University of Mary Washington Special Collections and University Archives
Simpson LibraryResearchers interested in AV materials may need to visit the Special Collections Reading Room for access due to copyright restrictions.
James Leonard Farmer, Jr. was born January 12, 1920 in Marshall, Texas. He was an exceedingly intelligent student and began attending Wiley College at age fourteen, graduating with his B.S. degree in 1938. From there he went to Howard University School of Divinity before obtaining his B.D. degree in 1941. Eventually, Farmer would become widely recognized as one of the "Big Four" of the civil rights movement. He founded the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) in 1942, and gained national recognition in the 1960s for his leadership of the "Freedom Rides" into the South. Farmer's non-violent acts played a significant role in the events leading to the passage of the Civil Rights Bill of 1964 and the Civil Rights Voting Act of 1965.
James Farmer also forayed into politics, albeit briefly. He unsuccessfully ran for Congress in 1968, and from 1969-1970, he served in the Nixon administration as the Assistant Secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (now the Department of Health and Human Services). By 1971, Farmer returned his focus to activism and education.
In addition to his role as a renowned activist, Farmer was an author, a teacher, and a labor organizer. Beyond his leadership of CORE, he also held a position as honorary vice chairman of the Democratic Socialists of America, and was a co-founding member of the Fund for an Open Society, which promoted thriving racially and ethnically integrated communities. In 1985, he began teaching the history of Civil Rights as Commonwealth Professor of History and American Studies at Mary Washingon College. He received the title of Distiguished Professor in 1987, which he held until his retirement in 1998. MWC awarded Farmer an honorary doctorate of humane letters in 1997. In 1998, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, awarded by President Bill Clinton.
Ill health troubled James Farmer for many of his later years. He would eventually lose both of his legs and his eyesight to diabetes, and passsed away from complications of the disease on July 9, 1999.
The collection consists of materials that have been transferred to UMW Archives from the Office of University Relations and Communications, dating from 1984-2008. The majority of the collection's content includes public media materials such as television and radio appearances, and newspaper and magazine articles. The collection also includes correspondence, secretarial notes, speeches written by James Farmer, and documenation of some of Dr. Farmer's many awards and honors. These materials document James Farmer's career at the University of Mary Washington so the bulk of the contents pertain to the late 1980s and 1990s. This collection offers insight into the life of James Farmer's career as an educator and public figure later in his life.
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_013
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_014
Farmer_Video_018b
Farmer_Video_022
FAC0099
Farmer_Video_025
CSPAN0026
Farmer_Video_026
Farmer_Video_027
FAC0043
Farmer_Video_028
FAC0043
Farmer_Video_029
FAC0042
Farmer_Video_032
Farmer_Video_034
FAC0090
Farmer_Video_035
Farmer_Video_044
Farmer_ Video_015
Farmer_Video_021
Farmer_Video_023
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_009b
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_037
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_010b
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_011
Farmer_Video_033
Video 023. DVD access copy available. Jewel case is damaged.
Digitized copy available on external hard drive UOMW_July2012_DRV02, filename Farmer_Audio_023.
Video 031. Notations on box read "Freedom Rides, 1991 Anniversary, NBC "Today" (Video)".
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_031.
Farmer_ Video_024
Farmer AV 01 > Farmer_Video_036
Farmer_Video_016
Farmer AV 1 > Farmer_Video_012
FAC0053
Farmer_Video_017b
Farmer_Video_020
Farmer_Audio_040.
External notations on cassette read "WITH GOOD REASON, VOL. 2, NO. 5 / "On the Bias: Black and White Perspectivees on African-American History / Farmer (MWC) Toppin (VSU)." Case includes a business card from Pamela H. Landrum with the handwritten note "My extra copy of tape, if you want to listen. [R?] 7/16".
Segment is hosted by Laura Womack.
Farmer_Audio_041.
Handwritten notations on cassette read "James Farmer/Susan Stamberg / Weekend Edition/Sun 6/18/89." Notation on case reads "JAMES FARMER".
Segment hosted by Susan Stamberg.
Green sticker on case reads "Audio 042". Notations on cassette read "FAC0055 / James Farmer singing / dubbed 8/99".
Original recording date unknown. This recording is several loops of the same song; the run time for one loop of the song is 1m45s.
In a 1985 interview with NPR, Farmer said this is an old labor song with new words he wrote for the freedom rides.
Farmer_Audio_042
Notations on cassette read "CUTHBERT SHOW / JAMES FARMER ON CIVIL RIGHTS TODAY / 12-11-89." Tape label indicates that the recording comes from WAMU at American University.
Hosted by Mike Cuthbert.
Farmer_Audio_039.