History

Thomas Fleming
Archives

Column 49: Duke Ellington

Column 47: C. L. Dellums and Mr. Bojangles

Column 38: Oakland, Where the Trains Stopped

Column 37: The Railroad Ferry

Column 36: Last Days on Shipboard

Column 35: Los Angeles Bound

Column 31: The Admiral Line

Column 30: Finding Work

Column 29: Back to the City

Column 25: A Jack of All Trades

Column 23: The Color Line

Column 22: The Agricultural Life

Column 21: California's First Black Politicians

Column 20: A Potential Race Riot

Column 19: The Great Experiment

Column 18: Black Musicians and Early Radio

Column 17: The Day President Harding Died

Column 16: The Black Press in the 1920s

Column 15: The Klan Marches in California

Column 14: Good Times in Chico

Column 13: Jim Crow in 1920s California

Column 12: Race Relations in a Small California Town

Column 11: Black Life in Rural California

Column 10: West to California

Column 9: Goodbye to New York

Column 8: Mischief-Making in Harlem

Column 7: The Rise of Black Professionals Column 8: Mischief-Making in Harlem

Column 6: Encounters with Fats Waller

Column 5: Marcus Garvey Comes to Harlem

Column 4: Boyhood in Harlem, 1916-19

Column 3: A Stowaway to New York

Column 2: Black Entertainers on Vaudeville

Column 1: Jacksonville, 1907-15

WHY THE BLACK PRESS IS STILL NEEDED

Retires From Sun-Reporter At 89 Thomas Fleming, "Good Soldier" Of San Francisco's Black Press


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