries further contextualize his legacy, emphasizing his impact as an educator and leader within the Tallahassee community and beyond.

              At the time of processing, the collection had no discernible original order. The materials were therefore reorganized by subject and record type, with correspondences grouped by date and organizational records categorized by affiliated institutions or committees. Items were arranged in both alphabetical and chronological order to enhance accessibility and preserve contextual relationships. The collection was rehoused in acid-free folders and archival boxes, expanding to two boxes totaling approximately one linear foot. Processing also included preparation for digitization and the replacement of deteriorating fasteners with archival-safe materials. This collection serves as a significant resource for researchers examining the history of Florida A&M University, African American leadership in higher education, and the institutional development of historically Black colleges and universities during the twentieth century.

              Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_001-_004 · 1933 - 1972
              Part of History of FAMU

              Location: AC.4B.3.1.1- AC.4B.3.4.6

              The William H. Gray Jr. Collection, preserved at the Meek-Eaton Black Archives Research Center and Museum at Florida A&M University, is a substantial and multifaceted body of primary source material documenting presidential leadership, institutional governance, and the broader landscape of Black higher education in the mid-twentieth-century American South. The collection is anchored in Gray’s presidency during the 1940s—a period shaped by World War II, postwar transition, and intensified struggles over educational equity within the rigid framework of Jim Crow segregation.

              The collection contains extensive correspondence, manuscripts, and administrative documents that illuminate Gray’s executive decision-making and strategic vision for Florida A&M University. Presidential and institutional correspondence reflects sustained engagement with state officials, accrediting bodies, faculty leadership, alumni, and external partners, revealing the political and financial negotiations required to sustain and advance a public historically Black institution. Manuscripts and policy drafts further document Gray’s intellectual approach to higher education leadership, institutional planning, and the articulation of Florida A&M University’s public mission.

              Faculty-related materials—including reports, evaluations, appointments, and governance documentation—provide insight into academic labor, professionalization, and the development of instructional and administrative standards during a period of institutional growth and constraint. Of particular significance are documents related to the Florida A&M University Hospital, which underscore the university’s role in professional training, public health, and community service, and highlight the intersection of education, medicine, and racial equity in segregated Florida.

              The collection also preserves records pertaining to major cultural and athletic initiatives, most notably the Orange Blossom Classic, situating the event as both a site of institutional visibility and a locus of African American cultural expression, economic impact, and alumni engagement. News clippings, printed programs, and ephemera document how Florida A&M University and its leadership were represented in regional and national media, offering scholars valuable perspectives on public perception, advocacy, and the university’s evolving national profile.

              Collectively, these materials document Gray’s efforts to expand campus infrastructure, stabilize governance, strengthen academic and professional programs, and position Florida A&M University as a flagship public HBCU amid persistent racial discrimination and structural underfunding. As an archival resource, the William H. Gray Jr. Collection supports advanced research in African American history, higher education administration, public policy, health and medical history, and cultural studies. It offers a critical lens through which to examine the intersections of race, leadership, and institutional resilience, while affirming Florida A&M University’s central role in the historical development of Black higher education in the United States.

              William H. Gray Jr.