Bahai Library Online

Tag "Smithsonian Institution"

tag name: Smithsonian Institution type: General; Organisations, Other
web link: Smithsonian_Institution
variations or
mis-spellings:
Smithsonian Institute; The Smithsonian
related tags: Washington, DC, USA
references: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithsonian_Institution

"Smithsonian Institution" has been tagged in:

4 results from the Main Catalog

1 result from the Chronology

from the main catalog (4 results; collapse)

sorted by  
  1. Dyar, Harrison Gray, Jr., by Pamela M. Henson (2005). Bio and linked articles about the man who edited Reality magazine and also achieved infamy in Washington, DC for underground tunnel building.
  2. Glimpses into the Life of Laura Dreyfus-Barney, A, by Mona Khademi (2009). The life of Laura Dreyfus-Barney (1879-1974), a prominent early American Bahá’í, compiler of Some Answered Questions, and wife of the French Bahá'í writer Hippolyte Dreyfus-Barney.
  3. Juliet Thompson: Champion of the Bahá'í Faith in New York City, by Hussein Ahdieh (2021-05-06). Essay about the life of Juliet Thompson, a prominent early Bahá'í and friend of 'Abdu'l-Bahá.
  4. Mark Tobey: A retrospective exhibition: Review, by Brad Pokorny (1998-01).

from the Chronology (1 result)

  1. 1912-04-30
      Talk at Hull House, Chicago, Illinois where He spoke about racial unity. Hull House was a immigrant community centre, one of the earliest in Chicago, founded by Jane Addams of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. [PUP67, MD70; 'Abdu'l-Bahá's Historic Meeting with Jane Addams by Ruth Moffet]
    • Talk at Fourth Annual Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Handel Hall, Chicago, Illinois. [PUP69, MD71]
      • The NAACP's co-founder, writer and civil rights activist W.E.B. Du Bois, was in correspondence with 'Abdu'l-Bahá and published His talk as well as His photo in the organization's magazine, The Crisis Vol. 4, No. 1 (May, 1912) pp14-16. [BWNS1310; Luminous Journey 45:04] iiiii
      • The website for the current day on-line magazine and a collection can be found in the Smithsonian Museum.
      • His talks in Chicago attracted such prominent Black people as Alain LeRoy Locke, Ida B. Wells and Robert Sengstacke Abbott, the founder of The Chicago Defender, the most influential Black newspaper. [Luminous Journey 45:26]
      • See FMH152 for the story of Grace Ober inviting Dr. Du Bois and 60 others from an NAACP Convention in Pittsburg 6-10 July, 1931, to their tenement flat for tea.
    • In the evening He greeted the closing session of the public meeting of the Bahá'í Temple Unity where more than a thousand people had gathered. After His address he donated 2,000 francs to the Temple Fund. The meeting was held in the Drill Hall, Masonic Temple, Chicago, Illinois. [PUP65, SYH67]
 
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