The second of two articles tracing the experiences of the Talbot family, a black family that has lived in Maine for the past two centuries. The article compares and contrasts Gerald Talbot, a leader in the civil rights movement, with his father, W. Edgerton Talbot, the head chef at the Bangor House, who quietly ignored racial slurs. With a related article on Gerald Talbot\u27s search for his roots
Rev. Charles Burt and Gerald Talbot in the State House, Augusta. Some of Gerald Talbot\u27s African ...
Blacks make up 0.4 percent of Maine\u27s 1,227,928 residents, compared to 12 percent nationwide. Ra...
Long article about Pedro Parris, a black man born in Africa about 1833, brought to Maine and taken i...
Article tracing the beginning of the Talbot family which includes Gerald Talbot, a civil rights acti...
WMPG celebrates the lives of Black men and women throughout the month of February. Bangor, Maine na...
Description: Gerald E. Talbot was the first African American to be elected to the Maine State Legisl...
Gerald “Gerry” Talbot was born on October 28, 1931 in Bangor, Maine and attended Bangor High School....
Gerald Talbot was the first African American to be elected to the Maine state legislature where he w...
Gerald Talbot was the first African American to be elected to the Maine state legislature where he w...
Being Black in Maine is the subject of a long article which explores the problems faced by the tiny...
Gerald Talbot, 73, three-time president of the Portland chapter of the NAACP and the first African-A...
Maine Interview piece with Gerry Talbot, 69, of Portland, an early leader in the civil-rights movem...
Like civil-rights activists everywhere, those in Maine challenged racism and inequality in postwar A...
Brief article describing the treatment of enslaved Black people in colonial Maine. Focuses largely ...
https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/speccoll-0445-hooks-series1/1110/thumbnail.jp
Rev. Charles Burt and Gerald Talbot in the State House, Augusta. Some of Gerald Talbot\u27s African ...
Blacks make up 0.4 percent of Maine\u27s 1,227,928 residents, compared to 12 percent nationwide. Ra...
Long article about Pedro Parris, a black man born in Africa about 1833, brought to Maine and taken i...
Article tracing the beginning of the Talbot family which includes Gerald Talbot, a civil rights acti...
WMPG celebrates the lives of Black men and women throughout the month of February. Bangor, Maine na...
Description: Gerald E. Talbot was the first African American to be elected to the Maine State Legisl...
Gerald “Gerry” Talbot was born on October 28, 1931 in Bangor, Maine and attended Bangor High School....
Gerald Talbot was the first African American to be elected to the Maine state legislature where he w...
Gerald Talbot was the first African American to be elected to the Maine state legislature where he w...
Being Black in Maine is the subject of a long article which explores the problems faced by the tiny...
Gerald Talbot, 73, three-time president of the Portland chapter of the NAACP and the first African-A...
Maine Interview piece with Gerry Talbot, 69, of Portland, an early leader in the civil-rights movem...
Like civil-rights activists everywhere, those in Maine challenged racism and inequality in postwar A...
Brief article describing the treatment of enslaved Black people in colonial Maine. Focuses largely ...
https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/speccoll-0445-hooks-series1/1110/thumbnail.jp
Rev. Charles Burt and Gerald Talbot in the State House, Augusta. Some of Gerald Talbot\u27s African ...
Blacks make up 0.4 percent of Maine\u27s 1,227,928 residents, compared to 12 percent nationwide. Ra...
Long article about Pedro Parris, a black man born in Africa about 1833, brought to Maine and taken i...