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Collection Title: Falk (Leslie A.) African American History Research Collection
Collection Number: M391
Dates:1842-1999
Volume: 1.8 cu. ft.
Provenance: Materials in the collection were generated and/or collected by Leslie A. Falk
Donor: Donated by Leslie A. Falk in May of 2000
Copyright: This collection may be protected from unauthorized copying by the Copyright Law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code).
BIOGRAPHICAL/HISTORICAL SKETCH:
Leslie A. Falk, born on April 19, 1915, was reared in St. Louis, Missouri. By 1936, he graduated from the University of Illinois, entered Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, and applied for a Rhodes Scholarship. From 1937 to 1940, the Rhodes Scholarship enabled him to attend Oxford University, work with Sir Howard Florey (and other scientists) in the development of a method for the extraction of penicillin from mold, and attain the Doctor of Philosophy in Medical Science.
In 1942, he obtained his medical degree from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, started a one-year residency at Johns Hopkins, and married Joy Hume, a happy union, which later resulted in four children: Gail, Ted, Don, and Beth. From 1943 to 1946, he served in the U. S. Army, Medical Corps. In November of 1948, he accepted the position of Area Medical Administrator for the United Mine Works Welfare and Retirement Fund in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, a position he would hold until 1967. But, while holding the position, he was also very active in the civil rights movement. In 1963, he was a member of the Medical Committee for Human Rights (MCHR), which served the medical needs of civil rights and other activists during the sixties, and for a short time, he served as the MCHR’s first field secretary in Mississippi. His daughter, Gail, also participated in Mississippi Freedom Summer 1964. After Freedom Summer 1964, he returned to his Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, position, where he formed a MCHR Pittsburgh chapter and attended national MCHR meetings.
On October 1, 1967, he accepted a faculty position with the Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee. While at Meharry he served as an officer in the MCHR Meharry chapter, and as President of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
In 1986, his wife, Joy, died of cancer. In 1987, he retired from Meharry, moved to Vermont, and energetically devoted more time to researching and writing about the Underground Railroad, African American heroes, and African Americans who pioneered in the field of medicine.
Sources:
Contents of the Collection.
Other Finding Aids:
Box and Folder List
Photograph Log
Related Collections:
M389 Blumenthal (Daniel S.) Papers
M375 Martin (Josephine D.) Papers
M368 Miller (Michael J.) Civil Rights Collection
Scope and Content:
This collection contains materials on Dr. Leslie A. Falk’s medical career and on his Civil Rights activities in Mississippi, but the bulk of the collection consists primarily of African American history materials on the Underground Railroad, African American heroes, and African Americans who pioneered in the field of medicine. The collection should be of interest to researchers of Civil Rights activities, the Underground Railroad, African American heroes, or African Americans who pioneered in the field of medicine.
Box and Folder List
| Box 1 |
|
| Folder 1 |
Leslie A. Falk—Biographical and Personal 1992-1993; undated |
| Folder 2 |
Falk Correspondence to Other People 1974; 1996; undated |
| Folder 3 |
Falk Handwritten Notes undated |
| Folder 4 |
Correspondence Written to Falk 1976, 1990-1996; undated |
| Folder 5 |
Falk-Related Correspondence—Leaving Pittsburgh ca. September-October 1967 |
| Folder 6 |
Falk Writings (General) September 26, 1996; undated |
| Folder 7 |
Falk Writings (Published; General) 1940-1953; 1980 |
| Folder 8 |
“The Rise and Decline of the UMWA Health and Retirement Funds Program 1946-1994” April 7, 1994 |
| Folder 9 |
Highlander Research and Education Center 1971; undated |
| Folder 10 |
Final Report: Follow Up Survey of Coal Miners September 20, 1972 |
| Folder 11 |
American College of Preventive Medicine (ACPM) 1999; undated |
| Folder 12 |
American Association for the History of Medicine (AAHM) 1990 |
| Folder 13 |
Photographs and Photocopies undated |
| Folder 14 |
Transparencies undated |
| |
|
| Box 2 |
|
| Folder 1 |
“A Selective List of Books About Negroes” undated |
| Folder 2 |
“Directory of Afro-American Resources” undated |
| Folder 3 |
Kellogg-Hubbard Library—Books on Africa undated |
| Folder 4 |
African-American History (General) 1997; undated |
| Folder 5 |
African American Genealogy October-December 1996 |
| Folder 6 |
African American Population Statistics (1790-1860) undated |
| Folder 7 |
“Black Pittsburgh: A social History, 1790-1840” Clarence Rollo Turner March 1974 |
| Folder 8 |
“On Negro Historical Societies Here” October 1968 |
| Folder 9 |
New York’s African Free School (1830-1840) undated |
| Folder 10 |
African American Occupations in New York city (1850) undated |
| Folder 11 |
African American Population in Middlebury, Vermont (1790-1860) undated |
| Folder 12 |
Nat Turner undated |
| Folder 13 |
Abolitionism 1969 |
| Folder 14 |
Henry Highland Garnet undated |
| Folder 15 |
Wendell Phillips undated |
| Folder 16 |
William Lloyd Garrison Writings undated |
| Folder 17 |
Writings about William Lloyd Garrison undated |
| Folder 18 |
Harriet Tubman undated |
| Folder 19 |
Sojourner Truth undated |
| Folder 20 |
William Wells Brown undated |
| Folder 21 |
John Brown undated |
| Folder 22 |
Underground Railroad undated |
| Folder 23 |
Underground Railroad in New England 1976 |
| Folder 24 |
Underground Railroad (Vermont) 1996; undated |
| Folder 25 |
African American Emigration to Africa ca. 1840s-1980s |
| Folder 26 |
“A Brief Bibliography of Early Healers and Doctors” September 11, 1989 |
| Folder 27 |
Early African American Physicians (1740-1790) undated |
| Folder 28 |
“Negro Health on the ante Bellum Plantations” 1941 |
| Folder 29 |
The Health and Physique of the Negro American 1906 |
| Folder 30 |
The First Medical College in Vermont, Castleton, 1818-1862 (fragment) (Frederick Clayton Waite) 1949 |
| Folder 31 |
The History of the Negro in Medicine (fragment) Herbert M. Morais 1968 |
| Folder 32 |
“Ideals of Science and Their Discontents in Late Nineteenth Century American Medicine” September 1991 |
| |
|
| Box 3 |
|
| Folder 1 |
“A Bibliography of Minority Medical Students Black Medical Professionals” undated |
| Folder 2 |
Afro-American Healers: A Historical Perspective Sam Cameron 1987 |
| Folder 3 |
Dr. John Shaw Billings undated |
| Folder 4 |
Dr. Zabdiel Boylston undated |
| Folder 5 |
Dr. Henry Ingersoll Bowditch undated |
| Folder 6 |
Writings by and about Dr. Martin R. Delany undated |
| Folder 7 |
Dr. Martin. R. Delany-Related Writings undated |
| Folder 8 |
Writings by Dr. Martin Delany undated |
| Folder 9 |
Dr. Martin R. Delany -- The Mystery l842, 1846 |
| Folder 10 |
Dr. Martin R. Delany -- Harvard Medical School 1850-1851 |
| Folder 11 |
Dr. Martin R. Delany -- Canada Years 1850-1856 |
| Folder 12 |
Dr. Martin R. Delany -- African Colonization ca. 1850s |
| Folder 13 |
Dr. Martin R. Delany Newspaper Clippings (from Dorothy Sterling) undated |
| Folder 14 |
Dr. Bartholomew Fussell undated |
| Folder 15 |
Dr. Henry E. Handerson undated |
| Folder 16 |
Dr. Ephraim McDowell undated |
| Folder 17 |
Dr. F. J. Le Moyne undated |
| Folder 18 |
Dr. John S. Rock undated |
| Folder 19 |
Writings by Dr. John S. Rock undated |
| Folder 20 |
Dr. David Ruggles undated |
| Folder 21 |
Information on Dr. James McCune Smith undated |
| Folder 22 |
“Case of Ptyalism. Fatal Termination” (1840) James McCune Smith undated |
| Folder 23 |
James McCune Smith – First Black American to Graduate From a Medical School (Leslie A. Falk) undated |
| Folder 24 |
Dr. Charles D. Spivak undated |
| Folder 25 |
Early Efforts of African Americans to Attend Harvard Medical School 1847-1850 |
| Folder 26 |
Harvard Medical Students’ Resolution Against Admittance of African Americans December 11-12, 1850 |
| Folder 27 |
Harvard Medical School -- African American Graduates 1871 |
| |
|
| Box 4 |
|
| Folder 1 |
We Are Your sisters (fragment) Dorothy Sterling 1984 |
| Folder 2 |
African American Nurses 1879-1891 |
| Folder 3 |
African American Women Physicians 1860, 1870, 1977 |
| Folder 4 |
Harriet Kezia Hunt – Denial of Attendance to Harvard Medical School 1847 |
| Folder 5 |
Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell undated |
| Folder 6 |
“Sarah Parker Remond Abolitionist and Physician” Dorothy B. Porter 1935 |
| Folder 7 |
Writings by Sarah Parker Remond undated |
| Folder 8 |
Ruth Cuffee, Doctoress undated |
| Folder 9 |
Dr. Mary Sargeant Nichols Gove undated |
| Folder 10 |
Crusader for Freedom (fragment) Deborah Pickman Clifford 1992 |
| Folder 11 |
Isaac T. Hopper: a True Life (fragment) Lydia Maria Child 1853 |
| Folder 12 |
Miscellaneous undated |
Photograph Log
| M391-1 |
Lady Holding Child |
| |
4 X 3 |
b & w |
undated |
| |
(Box 1, Folder 3) |
| M391-2 |
Japanese Building |
| |
4 X 5 ½ |
b & w |
undated |
| |
(Box 1, Folder 3) |
| M391-3 |
Grave Marker of Reverend John Braden, D. D. |
| |
6 X 4 |
b & w |
undated |
| |
(Box 1, Folder 3) |
| M391-4 |
Sketch of Dr. Martin R. Delany |
| |
6 X 4 |
b & w |
undated |
| |
Photograph of sketch
(Box 1, Folder 3) |
| M391-5 |
Dr. Martin R. Delany |
| |
7 X 5 |
b & w |
undated |
| |
Photograph of sketch
(Box 1, Folder 3) |
| M391-6 |
Sketch of Dr. John S. Rock |
| |
6 X 4 |
b & w |
undated |
| |
Photograph of sketch
(Box 1, Folder 3) |
| M391-7 |
Bishop Walden |
| |
5 ½ X 3 ½ |
b & w |
undated |
| |
Photograph of sketch
(Box 1, Folder 3) |
| |
|
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