Frankye Adams Johnson Correspondence Collection
Item set
- Title
- Frankye Adams Johnson Correspondence Collection
- Subject
- Black Power See all item sets with this value
- Black Panther Party See all item sets with this value
- Black lives and liberation See all item sets with this value
- Family See all item sets with this value
- Islam See all item sets with this value
- Prisoners See all item sets with this value
- Poetry See all item sets with this value
- Education See all item sets with this value
- Black Muslims See all item sets with this value
- Description
- This collection contains 161 pieces of correspondence in various sizes and conditions written at various dates by multiple authors. Many of the letters are written to Frankye Adams-Johnson by her husband, Nuh Abdul Qaiyum, who was incarcerated at the time of the correspondence. There are also letters to and from other people within the movement as well as letters to and from unknown authors. Within the correspondence are items like meeting agendas; original poetry; business dealings; a complaint against the NYPD; and much more. Major themes throughout the correspondence are the Black Panther Party; Islam; law enforcement; incarceration; prison; the freedom struggle; Black Power; liberation; family; Africa; political prisoners; love; revolution; politics; justice; and more.
- Identifier
- mwchcac.ar.2022.faj.cor
- Rights
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All rights held by the Margaret Walker Center. For permission to publish, distribute, or use this image for any other purpose, please contact Margaret Walker Center, Jackson State University, 601-979-3935 Attn: Center Director.
- Publisher
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Margaret Walker Center, Jackson State University
- Source
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The Black Panther Party Archives of Frankye Adams-Johnson
- Provenance
- Frankye Adams-Johnson
Items
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 27Good. 8.5"x11" 2 pages. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 26Good. 8.5"x11" 1 page. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 25Fragile. 8.5"x14" 1 page. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 24Good. 5.5"x8.125" 2 Pages. A Mother's Day card from Ashanti to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 23Good. 8.5"x11" 2 pages. A letter from Ashanti Alston to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 22Good. 5"x7" 2 pages. A photograph from Ashanti Alston to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika) with a handwritten note on the back.
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 21Fair. 8"x12.5" 3 pages. A letter to "Dear Friend and Comrade" from Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 20Fair. 8"x10.5" 2 pages. A letter from Walid to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 19Fair. 8"x10.5" 1 page. A letter from Sundiata to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 18Fair. 8.5"x11" 2 pages. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 17Fair. 8.5"x11" 1 page. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 16Fair. 8"x10.5" 4 pages. A letter from Brother Valdez to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams Johnson Letter 15Fair. 8"x10.5" 3 pages. A letter from Brother Valdez to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-JohnsonFrankye Adams-Johnson was born in Pocahontas, Mississippi to a family of sharecroppers. As a teenager in Jackson, Mississippi, she participated in the NAACP, COFO, and SNCC as a youth organizer and was heavily involved in the Jackson civil rights movement in 1963. In 1964, she enrolled at Tougaloo College where she continued to be involved in civil rights demonstrations. After moving to New York in 1967, she co-organized the White Plains branch of the Black Panther Party. Adams-Johnson became a college professor in the 1980s, and returned to Jackson from New York in 1999, where she began work as an adjunct professor at Jackson State University in 1999. She became a full-time professor in 2003 until retiring in 2014.
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 14Fair. 8"x10.5" 3 pages. A letter from Brother Valdez to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika).
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 13Fragile. 8"x12.5" 7 pages. A letter from Samuel Brown to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika).
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 12Excellent. 4.5"x5.5" 1 page. A card from Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika) to her husband (Nuh Abdul Qaiyum)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 11Fair. 7.75"x11" 1 Page. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson.
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 10Fragile. 8"x12.5" 1 page. A note from from Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika) to Nuh Abdul Qaiyum. The note outlines some points to a conversation she wants to have with him.
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 9Fair. 8"x12.5" 8 pages. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika).
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 8Fragile. 8"x12.5" 6 pages. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika).
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 7Fair. 8"x3.5" 5 pages. A letter from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika). Page 5 is a scrap piece of paper with a short poem about love.
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 6Fair. 7"x4.5" 2 pages. A postcard from Nuh Abdul Qaiyum to Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika)
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 5Fragile. 8"x12.25" 4 pages. A letter from Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika) to her husband (Nuh Abdul Qaiyum).
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Frankye Adams-Johnson Letter 4Fair. 6"x9.5" 4 pages. A letter from Frankye Adams-Johnson (Malika) to her husband (Nuh Abdul Qaiyum).