The full content of this document is only available to subscribing institutions. More information can be found via www.amdigital.co.uk

Title People vs. Property
Author Long, Herman H.; Johnson, Charles S.
Date 1947
Publisher Fisk University Press
Place of Publication Nashville, TN
Document Type Printed Book; Map
Visual content
Series Description Series 5: Surveys and Studies, 1944-1969
Box Description People vs. Property Study
Theme/s Housing  Police and Community Relations  
Keywords research, housing, segregation, racial tensions, covenant, real estate practices, neighborhood conservation, overcrowding, intimidation, rent, property value, government, city politics, violence, riot, legislation, legal case, civil rights, public opinion, statistics, population, living conditions, ghetto, slum, sanitation, contract, migration, community organization, church, prejudice, discrimination, Japanese, police, school, student, white flight
Names Catchings, L. Maynard; Johnson, Charles S.; Lane, Frayser T.; Long, Herman Hodge; Looby, Zephaniah Alexander
Organizations American Missionary Association (AMA); Chicago Civil Liberties Committee; Chicago Commission on Race Relations; Chicago Council Against Racial and Religious Discrimination; Chicago Urban League; Congress of Industrial Organizations; Democratic Party; Federal Housing Administration; Fisk University; Ku Klux Klan; Lincoln University; National Committee for the Housing Emergency; National Labor Relations Board (NLRB); Neighborhood Association; United Nations; University of Chicago; University of Tennessee; Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA); Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA)
Places Allegheny, PA; Atlanta, GA; Boston, MA; Buffalo, NY; Chicago, IL; Dallas, TX; Detroit, MI; Eugene, OR; Los Angeles, CA; Louisville, KY; Miami, FL; Minneapolis, MN; Nashville, TN; New York, NY; Philadelphia, PA; Pittsburgh, PA; San Francisco, CA; Spokane, WA; St Louis, MO; Washington, DC
Library Amistad Research Center
Copyright Physical rights retained and permission granted by the Amistad Research Center