Social Movements
Transcription
Social Movements
Eureka Books List 29 Social Movements l o s o d t u Internment Camps Freedom Riders Black Panthers Fugitive Slaves Young Lords Civil Rights Zoot Suits Tattoos Paños UFW (707) 444-9593 [email protected] www.eurekabooksellers.com Asians in America 1. [Gutstadt, Herman and Samuel Gompers] Some Reasons for Chinese Exclusion. Meat vs. Rice. American Manhood Against Asiatic Coolieism. Which Shall Survive? Washington, DC: American Federation of Labor, [n.d. but ca. 1901]. First edition. 38 pages. Spine ends beginning to split, old “RUHS Library” stamp on front cover, else very good in self wrappers. (51647) SOLD One of the most notorious pamphlets published in support of Chinese exclusion laws. While the first edition was published without a byline, when the Asian Exclusion League reissued it in 1908, it was credited to Gutstadt and Gompers. In what was surely a low point for the American labor movement, the authors argued that cheap Chinese labor degraded the white working man just as slavery had and that meat-eating Americans could not survive on the rice-wages and food of Asian immigrants. Uncommon. 1 2 Asians in America 2. Parker, Tom [photographer] War Relocation Authority Photographic Section (WRAPS) image E[The Ninomiya Family in Their 434 showing three interned Japanese Barracks Room at the Amache Americans. A typed caption is taped Center] to the verso: “The mother’s handiwork in preparing drapes, fashioning Amache, CO, 1942. Vintage gelatin furniture out of scrap material, plus silver print. 10 by 8 inches. Caption the boys’ ingenuity in preparing doudated 12/9/42; verso date stamped ble deck bunks have made this bare Feb 14, 1943. With two newspaper captions from the Denver Post; black brick floored barracks room a fairly crop marks drawn on the recto of the comfortable duration home. Tosh Uyano [sic, Ninomiya], left, is photograph. (51580) SOLD charged with the responsibility of documenting the history of the Amache Center.” Thomas Parker ran the Denver WRAPS office and specialized in propaganda photographs for the US government during the war. 3 Asians in America veterans of Hawaii’s 100th Infantry Division, a regiment of Nisei soldiers. According to Yoshisato’s obituary in a 1948 issue of the 100th division’s alumni newsletter, his nickname referred to his “small opticals.” Yoshisato died in a tractor accident while Japanese American soldiers at Camp McCoy, which doubled as an internment camp working on his watermelon farm. 3. Rito, Michael “Mickey” [photographer] good image, with a few scratches reproduced from the negative. Date stamped, with other editorial notations on the back. (51128) SOLD Corp K. Tanigawa Awakens Pvt K. Yoshisato “Peep Sight” with a The young soldiers pictured are Blast from a Bugle (probably) Katsumi Tanigawa and Chicago Times, 1942. 10 by 8 inches. Koomei “Peepsight” Yoshisato, both Vintage gelatin silver print. A very Camp McCoy, in Sparta, Wisconsin, served as both a Japanese American detention center and as an army training base. Surely that presented an odd environment for the Japanese Americans there. Some, like the soldiers depicted here, were natives of Hawaii and free men; others, who had been living on the West Coast, were uprooted from their homes and relocated to internment camps. Asians in America 4 4. [Wong Sun Yue and Ella May Clemmons on the Steps of Their Earthquake Shelter] [San Francisco]: [after 1906] Real photo postcard with a divided back (1907 or later) captioned in ink on the front, “Mr. & Mrs. Wong Sun Yue. Mrs. Howard Gould’s Sister.” Small spots on image margin and on the back. Generally very good. (51631) SOLD The image shows a hexagonal cottage with a canvas roof in a Chinatown refugee camp built following the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco. The sign on the cottage reads “Built by Musical Spraguello.” Chinese-Anglo intermarriage in San Francisco In her handwritten captions (which every postcard seems to have), Clemmons always calls herself Mrs. Howard Gould’s sister, because her sister Katherine had married the son of Ella May Clemmons met and married railroad magnate Jay Gould (they divorced in 1909, with Gould accusing Wong Sun Yue while she was doing his wife of infidelity with Buffalo Bill missionary work in San Francisco's Chinatown after the 1906 earthquake. Cody). The Goulds did not appreciate She had previously worked with lep- having a Chinese man in the extended family. ers in China (see Woman’s Medical Journal, August 1900). They opened In March 1907, Clemmons ana curio shop, and in addition to trin- nounced to the newspapers that she kets, sold picture postcards of them- was not going to leave her husband selves. despite her sister’s offer of money to abandon him (see entry for Wong Sun Yue in Street’s Pandex of the News, 1908 edition). Later that same year, Clemmons reportedly renounced her American citizenship and “declared her intention to become as much like a Chinese as possible” (see The Feilding Star, New Zealand, 7 Here-turi-koka [early August in the Maorian calendar], 1907, quoting the San Francisco Observer). It does not appear that she legally renounced her citizenship. She divorced Wong some years later and married at least once or twice more. See also “The Christ Angel” chapter in They Were San Franciscans by Miriam Allen De Ford. 5 Young Lords Movement In the mid-1960s, under the leadership of Jose “Cha Cha” Jimenez, the Young Lords, a Puerto Rican street gang in Chicago, began evolving into a neighborhood-based Latino civil rights organization. They made alliances with the Black Panthers and formed the Rainbow Coalition with other groups with similar aims. In late July 1969, a group of Puerto Rican activists in New York officially joined as a second chapter of the Young Lords Organization (YLO). The growing movement soon splintered, with the increasingly militant New York group changing its name to the Young Lords Party (YLP) in May 1970. By 1972, the YLP shed its neighborhood activists roots and became a Maoist-Leninist organization called the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization. histories. Material artifacts from the Young Lords are very hard to come by. 5. Simmons, Howard D. [photographer] [Jose “Cha Cha” Jimenez, a Leader of the Young Lords, Stands in Front of the Church which the Gang Took Over This Evening] Chicago: Newspaper Division, Field Enterprises, 1969. 8.25 by 10.25 inch vintage gelatin silver print. (16104) SOLD In the mean time, in Chicago, Jimenez had been sentenced to jail on a minor charge, and he went underground. The YLO faltered after that. This photograph, dated June 11, 1969, shows Jimenez in front of the United Methodist Church, which the Lords took over and turned into the People’s Church. The building became a center for organizing and activism for Puerto Ricans in Chicago. Despite its short life, the Young Lords movement remains on the most fascinating examples of Brown Power and continues to be a subject for academic research, documentaries, and oral The African American photographer started his career at Ebony and then worked at the Sun-Times for eight years before going out on his own as a commercial photographer. Young Lords Movement 6 After being sentenced to one year in jail on a charge of stealing $23 worth of lumber, Jimenez went underground. He emerged 27 months later to serve his time. The image shows Jimenez walking toward the camera as he enters a Chicago police station. Lenahan was a life-long Sun-Times photographer, starting with the paper in 1949 and spending more than four decades on the job. This little known image of a key moment in Young Lords history should be one of his best-known shots. 6. Lenahan, Jack [photographer] Chicago: Sun-Times, 1972. 8 by 10 inches. A very good vintage gelatin [Cha-Cha Jimenez, Y.L.O. Leadsilver print. Lightly wrinkled, with a er, Hiding from Police Since Aug. typed caption glued to the back, along 70, Surrenders to Police Towith the printed caption from the night—Crowd Outside Cheers Dec. 7, 1972, issue of the paper. Him On] (16103) SOLD Young Lords Movement 7 7. Simmons, Howard D. [photographer] 1) Captioned on a paper label attached to the verso “Jose Cha Cha Jimenez, leader of the Latin Kings.” [Press Photographs of Cha Cha This photo, by the African American Jimenez at the Beginning of His photographer Howard Simmons, is a Campaign for Alderman] close-up of Jimenez with his face up against a steel mesh-covered window. Chicago: Chicago Sun-Times, 1974. Two gelatin silver prints, roughly 8 by The printed caption from the Sun 10 inches. Very good to near fine vin- Times affixed to the verso reads “Victory...What we need now is victotage prints. Typical press markings on the verso. A few ink marks in mar- ry.” The photograph was taken on gins of both photographs, not affect- May 3, 1974. It ran on June 18. ing the image. (51584) SOLD 2) Jimenez, dressed in a suit and tie, sitting before bookcases filled with law books, faces the camera. This image is not credited and may well be his official campaign portrait. The caption, on a newspaper clipping affixed to the verso and dated June 21, 1974, reads in part, “Jose (Cha Cha) Jimenez, a former Latino street-gang leader, announced his candidacy Thursday for alderman of the 46th Ward.” According to Wikipedia, Jimenez won 39% of the vote. Young Lords Movement New York, so it seems likely that it originated there in late 1969 or early 1970, before the YLO became the [New York]: Young Lords OrganizaYLP. Stylistically, this banner, with its tion, [ca. 1970]. 60 by 42 inches. horizontal rifle, is closer to the Young Brown cloth with embroidery and apLords Party iconography than the anplique lettering. Generally very good gled “Tengo Puerto Rico en mi coraor better, with a couple of small holes zon” logo adopted by the Chicago and stains. (53559) SOLD faction. In any case, this is an excepA handmade, double-sided banner tional artifact from a critical time in for the Young Lords Organization. the Latino Civil Rights movement. The verso reads “Puerto Rico / Puerto Rican” with the island in green cloth in the center. This banner came out of 8. Unidos Luchamos / YLO / Unidos Triunfamos 8 Latino Political Movements 9 Includes “Analysis of 3-Year History of Y.L.P.,” an account of the formation of the Young Lords Organization in Chicago, the birth of the New York chapter, the ideological split that formed the Young Lords Party in New York, and the group’s increasing shift toward Leninist and Maoist ideologies. Also include are speeches by Mike Hamlin of the Black Workers Congress, Gordon Chang of I Wor Kuen, and Bob Avakian of the Revolutionary Union. 9. Young Lords Party; Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization Resolutions & Speeches. 1st Congress. Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization (Young Lords Party) [cover title] [New York]: Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization, 1972. First edition. 54 pages; 8.5 by 11 inches. Dampstain to upper left corner, else very good. (51637) SOLD The influence of the YLP waned quickly after this congress, as its attention moved from neighborhood issues in the barrio to the worldwide proletariat struggle. All of the Young Lords pamphlets are scarce; OCLC records two copies of this. 10. Howell, Duane and Dave Buresh [photographers] [La Raza Unida Press Photographs] Denver: Denver Post, 1970-74. Three vintage gelatin silver prints showing La Raza Unida Party (RUP) officials from Colorado. Images very good, with press stamps, markings, and captions on the verso. (51166) SOLD 1) Jose Gonzales, Jose Calderone [sic, Calderon] and Ernesto Vigil at a press conference (9 by 7.5 inches, dated April 24, 1974); 2) Jose Gonzales and Jose Calderone [sic, Calderon] at a press conference (9 by 6.5 inches, dated September 3, 1974); 3) Joe [sic, Jose] Gonzales presenting paperwork to the Colorado Secretary of State, becoming the first official RUP candidate in the state (10 by 8 inches, dated September 20, 1970). United Farm Workers 10 l to r: nos. 11,, 12, 13 (top) and 14 11. Lewis, Jon [photographer] photographer. His archive of some 11,000 photographs, most taken be[Portrait of Cesar Chavez] tween 1966 and 1968, are in the BeiDelano, CA: Jon Lewis, 1966. Gelatin necke Library, at Yale. Very few silver print, 8 by 10 inches. A few vintage prints of his photographs are short cracks to image, some discolor- in private hands. A rare vintage print ation to margins, else very good, with from the most important photograextensive markings on the verso, in- pher of the UFW. cluding Lewis’s stamp in the upper 12. [Cesar Chavez, July 5, 1969] left corner. Date stamped June 14, 1966. (51163) SOLD Gelatin silver print, 8 by 10 inches. Very good. With the typical stamps Lewis began volunteering with the and markings of press photographs. United Farm Workers in 1966 and (51164) SOLD became the union’s de facto official A closely cropped version of a photograph described by the Associated Press as: “United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez stands beside the bed in his union headquarters in Delano, Calif., as work goes on for the second season of what Chavez and his workers hope will become a nationwide consumer boycott of California table grapes, June 5, 1969. Chavez is convalescing from spinal bone disease and a kidney ailment.” United Farm Workers 13. Buresh, Dave [photographer] 11 15. White, John G. [photographer] [Cesar Chavez Addresses Rally in [United Farm Workers Denver Indian Center] Organizer Len Denver: Denver Post, 1974. Gelatin Avila...Talks with Strikers] silver print, 9.5 by 8 inches. Very good. Typical press markings on verso. (51162) SOLD 14. Fisher, Don [photographer] [Cesar Chavez Exhorts Laneco Employees] Denver: Denver Post, 1973. Gelatin silver print, 6 by 9 inches on larger sheet. Near fine, with typical press markings on the verso. (51165) SOLD At the time this photograph was taken, Magdaleno RoseAllentown, PA: The Morning Call, Avila was leading the UFW 1985. Roughly 13.5 by 8 inches, on strike against Finerman Co., a larger sheet of photographic paper. lettuce grower in Saguache Gelatin silver print dated May 7, County, south of Denver. He 1985. A near fine image, with a few was later the director of the crop marks in the margins and Cesar E. Chavez Foundation, stamps and notes on the verso. and he is currently the direc(51346) SOLD tor of the Office of Immigrant Chavez was rallying workers who had and Refugee Affairs for the walked off the job at the Laneco chain City of Seattle. of supermarkets more than a month earlier. Wendell Young, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers, is visible in the background. The strike was settled on May 16, after 46 days. United Farm Workers 12 16. Lenahan, Jack [photographer] farmers. A total of 4500 workers from Mexico will be brought to Colorado Denver: Denver Post, 1945. Two vinthis spring.” The left image shows tage gelatin silver prints, both roughfour of the leaders of the group; the ly 5 by 7 inches. Crop marks on front, right is described as “A scene inside else very good. Stamps and markings Chicago: Field Enterprises, 1974. Gel- typical of newspaper photographs on one of the cars of the special train. The workers are shown making victoatin silver print, 10.5 by 8.5 inches. verso. (51167) SOLD ry signs with upraised fingers. They Near fine vintage print, with usual The caption used when these images feel their farm work is a blow at Hitnewspaper labels and stamps on the ran in the Denver Post is pasted on ler.” verso. (51168) SOLD the back of one of the photographs: The Bracero Program, started during A wonderful image of Chavez running “Soldiers of the fields is what these off mimeographed flyers at the Chica- Mexican nationals called themselves the Second World War, attempted to regulate and give legal status to Mexigo headquarters of the UFW. when they arrived in Denver Saturday can field workers. The waning of the on a special train to work on western program in the early 1960s led to the farms—mostly in the beet fields. formation of the UFW. There were 693 of them—all expert [Juan Chavez, 36 Yrs. Old, Striking Farm Worker from California, Working on a Press at United Farm Workers Hdqrs] 17. [Soldiers of the Fields, 1945] United Farm Workers 13 20. Zermeno, Andrew Huelga! Strike! [Tarzana, CA], (2010). 154 pages. 8.5 by 11 inches. As new. Velobound with a clear acetate cover. (51936) $60 19. [United Farm Workers] HHH Si! Si! Si! 18. [United Farm Workers Flag] Rougly 36 inches square, double-sided; 1960s. Constructed from burlap dyed red, with a white circular field cut with pinking shears, and a black eagle cut from thin black cloth. Minor soiling, a few loose threads, otherwise, very good. A very nice example of a vintage homemade flag for the United Farm Workers. According to the person we acquired it from, he obtained it on the boycott lines in Texas in the late 1960s. (53558) SOLD [Delano?]: [United Farm Workers], [1968]. Original screenprint poster, 20 by 14 inches. Near fine. (52954) SOLD The UFW strongly supported Hubert Humphrey in the 1968 election and adopted this slogan based on his triple-H initials. A self-published collection of short stories written and illustrated by the main graphic artist for the UFW, known for creating the political cartoons the appeared in El malcriado. As in Zermeno’s political cartoons, the stories here—perhaps closer to a graphic novel in form—are populated by metaphorical types: El patron, el coyote, the Filipino or Mexican farmworker, the scab, etc. United Farm Workers This is a poster for the April 11, 1969, performance of a play by El Teatro Campesino on the UC Berkeley campus. The Shrunken Head was Luis Valdez’s first full-length play, written when he was a student at San Jose State University in 1964. It was influenced by the nascent magical realist movement in Latin American literature and involves surrealist elements, including a talking head. The characters are send-ups of Chicano stereotypes: a drunken father, a criminal son, an unwed daughter with a child, and a set infested with cockroaches (a theme adopted a decade later by Oscar Zeta Acosta in his Revolt of the Cockroach People). After college, Valdez joined the United Farm Workers movement and formed El Teatro 21. Valdez, Luis and El Teatro Campesino (The Farmworker TheCampesino ater). His troop, drawing on agitprop The Shrunken Head of Pancho traditions, performed for striking Villa [poster] farmworkers and soon evolved into [Berkeley]: Committe for Arts and the first (and still oldest) Latino theLectures, 1969. 11 by 15 inches; print- ater group. El Teatro Campesino ed offset in three colors. Tiny piece (ETC) material from the 1960s is quite missing from one corner and a fold at scarce. The inventory of posters in the one corner neatly strengthened on ETC archive at UC Santa Barbara lists verso; a couple of pin-holes and a date only one poster from the 1960s, and stamp on the back suggest a campus then only as a slide. bulletin board. (52940) SOLD 14 22. South Central Farmers Committee The Delano Grape Story...from the Grower's View [cover title] Delano, CA: South Central Farmers Committee, (n.d. but ca. 1968). First edition. 8.5 by 11 inches. [20] pages reproduced from typescript including five pages of photographs at the end. Somewhat uncommon. Fine in stapled wrappers. (51120) SOLD A response to the union organizing efforts of the UFW, including an argument that Delano was the first place to be organized because the farm workers there had the highest pay in the country and thus the best ability to pay union dues. California Spanish Land Grants 15 agreement between Emeric and the Alvarados, dated January 7, 1867. 23. [Rancho de San Pablo Archive] An archive of six documents related to Juan Bautista Alvarado. Alvarado was governor of California for six years during the Mexican period and one of four signatories to California’s 1836 declaration of independence from Mexico. After California became part of the United States, Alvarado moved to the land grant property in Contra Costa County owned by his wife’s family. The property, in the present-day cities of San Pablo and Richmond, became subject to one of the most complex ownership disputes in American history. The case took nearly 40 years to settle. All documents with old folds. Generall very good. (51612) SOLD 5) 8 by 12.25 inches, two pages. Secretarial copy of a contract between John B. Felton and Thomas W. Mulford and Thomas R. Horton, transferring a portion of Mulford and 2) 7.75 by 12.5 inches, one page. Man- Horton’s interest in the Rancho to uscript order dated February 6, 1873, Felton in exchange for legal services. for the start of a trial between Joseph 6) 8 by 12 inches, 3 pages, in pencil. Emeric and Juan B. Alvarado, et al. Manuscript notes, apparently from a (the Emeric-Alvarado dispute was one of the most contentious portions deposition of Antonio Castro about the original 1856 partition of the Ranof the extended series of lawsuits). Signed by judge Samuel H. Dwinelle cho, which set off the decades-long and acknowledged with signatures on court case. Hard to decipher. the back by 14 attorneys. Signed by the Father of California Independence Gov. Juan Bautista Alvarado 3) 8 by 13.75 inches; one page, on blue paper. Manuscript agreement dated April 18, 1863, from Edward W. F. Sloan, 1) 8 by 12.5 inches; 3 pages, with revan attorney for the Alvaraenue stamps on both sheets. Manudos, accepting 1/20th of the script copy of an indenture selling Rancho de Santa Fe (889 1100 acres of Rancho de San Pablo, acres) as payment for legal dated November 26, 1869. Signed by services in the case. Signed by Juan B. Alvarado, his daughter Maria Sloan, with his wax seal and a Victoria Delfina Alvarado, and his revenue stamp. A short tear afwife, Martina Castro de Alvarado. fects one word of text. The contract is witnessed by noted California author and attorney Theo- 4) 7.75 by 12 inches, six pages on four leaves. Secretarial copy of an dore Hittell. Chicano Outsider Art 16 25. [“Droopy”] Untitled Paño Avenal State Prison, 2005. 15.5 by 16 inches. Ink on a handkerchief. Near fine. The pen work is quite fine. (51130) SOLD 24. Green Angels (Rialto, CA): (Green Angeles), (n.d. but ca. 1984). [48] pages. Fine in wrappers. (17551) SOLD The first and apparently only issue of this periodical inspired by the lowrider culture mag Teen Angels—this devoted to Mexican Americans in the military. The content is mostly letters from and photographs of soldiers, along with drawings and collages of military images. Uncommon. 26. Henry, Martha V. and Peter David Joralemon (editors) Art From the Inside: Paño Drawings by Chicano Prisoners Brooklyn, CT: New England Center for Contemporary Art, 2005. First edition. 56 pages, including 24 full-page reproductions, some in color. Near fine in wrappers. (53567) $25 Paños are the dominant form of Chicano prison art, typically ballpoint pen The only book on the subject; with a drawings on cotton handkerchiefs. critical introduction, a list of 119 exThis is a particularly interesting exhibited paños , and a dictionary of freample, attributed to “Droopy” by its quently-used symbols. The gallery former owner, who acquired it in Ave- closed soon after this show and copies nal State Prison in 2005. The central of the catalog are scarce (not shown). image is an Aztec warrior in a feathered headdress, with a stone temple in the background. Other figures include a grinning skull, the head of a man in a bird headdress, a woman in a crown, and a central shield with a face in Aztec style. At the top and bottom are stylized Aztec eagles, and on the left and right borders are headless UFW eagles. The incorporation of the United Farm Workers’ logo is unusual, though in recent years some Chicano gangs have co-opted it. Chicano Outsider Art 17 Boog (pronounced as in boogie), also Reproducing the tattoo flash from three well-known Chicano tattoo artknown as Boog Star and Boogstar DiNero, is undeniably the most influ- ists. ential and popular practitioner of the Chicano style of tattooing. Boog (his real name could not be determined by this cataloguer) was born about 1973 in the Dallas Metroplex. He began tattooing at 14 years old, working on the streets as a “scratcher” with improvised needles and ink. Today, he tattoos by private appointment only. In the short introduction to this book, he writes, “There are many names for the style depending on what you think of it. Whether you like it or not or respect [it] can be determined on what you call it: jailhouse, ghetto, penitentiary style, urban art, chicano. It’s definitely street in nature. How about just [call it] art.” 27. Boog From the Street with Love Milan, Italy: Mediafriends, 2007. First edition. 152 leaves, printed on one side only. 16 by 12 inches; ringbound. 140 sheets of mostly black-and-white tattoo flash. Fine. (47146) $300 28. Lopez, Jose; Adrian ‘Spider’ Castrejon; and Tattoo Tony (Anthony Rodriguez) Lowrider Tattoo Flash Milan, Italy: Mediafriends, 2010. First edition. 96 leaves. 15-1/2 by 12 inches, mostly printed on one-side only. Fine hardcover. (47147) $300 Chicano Outsider Art 18 An anthology of 55 artists working in the Chicano style, including Chuey Quintanar, Boog, Placaso, Carlos Torres, Dr. Lakra, Juan Puente, Manuel Valenzuela, Steve Soto, and Jose Lopez. The goal for this book was to “display the most interesting interpretations of great tattoo artists, not only those belonging to the Chicano culture, but also other international artists who have been influenced by this important artistic movement. Originating primarily on the U.S. west coast, Chicano tattoo culture has strongly impacted the rest of the U.S., Mexico, Europe and Japan.... ‘Real’ Chicano can be recognized by its fast and rough strokes that reflect the street and the barrio; it’s a style which focuses more 29. Vialetto, Miki and Daniel O. ‘Dan- on the subject than on the picture’s ny Boy’ Sawyer (editors) overall appearance.” Con Safos: Chicano Style Tattoo Art 30. Yaya Milan, Italy: Mediafriends, 2012. First [Amateur Art by a Chicana] edition. 142 leaves, most printed on one side only. 11-3/4 by 15 inches. 120 [No location, but acquired in San sheets of black and gray tattoo flash. Francisco], 2001-2002. In a black zipNear fine in silver boards printed in pered portfolio case. Contents generblack; no dust jacket, as issued. ally very good. (52749) (47148) $300 SOLD An archive of amateur art by a young Chicana, Yaya [last name withheld], including more than 30 drawings and two paños. The artwork is not especially good, but it is interesting for the following reason: Yaya is working in the urban/prison Chicano style, which is typically very male dominated. Included here are two paños (the exhibition, Art from the Inside [see no. 25], included 118 pieces, all by men). Yaya’s paños include roses and the tragedy-comedy masks typical of the form. The other drawings, many with the usual school-girl captions—“Yaya Loves Steve”, for example—are done in the style of Chicano tattoo flash. Chicanos Behaving Badly 31. [Divorce Complaint] which she reportedly replied that “as to when and with whom she had In the Superior Court of the State been, it was none of his damned busiof Californa in and for Monterey ness.” Nineteenth century material County. Domingo Mendez, Plain- related to Mexican Americans is very tiff vs. Manuella Mendez, Defen- scarce (not shown). dant Three leaves, mimeographed typescript, with numerous manuscript additions. Generally good to very good in original paper docket, titled in ink. Base of third page, where the notary has signed, is tattered but complete. (26041) SOLD A divorce complaint filed to dissolve a marriage between two Mexican Americans. According to the 1880 census, Domingo’s father was born in Mexico and his mother in California and Manuella's parents were both native Californians. Domingo seeks a divorce on the grounds that Manuella is a wild woman who “has been in the habit...of attending Mexican and Indian Fandangos or ‘bailes’ ” and of returning home “after 32. [Gallagher, Bertrand E.] the hour of midnight, accompanied Utah’s Greatest Manhunt: The by a City policeman in a beastly inTrue Story of the Hunt for Lopez toxicated condition.” by an Eye Witness [cover title] Domingo asked his wife to behave and inquired as to her companions, to 19 Salt Lake City: B. E. Gallagher, 1913. First edition. 142 pages. Illustrated. Very good in wrappers (paperback), with preliminary leaf beginning to tear. Printed on thin, acidic paper, browned as usual. (17492)SOLD An account of Rafael Lopez, a Mexican American who killed several men in Utah, holed up in a mine, and somehow evaded a massive man hunt. According to the author of this book, Lopez was from northern Arizona and had little patience for discrimination or prejudice, frequently erupting into violence when he was slighted. Gallagher writes, “Lopez, being a native of this county, it is likely that if taken advantage of...or looked upon and treated as a full blooded Greaser, might resent it to such an extent as to cause him to commit the crimes he did.” See also Adams, Six-Guns 1362 and the Wikipedia entry for Red Lopez. Chicanos Behaving Badly 20 drape coat is part of a $75 suit, while residue on back. AZO back with four upward triangles (1904-1918). (17552) the peg-top trousers, very full at the knees and narrow at the cuffs, are part SOLD of a $45 suit. The pancake hat features The post card reproduces a typewrita feather at the rear. Tellez, who said ten caption and Sanchez’s mug shot. he was en route to see his girl when he According the Sheriff Charles Ward, was arrested, holds a medical dis“This mexican killed another on the 15 charge from the Army.” On June 10, of Feb. 1915,” and Ward seeks more following the Zoot Suit Riots in Los information from other law enforceAngeles, hundreds of newspapers rement agencies. printed this wire photo, catapulting Sanchez is described as a “chollo”, a the defining costume of pachuco style relatively early American use of this into the national spotlight. Every surslang term (usually spelled with one vey of the zoot suit refers to this imel) for a Mexican American. age. 34. [This Is the Zoot Suit] 33. Ward, Chas. F. Los Angeles: Associated Press, 1943. Roughly 8 by 11 inches. AP Wirephoto. Very good, with minor crazing to the surface of the image. Datestamped on the back, with other markings. (51347) SOLD Captioned on the right hand margin: “Los Angeles, June 9--This is the Zoot Suit--Frank H. Tellez, 22, held in county jail on a vagrancy charge, San Bernardino: Charles F. Ward, 1915. Real photo postcard, roughly 3.5 shows what the Zoot Suit, conspicuby 5.5 inches. Old ink check mark be- ous badge of roving bands of juveniles who have been engaged in rioting with tween two mug shots; glue and ink servicemen here, looks like. His long [Gregorio Sanchez Mugshot Postcard] Zoot Suits 21 35. Valdez, Luis 36. McEver, A. C. Zoot Suit [Broadway program] [First Zoot Suit on Record] New York: Schubert Organization, 1979. First edition. [24] pages, 8.75 by 11.75 inches. Very good in wrappers (paperback). (52717) SOLD (N.-pl.): (World Wide Photo), (1943) 6.5 by 8 inch image on 7 by 9 inch paper. Black and white copy-print A program for the Broadway produc- photograph with a separate mimeographed caption. Image slightly tion of Luis Valdez’s play, Zoot Suit, which includes a longish essay by Val- wavy, else near fine with expected dez on the origin of the play. Illustrat- production and date stamps on the verso (back). Caption also near ed with stills from the production. SOLD Zoot Suit had a record-breaking run at fine. (51129) the Mark Taper Forum, and then at News photo used to illustrate the the Aquarius Theater in Hollywood, most widely circulated story about where it ran for many months. It was the origin of the zoot suit style in less successful in New York, lasting the immediate aftermath of the just five weeks at the Winter Garden. Zoot Suit Riots in Los Angeles. Uncommon. This image is a photograph of a half-tone illustration from the February 1940 issue of Men’s Apparel Reporter. Acccording to the caption, Clyde Duncan, a busboy [actually Clyde Duncan Rakestraw, a bellhop, if we want our facts right] in Gainesville, Georgia, ordered this suit from the tailor A. C. McEver. McEver thought it was ridiculous and sent the picture to a trade magazine. When the Zoot Suit Riots brought the long coat and baggy pants style to na- tional attention, this photograph was republished in hundreds of newspapers around the country (including the front page of The New York Times). Black Civil Rights 37. [The Bourbons Got the Blues: A Social Review] [New York]: Negro Cultural Committee, [1938]. 8.5 by 11 inches. Promotion flyer printed in dark blue ink on light blue paper. One corner creased, edges tanned, date in pen at bottom edge, else near fine. (52655) SOLD A promotional piece for the May 8 (and perhaps the only) performance of this revue that “offered historical sketches of black life from slavery to the Depression, presented by actors and playwrights in the WPA Negro Theatre”—Mark Naison, Communists in Harlem During the Depression, p. 203. The black playwrights Carlton Moss and Dorothy Hailparn wrote most of the skits and enlisted Georgia Burke, Duke Ellington, Juanita Hall, Rex Ingram, Arthur Wilson and Frank Wilson as performers. By all accounts, the most memorable acts was Miriam Blecker and Anna Sokolow’s satiric ballet, Filibuster, in which the dancers played senators opposing the antilynching law while actors read from the politicians’ actual filibuster speeches. Scarce. 22 Black Civil Rights 23 Hilliard was involved in the shootout with Oakland police that left the teenage militant Bobby Hutton dead, two police officers wounded, and Eldridge Cleaver and Hilliard under arrest. While out on bail, Cleaver fled the country; Hilliard went to prison. A True Story of the Christiana Riot Nearby farmers came to help their neighbors and a gun battle ensued, leaving the slave owner dead and several of his men wounded. The black farmer and the escaped slaves fled to Canada. Quarryville, PA: Sun Printing House, 1898. First edition, first issue? Two variants are known to this cataloguer, one with 154 pages followed by a blank leaf; the other with 154 pages, a blank leaf and a conjugate index leaf at the end. This is the former, A near The “riot” became a national issue and ultimately 38 men were arrested (36 of them black) and were charged with treason! The first trial resulted in an acquittal and the charges against all the defendants were dropped. 39. Forbes, David R. 38. Free David Hilliard Chief of Staff, Black Panther Party. Free All Political Prisoners Quaker village in Pennsylvania. A southern slave owner arrived in the town with a posse, surrounded the home of a free black farmer, and demanded the return of two of his slaves hiding inside. “The most violent incident of African American resistance to the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850” —Junius P. Rodriguez (ed.), Slavery in the United States, vol. 2, p. 222. [Oakland]: [Black Panther Party], 1971. 14 by 20 inches. Original poster, silkscreened in red and black. Edges fine copy with mild bumping to the toned, corner bent not affecting imspine ends. Printed review slip glued age, a touch of soiling. Generally very to first blank. (51645) SOLD nice. (52968) SOLD The events unfolded beginning on September 11, 1851, in Christiana, a This account was written by the editor of the Quarryville Sun Times, a newspaper in the area, based on interviews conducted with surviving witnesses. It first ran in installments in the newspaper and then was re- Black Civil Rights 24 bored slaves on the Underground Railroad and who stood up to federal marshals seeking to arrest black men hiding on his land after the Christiana riot. Left: Item 39. Right: Item 40 printed in book form. A somewhat uncommon book. The last copy sold at auction made $400 in 2000. This copy, however, bears an interesting inscription: “To Moses Dunmore, compliments of S. M. Collins.” 40. another copy, with an interesting provenance Dunmore (1842–1920) was a free black child living in Cecil County, Maryland, in 1850. During the Civil War, he served in the 3rd US Colored regiment for Pennsylvania. First edition, second issue, with the index leaf. Very good, with considerably white spotting to the back board. Collins was the son-in-law of Samuel (51644) SOLD Bushong, a Quaker farmer who har- Black Civil Rights 41. Young Communist League, New York State (52707) 25 43. Erie County Communist Party Danger!-Lynchers Loose (N.-pl. but Buffalo): Erie County A Mixed RegiCommunist Party, (n.d. but 1948). ment: More Power Small broadside, 8.25 by 11 inches, on for America! newsprint. Near fine. (52711).SOLD (New York): (Young A plea for passage of H.R. 3488, an Communist League, anti-lyching law introduced in ConNew York State), gress in 1947. This chapter of the (1942). Three-fold CPUSA argued that Southern viobrochure. Paper lence against African Americans detanned, else fine. pressed the wages of black workers to SOLD the detriment of all. Arguments for the end of segregation in the armed forces. 42. Because His Skin Was Black New York: Harlem Council of the Civil Rights Congress, (n.d. but 1948). Three-panel brochure. Minor chipping. (52713) SOLD Black victims of police brutality. 44. 5th Ward Branch, Communist Party U.S.A An Open Letter to Wall Street Buffalo: 5th Ward Branch, Communist Party U.S.A., 1939. Broadside, 8.5 by 11 inches on newsprint. Edges browning, else fine. (52710) SOLD An anti-war, anti-descrimination flyer, purportedly written by a black CPmember referring to “loud mouthed promises of Democracy for our Race.” Black Civil Rights 26 Press photos of the Freedom Riders Ralph Diamond, a black union official, and Francis Randall, a white college professor, having lunch at the St. Petersburg Greyhound Station on June 16, 1961. Diamond was the vice president of the United Auto Workers Local 259, in New York. Randall, a specialist in Russian intellectual history, was teaching at Columbia at the time. This was the last stop on the Organized Labor / Professional Freedom Ride, which began in Washington, DC, on June 13. Their ride was relatively peaceful, but 13 others who made the same journey were arrested in other Florida cities. 45. Ramsdell, Jack [photographer] [Freedom Riders Arrive in St. Petersburg] (St. Petersburg, FL): (St. Petersburg Times), (1961). Nine vintage 8-by-10inch gelatin silver prints. Photographer’s stamp and date on the verso of each photograph. Generally near fine, one or two with bent corners. (53550) SOLD These photographs demonstrate that in the South during the early 1960s, the simple act of a white man and a black man sitting in public sharing a meal together brought a large crowd of gawkers and the press. One of these images ran in the St. Petersburg Times; another, in digital form, is the 1961 entry in the paper's online history, Images of the Florida Century. The other seven are unpublished. 27 Wrappers Are Not Hip-hop Artists The terminology of the book trade can be a little off-putting to those new to the sport. Here are few definitions for new collectors. WRAPPERS, or wraps, refer to the covers of paperback books and pamphlets. FIRST EDITION is used in the long-established sense of first edition, first printing. Publication details are given as PLACE: PUBLISHER, YEAR. Any of this information not found on the title page is enclosed in parenthesis, to conform with standard bibliographical practice. (Why this is standard practice is beyond the ken of the cataloger. He does what he is told.) If the publisher omits some of this data, that fact will be indicated with (N.-pl.), (n.p.), and (n.d), for no place, no publisher, and no date, respectively. What Condition My Condition Is In FINE means excellent condition, almost like new. VERY GOOD indicates a gently used book. GOOD is the bookselling euphemism for not so good, but still acceptable. We know what the words SIGNED and INSCRIBED mean and use them correctly (please check your dictionary). There are no (intentional) SINS OF OMISSION in this catalog. If a book is not described as priceclipped, it isn’t. If a previous owner’s name is not mentioned, then the previous owner was kind enough to not scribble that in the book. eureka books 426 Second Street Eureka, CA 95501 707.444.9593 [email protected] www.eurekabooksellers.com Fine Print Basically, the fine print is that if you order something, you have to pay for it. If you are known to us, we will probably send your order with an invoice. If you prefer, we accept all major CREDIT CARDS and PAYPAL at [email protected]. LIBRARIES will be billed according to their requirements, no matter how complicated. Operators are standing by everyday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., California time. A digital recording device will take a message other times. SHIPPING adds $5 per order to the total. Residents of California will be charged SALES TAX. If you aren’t satisfied with your purchase—you think the book is boring, or ugly, or not what you expected, or you just want to ruin our day—you may RETURN if for a full refund, within a reasonable period. All items are SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE, so don’t delay. We’re doing our best to sell the book you really want to someone else who really wants it. Catalog Numbering Your cataloguer, P. Scott Brown, issued 25 lists under his own name; this is the fourth as Eureka Books, for a combined tally of 29. Where Are All the Books? It’s already passé for booksellers to issue lists of items that aren’t actually books, but we’re usually well behind the times. So here’s the first of what may be several similar lists (if this one proves worth the effort). If it doesn’t work, we’ll go back to cloth and boards.