Thelma Thurston Gorham

Born and raised edit

Thelma Thurston was born February 21, 1913, to African-Americans Frank and Bertha Thurston,[1][2] in segregated Kansas City, Missouri.[3] In January 1920, she was living with grandparents John and Anga Thurston. Her grandfather was a freight handler.[4] She attended the black public schools in Kansas City, and, in 1925, she moved with her mother to Detroit and worked with her mother as a maid,[1] starting at just twelve years old.[5] There, she attended Hamtramck High School and Northern High School, before moving back to Kansas City, where she attended Northeast Junior High School and Sumner High School,[6] amid the chaos of the Great Depression. There she graduates from Sumner High School in 1931.[7] The school was severely overcrowded.[8] A Sumner High English teacher inspired Thurston, Scottie P. Davis, to write about the good news of the black community and not just criminals.[5][9]

College and career edit

Having been inspired and, with family aid, able to attend college, Thurston sought but was denied attending the University of Missouri because she was black.[1] She considered the University of Kansas, but chose not to because they practiced race segregation on campus. Instead, she became the first black student in journalism at the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis.[1]

In her first year of college in 1931, Thelma was invited to join Sigma Epsilon Sigma academic sorority on campus,[10] though at some point she was asked to leave.[5] In early 1932, Thurston spoke at a bi-racial YMCA/YWCA group on the topic of James Weldon Johnson's God's Trombones, a collection of Negro sermons.[11] In the fall, Thurston was on a YWCA service program committee running the social hour at a settlement house.[12] Opening 1933, she gave a talk for the Cameo Social Club.[13] That summer, after finishing two years at college, Thelma was among the 200 named to the Campus Sister group,[14] was visible back in Kansas City,[15] and published a poem in a local newspaper in Kansas City.[16] She returned to Kansas City the summer of 1934 too,[17] and was announced as one of twelve who joined another honorary journalism sorority.[18]

In her senior year, Thurston was among the YWCA student committee that sponsored James Weldon Johnson speaking at a YWCA luncheon while in town to address the state legislature on an anti-lynching bill.[19] Thurston reported on his appearance for The Minneapolis Spokesman.[20] She was also on the Theta Sigma Phi honorary journalism sorority committee for the next round of pledge invitations,[21] and presided at the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority meeting though her talk was called "sketchy" in a newspaper article.[22] Despite the evaluation, she was mentioned again in coverage of Alpha Kappa Alpha events in May.[23]

With the majority of the Great Depression past, Thurston graduated in the spring of 1935 with a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism from the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis,[24][6][25] while living in St. Paul.[26] She was one of three black women in the entire graduating class in 1935.[1] However, an instructor for a central class of her program failed to set up a newspaper internship for her as was customary for all students.[1]

Rising journalist and academic edit

The Call edit

After graduating, Thurston's first placement was doing various jobs for the African-American Kansas City Call.[25] She was visible there by October,[27] registering in the US Decadal Census as living in Kansas City, Missouri, since at least 1935, and employed as a reporter.[2] She soon worked as a reporter covering the police for The Call.[1][28] She was also visible socially in Kansas City.[29]

By 1938, she was an editor for The Call and its chief feature writer.[1] That year, Thurston also directed the Moravian Club Fashion Parade.[30] In early 1939, Thurston was a speaker at an Adult Education meeting while running for school board office,[31] though she lost the race.[32] Decades later, she said, "I couldn't trust my own people.… African-American men tried to knife me."[33] During the electioneering, Thurston was also director of the Monrovian Club Fishing Show.[34] That summer, Thurston heard Mary McLeod Bethune speak at a club meeting in town.[35] In the fall, Thurston was among those given a tour of a new hospital wing built to serve African Americans, albeit segregated.[36] That year, an organization was formed to aid the wing.[37] The year closed with a mention of Thurston at the Republican State Convention,[38] even though, by 1936, most African Americans had switched political parties.[39]

In 1940 she was still working with The Call,[40] and the US Census had her living with her mother.[2] That October Thurston was mentioned as a member of the NAACP board, listed as representing The Call, and the board joined in protest about the lack of African Americans on announced Draft Board amid the rising war tensions.[41]

Thurston heard of the Bahá'í Faith about this time, though no further details are known.[5] That winter, Thurston gave a talk to the Sumner High School assembly.[42] Though some sources say she married Richard Gorham in 1939,[1] many sources detail her marriage on August 20, 1941.[43][40] Her marriage was announced,[44] and her parents returning from the marriage of their daughter in September.[45]

By 1941, she was the bureau news editor and feature writer for The Call,[6] and had served there for six years as a writer.[46]

Hampton Institute edit

In November 1941, Thurston started working with the HBCU Hampton Institute(today a University) in Virginia.[47][6] By December, and the Attack on Pearl Harbor, her husband had been drafted.[48] An article of hers was published in the African-American newspaper, The Pittsburgh Courier, which also called her a "recent bride",[49] and another article was published in April in The Jackson Advocate of Jackson, Mississippi.[50]

She also began to cherish a dream of visiting Africa: "…. Since the early 1940's Ghana has been the focus of my African dream.…. Perhaps the answer goes back to 1941 when I was working as assistant director of public relations at Hampton Institute, Hampton, Virginia. One of my self-initiated, extracurricular tasks was the organization of a Foreign Students Association.… The courtesy, and even courtliness, of the young men in the association was a refreshing contrast to the manners of the American-born students. And to listen to the students talk about their goals for their homelands and their countrymen was sheer joy to me.… it was the students from the Gold Coast with whom some of my closest associations developed.”[51]

By the summer of 1942 husband Richard was initially stationed at Camp Funston in Kansas.[48] She gave up her Hampton Institute position, briefly working with The Omaha Star,[46] moved with her husband to Fort McClellan, Alabama, where Gorham stayed in Aniston.[43] But within the year he was transferred again, this time to Fort Huachuca in south Arizona,[48] where he was a sergeant in communications.[46] Wherever she went, she got jobs in and thrived in journalism.[1][7][24]

The Apache Sentinel edit

June 1942 opens with a set of poems of Gorham's published in The Pittsburgh Courier.[52] Already described as having a column on advice for wives of servicemen, formerly of the Kansas City Call and teacher at the Hampton Institute, by January 1943, she had published another article with The Courier,[43][53] but also one in The Chicago Defender,[54] and ‘’The Crisis’’,[55] all focused on life at the Fort. Fort Huachuca housed the largest single group of African Americans in the Army.[56] Gorham's unfinished plywood shack for a home while stationed at Fort Huachuca was shared with eleven couples, each room of which was about seven feet square with only two army cots, and everyone shared two sinks for every need, and there were no facilities for cooking.[57]

The Gorham family visited his father's family in Omaha in the winter of 1942-3,[46] and then she was hired for The Apache Sentinel before July 1943.[58] Captain David A. Lane had given management of The Sentinel to Gorham, ultimately with the title Technical Advisor, and had been on an overseas assignment in January 1944.[59][60] Amidst her new responsibilities, she also spoke at a Palo Alto High invitational assembly in February, invited by a social problems class.[61] Her job as editor at The Apache Sentinel remained substantially the same, despite titles, save for two army orders - one that no civilian could be the editor of a post newspaper "so she was designated associate editor" and then that no civilian could write an editorial, so she became a "technical adviser" who could, and someone else became the official editor.[62] However, she functionally became the only woman editor of an official army newspaper in the country.[25] She was pictured in July 1944 in the newspaper and described as hard at work 24 hours a day with two core staff military personnel working under her.[63] Gorham was also hospitalized in September.[64]

A later writer said: "it was more a driving sense of personal accomplishment that compelled [her] to pursue a career, rather than militancy of feminism."[5] But Gorham's editorship of the Apache Sentinel was commented upon by Carlotta Bass, editor-publisher of The California Eagle: "The most radical changes in Negro journalism came about during World War II.… for the first time in history a Negro woman was editor of an Army newspaper…."[65] She served 22 months as editor of The Special Services Bulletin and The Apache Sentinel, official publications of the Armed Forces Special Services Division Service Command Unit 1922.[6] She also served as publicity assistant to the Post Public Relations Officer at the Fort.[6] She finished the period writing articles published in Tulsa for The Oklahoma Eagle.[66]

The Crisis and the Labor School edit

With the War ending, Richard was discharged in October 1944, and the Gorhams were visible visiting Los Angeles.[67] She represented a number of Negro weekly newspapers on the West Coast as an accredited correspondent during the United Nations Conference on International Organization held in San Francisco in April to June 1945.[6][25] The winter of 1945-1946 Gorham did a brief stint as managing editor of The Crisis, official organ of the NAACP,[25] starting while living in San Francisco but briefly moved to the national headquarters in the Wendell Willkie building, New York City.[6][68] Her final piece for The Crisis was the short story "It's never too early: a trilogy" in March, also republished in 2011.[69] And Gorham published a book “Aquarina” for black children through the University of Minnesota back in January 1946.[70]

In the academic year of 1946-7, Gorham was an instructor with the California Labor School.[71] In between, she was occasionally also a teacher at the Hampton Institute across 1944-1947.[24] She also served as part-time publicity director of the NAACP West Coast Regional Office in San Francisco,[6] and editor of the Alpha Kappa Alpha official publication The Ivy Leaf.[72] She had gained that position during their conference in Cleveland on world peace.[73] She was editor-in-chief of the publication from 1946 to 1949.[6][74] She was also a freelance writer and publicist in the Northern California Bay Area, residing in Berkeley,[6] when not in New York. With her husband, she operated Gorham Enterprises, a photography, public relations, and publicity agency in Oakland, but her opportunities crossed the country.

Lincoln University and University Minnesota at Minneapolis edit

Gorham started with the HBCU Lincoln University, Missouri as Assistant Professor of the School of Journalism for the fall 1947-1948 school year.[75] She's also noted as a patron supporter of football program for the Lincoln vs Tenn. State homecoming game, from Lincoln U. in 1947.[76] She would teach here for four years, 1947-1951.[6][7] In late June 1948, she rejoined her husband in California, traveling from Lincoln University to the Berkley area, and this time pursued graduate studies at Stanford University for the summer.[77][6] She recorded some graduate-level coursework in the summer of 1948 at Stanford University.[78] She also worked as a free lance writer and edited Building a Better State, the monthly organ of the Missouri Association of Social Welfare.[6] The couple had a son named Darryl Theodore Thurston, born September in Minnesota.[1][79]

In March 1949, Gorham opened the Journalism Forum at the Lincoln University conference,[80] and in the summer worked at the University of Minnesota on her Masters Degree in Journalism while still an instructor at Lincoln University; she had sisters and her father living in Minneapolis,[81] was still visible at social appearances in St. Paul,[82] and was visited by her husband there too.[83]

In the 1950-51 school year, she helped organize the Foreign Students Association at Lincoln University.[84] In May, she visited her husband's parents in Omaha, Nebraska, and spending time surveying African American newspapers.[85] Her next summer in Minnesota she is listed as a member of St. James AME Church in St. Paul, (where her aunt was also a member,)[86] and speaker at Women’s Day meeting of the church.[87] Later that year, her Master's thesis was previewed as a book Negro Newsmen and Practices of Pressure Groups in the Middle West,[88] which was republished in 1952 after her degree was finished.[89]

She graduated in 1951 with a Masters of Arts in journalism from the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis.[24][6][90] Her thesis reviewed "social and professional characteristics of newsmen working on seven Negro weeklies in four midwestern metropolitan centers - Chicago, St. Louis, Greater Kansas City, and Omaha" including interviews and a survey of opinions and attitudes.[91] She also initiated her PhD work. That April, a poem by her, "Sunset down a country lane”, was published in a national teacher's journal.[92]

St. Louis edit

After graduating with her Masters' degree, a number of initiatives took place. First, in April 1951 she led some workshops at Lincoln University on preparing yearbooks.[93] While there she particated in a wedding shower of a faculty coworker,[94] and a banquet for the university's Women association.[95] By that October she had a county position working with three YWCAs of St. Louis.[96] She was soon visible working at the job and community events.[97] There were also some regional trips she participated in. She was a speaker to an interracial meeting in early May in the Venice-Lincoln, IL, area.[98] She went to the Kansas City hosted regional conference of the National Council of Negro Women in later May.[99] She was also profiled back in St. Louis where she positively commented in St. Louis rising racial integration effort.[100] In October she was part of an unaffiliated support group in favor of electing Howard Elliott,[101] and in meet candidate events,[102] who lost to the incumbent Phil M. Donnelly.

That December 1952 she also got a newspaper article published through her Gorham Enterprises company,[103] and published an editorial marking the changes of late 1952.[104] A new magazine Set-Up was initiated that spring of which Gorham was chief editor.[105] While that effort unfolded, by October 1953, she was known to also work with a project named the Great Books Program in the St. Louis Missouri public library, assisting Charles H. Compton, some of which continued into 1955.[106][6]

Stepping into early 1954, mentions of Gorham begins in February when she composed an article of events in St. Louis published in St. Paul reporting on the Supreme Court test case quoting comments of Morehouse College president supporting ending segregation:

1) The religious approach which see segregation as incompatible with the best that there is in the Christian gospel;

2) The point of view which finds it inconsistent with our democratic pronouncements as found in the federal Constitution, and

3) The world-view which see that America, the greatest democracy in the world, cannot assume the spiritual leadership of the world in segregated economy."[107]

Segregation, and its ending, was also no longer an issue just of society - her son was approaching 6 years old that fall. By March, she started publishing articles for The Oklahoma Eagle in Tulsa,[108] where she was a consultant in March,[109] and was a VP and Managing Editor by April.[110]

Bahá'í and Professional edit

Tulsa edit

Gorham joined the Bahá'í Faith in 1954, though we don't know the date, more for her son "to have a religious base”,[1] although she was already familiar with the religion and it would come to inform her actions in a wide set of her actions.[5] Yet it is unknown how much contact she had with Bahá'ís in Minneapolis/St. Paul/St. Louis or in Oklahoma or elsewhere, and/or publications mentioning Bahá'ís in the period before she joined the religion. It can be said that she had a copy of an insert from Bahá'í News on "Building the Bahá'í Community" from September, 1952, that she kept in her collection of items through her life.[111]

Tulsa lacked a measurable Bahá'í presence in the period. The Bahá'ís of nearby and much bigger Oklahoma City was a community of 14 adults as of January 1955.[112] It was a community dating from 1937 starting from Albert and Mrs. Entzminger's pioneering as a result of the first Seven Year Plan to form assemblies in every state.[citation needed] But in 1955 about 20 Bahá'ís were known in the state, so over half the Baha'is in the state lived in Oklahoma City. They had contacts in Tulsa from 1940,[113] literature was in the Tulsa library in 1946,[114] and it was a goal city for an assembly from 1953 and internal goals of The intranational growth of Local Spiritual Assemblies during the Ten Year Crusade in the continental United States.[115] The Oklahoma City Bahá'ís held many meetings at the integrated and black community centered YWCA, which was founded by Drusilla Dundee, sister of the founder of The Black Dispatch newspaper.[116] Starting a review of the area Bahá'í Community in 1952, in May the Weeden family gave a talk on their pilgrimage at that YWCA.[117] Mary Rublee of San Antonio was the guest speaker for the observance of the Birth of Baha'u'llah in November held there.[118] Oklahoma City's community heard a talk by Harry Ford of Colorado Springs held at the YWCA at the beginning of December and Albert P. Entzminger was mentioned as chair of the assembly in 1952.[119] Entzminger was part of the staff of tv station WKY(now KFOR).[120] Edward S. Campbell gave a talk "The Eternal Christ and the Drama of Salvation” in February 1953 at the YWCA.[121] In March the national Bahá'í community announced the Ten Year Crusade which gained its own local publicity.[122] Florence Mayberry was the speaker on "God's Plan - Man's Destiny" at the YWCA timed with Naw Ruz in Oklahoma City.[123] An article profiling the religion is echoed from Chicago talking about the International Conference and coming dedication of the Temple, and briefly of the history and teachings of the religion.[124] There was coverage of the opening dedication of the Temple in early May.[125] Indeed there was further coverage in mid-May from the Associated Negro Press (ANP) profiling the Faith highlighting the stance on race issues in the country and published at The Oklahoma Eagle.[126] The unnamed reporter of the ANP article interviewed Ruhiyyih Khanum who gave her a review of African-American connections with the Faith starting with Louis Gregory, but going on to others in other places. However, further in the coverage, there was a set of points from the article that could be connections for Gorham. Among the speakers at meetings for the dedication of the Temple and the initiation of the Ten-Year Crusade was Charles H. Wesley, then president of Central State College in Wilberforce, Ohio.[126] And a week later Wesley was the speaker at the Booker T. Washington High School commencement in Tulsa.[127] Another connection mentioned in the ANP article is Juanita C. Macklin and some of her story is told.[126] She was a former Tulsan, who was then an instructor in Los Angeles City Schools and had stopped in Tulsa, where she was interviewed on her way to speak at Langston University. Another possible connection for Gorham outside the ANP coverage was more visible in later years. Adelaide Turner was visible as a local leading African American Bahá'í though it is not clear what her position was circa 1951-1954. Adelaide Turner, who was a regional director of the YWCA of Nebraska,[128] was later chair of the Kansas City Missouri Spiritual Assembly with coverage of this coming out of The Call, and went on to further services covered in other periodicals.[129]

In June, 1954, Gorham was part of the panel for the Vernon AME Church North Side Missionary Union's Christian Social Relations Committee, and they were planning a similar work at the regional conference in Muskogee.[130] Gorham was also there to receive the royal delegation from Ethiopia when they arrived at Stillwater.[131] Gorham was then part of the AME congress held in Muskogee and was part of the panel discussion on integration on the theme "What we can do as missionary women to smooth the transition from segregation to integration."[132] The ANP had a small article on the upcoming 1954 Bahá'í national convention.[133] Helen Callaway was the delegate to the national convention from Oklahoma that year.[134] Ann Davidson spoke for the Oklahoma City Assembly at YWCA for Proclamation Day, an event that was also covered in The Black Dispatch.[135] Margery McCormick spoke at the YWCA on the Faith noting "Less than one-third of the people in the world have white skins, …."[136] A reception for Patience Kindness of the Colorado Spring Bahá'í community was held in Tulsa.[137]

A couple of series of editorials by Gorham, one a stand-alone set often entitled "How Ready are We for Integration" across September-December and the other in a regular column "Distaff Diary: One Woman's Viewpoint", appear.[138] Amidst the series, Gorham also aided a series of public talks on integration held in St. Louis through YMCA affiliations.[139] In October, she comments on National Bible Week and recalls the gift of Baltimore Negroes of a Bible to Abraham Lincoln. She says: "The best gift God has given to man, but it contains a variety of material to meet the temporal, as well as the spiritual, needs of the most discrimination readers",[140] and continued her intermingled series of editorials.[141]

In November, Gorham penned an editorial on the problem of lacking faith - key in her view to the ability to stand up for what needs to be done rather than fall into platitudes. She examined both historical as well as present race issues to rise over fears and oppression by sanction. And she looked at more than a general lack of faith, specifically "A lack of faith in God as a loving Father, and a lack of faith in the innate goodness of His creation.”[142] This was published close to the observance of the Birth of Bahá’u’lláh. Gorham returned to the subject of personal faith a week later, calling for faith in God and His Creation. She counters the feeling of "too much talk about desegregation and integration" and also parses the words from sides of the debate and that integration "must come through the application of understanding… and faith… and love."[143] Gorham then addresses the issue of prejudice and "the acceptance of second class citizenship on both sides of the color line, the time has come to consider some of the things that can be done… to accentuate the positive in the trend toward desegregation and integration in American life.”[144] She goes on to various examples of the frustrations on both sides of the color line, with both sides seeking economic security, though the problem touches on other parts of life. She observed the churches can have a far-reaching impact if they were desegregated, at least for emotional security. However, she feels that the churches had to lead on this. She also noted Mrs. Charles S. Johnson, wife of the president of Fisk University, mentioned the idea - that "11 o'clock on Sunday morning is the most segregated hour in America."[145] Her series of editorials continued into January 1955.[146] (there are various mentions but no more editorials.) Gorham was managing editor of The Oklahoma Eagle in 1955.[6]

The community was going to hold World Religion Day in January 1955 with Mrs. Randall T. Cochran of Kirkwood, Missouri, speaker,[112] and coverage was published in The Black Dispatch.[147] Ida Belle Sine gave a talk for the Chappell Class in February.[148] Gorham's series "How Ready Are We for Integration" was the reason for an award from the National Conference of Christians and Jews for Brotherhood Week of February though the award went to the newspaper as such and not directly to Gorham.[149][6] Inbetween she also was working on the Oklahoma City Human Relations Council.[150]

In April a Bahá'í regional conference was held at Callaway home with Mrs. David Ruhe and Francis Johnson gave talks,[151] and a talk "What the Bah'ai(sic) World Faith offers Modern Man" was held at the YWCA Saturday night.[152] Arabelle Haywood, living at the Center,[153] hosted informal meetings on the Faith at her home a week later, published in The Black Dispatch.[154] In May, the National Bahá'í Assembly message was published addressing the persecution in Iran.[155] It was later that summer, June 26, when Gorham was publicly mentioned as a Bahá'í in coverage of a reception picnic in Oklahoma City was held for her which was published July 2 in The Black Dispatch.[156] The week after she had her picnic reception, she was at an integrated conference of the Faith in Little Rock, Arkansas, along with Margaret Ruhe and others at the Lafayette Hotel.[157]

Oklahoma City edit

Prior to accepting a position with the Oklahoma City Public Schools, she was already executive editor of the "militant" Black Dispatch, (according to the Omaha Star,) the "Oklahoma City Negro weekly",[6] essentially simultaneous with being public as a Bahá'í in July 1955. Bahá'í meetings continued to be mentioned in The Dispatch in August.[158] A month later, she was visible at a reception for friends.[159]

While still being invited to speak at black church functions,[160] her next Bahá'í conference was local in early September in the Allis Hotel.[161] Later in September Gorham penned a story of her own about a centenarian in town,[162] and then returned to her editorial efforts. She examines the difficulty of bias, that we notice and hate it applied to us while when we do it, like it seems most natural and appropriate when we do it ourselves. She writes "By denying their children the rich experience of understanding and respecting and learning to love all humankind for the God that is in them, they relegate their children to outhouses of the mind and soul.… And if parents won't take the step, then the youth must make the move to free themselves by independent investigation of all available facts and by repudiation of the misinformation of their unthinking or misguided elders.” and proceeds to decry moves towards segregation in the black community as well.[163] That same weekend she took part in a “Great Books” club discussion in Oklahoma City.[164] Her next editorial came in early October speaking the death of Emmett Till and of her own son being raised in liberal circumstances about race and in an encounter he had: "… I am a child of God, just the same as she is…”.[165] The next week came a talk by Gorham for the Tulsa Beauticians Sorority,[166] and her next editorial including comments like:

"But to be a devotee of religion as a solution to our problems is to be a 'long hair.' And it is not yet popular to be 'long-haired' in religion. Indeed, it is really not yet universally popular to be religious.… it appears that a grave need today is for a few 'long hairs' in religion - sincere devotees who will not be guilty of deprivation of the people through lust for leadership or through want of knowledge and understanding.… At mid-century, as mankind moves or is pushed - into the orbit of total integration, there are many challenges…. Perhaps the greatest of these is the challenge implicit in a law which proclaims and underlies the basic unity of all religion and the oneness of truth - a law which runs like a golden thread through all the great religions of the world… to love God as a father and love all men as children of the same father. Where men debate the issue of who is inferior or superior …all can agree with Baha'u'llah - the Manifestation of God in our time - that 'the lovers of mankind … these are the superior men, of whatever nation, creed, or race they may be."[167]

In later October, the Oklahoma City Bahá'ís held UN Day at the YWCA with a children's afternoon program by Laura Lee, Marefatollah Soghani, Mrs Nathan (Carole Kelsey) Rubstein, and Helen Callaway. In the evening, the Bahá'ís had a panel with Idabel Sime, Arabelle Haywood, and moderator Gorham herself.[168] There was also a showing of a 30 minute film on the UN and then the next evening Winston Evans speaking at the Bahá'í Center.[169] Meanwhile Gotham’s next editorial came out supporting the benefits of progress in the state should go to all and not just some.[170] A week later Gorham spoke at the Bethany Presbyterian Church's annual Women's Day Sunday morning program, with coverage saying she was a former AME church member but not that she was now a Bahá'í.[171] In this busy October, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, that had earlier given her work an award but to the newspaper itself, and local organizations, held a conference at the Oklahoma City University. Gorham was one of the compilers of the input of group meetings towards the output of the organization.[172]

In November, Gorham, sometimes with son, was visible at various receptions,[173] and Gorham continued various articles like the US Supreme Court striking down an Oklahoma law requiring race designations on ballots of those running for office,[174] spoke to the NAACP,[175] and then at a vocational printing class in mid-December.[176] Earlier in December the local Bahá'í community was visible making donations for raising a memorial site for a group of Americans that were killed in Iran circa 1951,[177] and Arabelle Haywood was mentioned staying in Oklahoma City as a homefront pioneer,[178] with ongoing meetings, and some of them hosted at Gorham’s home on 17th St.[179]

In January, 1956, Gorham continued her presence at social engagements,[180] and writing articles for the Dispatch on race issues.[181] And there were visits from her mother and kin in February.[182] She also gave occasional talks, for example “Negro History and Brotherhood”.[183] Bahá'í activities continued elsewhere in Oklahoma,[184] as well as in Oklahoma City,[185] while there were Bahá'í quotes published in The Dispatch.[186] Also in March, a regional conference of the Area Teaching Committee was held in Springfield, Missouri.[187] Events at the Bahá'í Guest House continued including with Gorham,[188] and Naw Ruz was held.[189] ‘’The Black Dispatch’’ continued other Bahá'í mentions like The Associated Negro Press review of Race and Man.[190] Meanwhile, Gorham also continued her occasional speaking opportunities like in Shawnee for the Excelsior Club which was quite a focus of hers March-through-April.[191] Gorham was also elected president of the Creston Hills School PTA,[192] during a period of integration of the school system.[193][194] Mr. Gorham came down sick in early April during his career on radio KBYE(later KTLR).[195] Also in April, the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís published a statement against the persecution going on in Iran,[196] and a local Ridvan event was planned,[197] while Gorham MC’ed a meeting of the Club Leonard.[198]

January 1957 opened with the Bahá'í Assembly of Oklahoma City holding World Religion Day with Gorham as chair of the event.[199][200] In March, Gorham was the speaker for the Bahá'í sponsored World Youth Day at the YWCA on W. Park "Stockpiling for the Future: A Baha'i Looks at Youth". Gorham was also a teacher at the black community school of Moon Junior High(later renamed).[201] Her talk was summarized/quoted about youth owing their parents and the need for adults to get educated and other community work going on.[202] In August, she received her certification as a teacher in Language Arts in Oklahoma,[203] She took graduate-level coursework at the University of Oklahoma at Norman in the summer of 1957.[204] Late in the summer, the Gorhams held a reception in Oklahoma City, and it was mentioned that Richard was working in newspaper publishing, Thelma was a high school teacher, and Thelma and Darryl were guests of a couple of families in Kansas City, Missouri.[205]

Gorham's husband summarily left the family in later April 1958, followed by the death of Gorham's brother in June and the end of the Gorham Enterprises business they had been running.[206] The unexpected death of her brother while staying in her home caused a delay in her attempt to publish an article in The Oklahoma Teacher that summer.[207] Gorham was named on the 1958 Bahá'í summer school program committee for the Southwestern School early in the year.[208] That year's Bahá'í Summer School was held at Bachman's Lake YMCA Camp Kiwanis in November,[209] in Dallas,[210] an event attended by soon-Baha’i Jack E. McCants.[citation needed] Meanwhile, in June, kin Stafford Warren Parker was named to US Army staff in France,[211] and Gorham herself sent an inquiry about seeking a PhD at the University of Oklahoma.[212]

A number of sources outline the Gorhams in 1959[6][213] - they were listed on 17th Street in Oklahoma City. As a member of the Bahá'í Faith, this year Gorham was elected as Secretary of the local Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Oklahoma City. She was also a teacher at F. D. Moon Junior High School and chair of its PTA, was also president of the Oklahoma City Urban League Guild, served as a journalist of the local chapter of Jack and Jill of America, and secretary of the 1959 year Southwestern Baha’i School committee.[214] On her application for admission in pursuit of a Ph.D. at Stanford in 1959, she listed references would come from Dr. Ralph D. Casey of the University of California, Mitche Charnley of the University of Minnesota, and Dr. Charles Swanson of Curtis Publishing Co. of Philadelphia, PA.[78]

Minnesota edit

Gorham was awarded a $5000 grant from Stanford University in April 1959.[215][6] The award listed her as one of 18 splitting $100k from the Fund for Adult Education for Stanford University.[216] Her profile listed her membership in the society for women in Journalism, Theta Sigma Phi, that she had been elected to membership in Nu chapter at the University of Minnesota, and that she was the first Negro student to be initiated into the organization.[6] During her fellowship year at Stanford, Mrs. Gorham would be accompanied by her ten-year-old son who would be enrolled as a pupil in the Stanford University Laboratory school.[6] The plans were to study at the Stanford Institute for Communications Research the school year of 1959-1960; returning eastward, she was covered as a guest speaker in Springfield, Illinois, in The Chicago Defender.[217] She called for adaptability to change so that the "spectacle of Little Rock" and other incidents would not happen. She and son Darryl were guests of Count & Mrs. Harvey, was given a tour of the city by the first Negro declarants of Springfield, Ed & Mrs. Adams, and had been on a recent trip to the Temple in Chicago as well as The Defender offices who included two of her former students - Lee Blackwell and Eddie Madison. In October, she was visible in St. Paul doing a book review for a club,[218] and that winter took part in a Bahá'í meeting for Maria Montana.[219] Back in the area, Gorham took graduate level classes from the Fall of 1959 into the second summer session of 1961.[220]

January 1960 she also writes from the Minneapolis/St. Paul area about local nursing home development,[221] and spoke at a sorority event,[222] and that spring she was elected to Minneapolis Local Spiritual Assembly.[223] Bertha Lee of Kansas City and grandson Parker visited Gorham and kin. Parker was an adjunct officer in the Air Force in France.[224] During 1960 she was present at a dress down of journalist student on the University of Minnesota campus.[225] In May Gorham was a staff writer for The Minnesota Daily Ivory Tower Edition,[226] and in July covered the NAACP convention for the ANP at Hotel Lowry as part of lifting Roy Wilkins rise to notability.[227] In September she covered Minneapolis youth issues and crime,[228] and was funded at the University of Minneapolis on a Ford Foundation fellowship, and that she was visible going to be joining Southern University at Baton Rouge where she would be supervising the publication of The Digest school newspaper. [229] Meanwhile in the fall she was named added to the Baháa'í national Interracial Teaching Committee,[230] and published an article set on a series of fictional stories people ranging from not prejudiced, who stands up to violent opposition, to fairly prejudiced cases of people who's biased conformist behaviors compromise too much.[231] In October 1961, she received word that some work she had done in French was used to satisfy her work towards a PhD.[232]

Louisiana, and Hawaii, and Oklahoma… edit

Around 1960-1962 Gorham was teacher at HBCU Southern University,[24] and listed on staff for next term 1960-1961.[233] She wrote in 1961 in the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis student newspaper The Minnesota Daily: Ivory Tower Edition already committed to moving to Baton Rouge. Part of the trip, she took pictures.[234] She wrote of dreaming of being able to travel to Africa, first to Ghana, but then seeing the Bahá'í development in Uganda. She sees the rising wave of independence in Africa and Ghana in particular "because it appears to me that the black man has a definite role to play in bringing about the ultimate elimination of all sorts of prejudices and because the drama of the elimination of prejudices based on race may well be played out in Africa.… Because I believe that mankind is evolutionary and created to carry forward an ever advancing civilization and that all men are parts of one human family that must eventually be unified on this planet, I enjoy a ring-side seat wherever men are playing out their roles in this great drama. The drama is thrilling whether men make themselves ridiculous as they resist the inevitable with name-calling, jeers, legal barriers and taxation without representation; or whether they ennoble themselves as they move forward to accept the challenge…. now that the giant is awake and throwing off his shackles, my interest is divided between Ghana and Uganda. In this new or added interest I am again motivated by the desires to have a ring-side seat at another performance in the great drama of human evolution. This week in Kampala, Uganda, on a wind-swept hill some distance from the center of town a beautifully-domed, nine-sided building is being dedicated. It is the Mother Temple, Mashriqu'l-Adhkar of the Baha'i World Faith in Africa. It symbolizes the spiritual eagerness, and the physical agility with which the once sleeping giant is assuming the responsibilities of a new era, responding to the demands of the position that he must occupy in the family of mankind.… When and if I ever go to Ghana, I don't expect to find the experience strange and exotic.… I think I'll feel as though I had never left home.…"[235] This article was the first mention of the Bahá'í Faith on campus in its newspaper since November 1957 when there was a Bahá'í Club meeting,[236] as there was after she left.[237]

In April 1961 she was visible working at the Southern University's Press Workshop.[238] This is also when the Gorhams divorce was finalized.[1][239] In May Gorham did a book review talk at the YWCA in Baton Rouge on "Man Under Stress",[240] and was still listed in May as a Minnesota University faculty and advisor, and credited with assisting the Southern University Digest.[241] At Southern University she was listed as a market counselor, named Market Research Editor for World Mutual Exchange, Inc.[242] and produced a report for them.[243]

By July Gorham was named as part of the Bahá'í National Spiritual Assembly's Public Information group.[244] Note this was five years before Salvatore Pelle would serve full time in this capacity. Gorham also put together an exhibit on the Faith hosted at the Library of the Southern University.[245] Also in July Gorham wrote an obituary and memorial article,[246] published a book review in New Orleans,[247] and another book review was published of Harris’ The Quest for Equality.[248]

In September, she attended a Kansas reunion of the staff of The Call,[249] and visited kin.[250]

The winter of 1961-2 Gorham was going to talk in Hawaii, officially representing the Bahá'ís, and it was widely covered in print media.[251] The conference ran from November 5 to 9. The first meeting was 7:30pm, at the campus YWCA at which Gorham was introduced. Panels were held noon, and 3:10pm, at the Hemingway Lounge and in George Hall across each of November 6 to 9. There was a dance on November 9. The panel of speakers also appeared on the program “Conversations” with Betty Smyser on KHVH-TV from 10:15pm on November 12.[252] Classroom visits were possible November 6- 9 from 8am to noon if teachers invited the panelists, and nightly in faculty homes November 6 to 7, as invited. It is known Gorham gave a talk "Democracy and Communism--a Baha'i View," to a history group, and "Baha'i--An Answer to Mental Stress," to a psychology seminar. The subject of her final talk for the public meeting was "Will Mankind Survive--How?”[253] Tuesday, November 7, Gorham and the panel appeared for “The Death of God” in the Hemingway Lounge; it was a “Music and Religion: Jazz, its Place in Religion Today” event. November 10 and 11 were holidays from the proceedings, and the “Conversations” show was on Sunday evening.[254] While there Gorham was also interviewed and commented on White culture in the mainland.[255] There was other coverage…,[256] Further coverage….[257] Betty Smyser was the first woman on Hawaii TV and a local pioneer in the talk news on tv.[258]

Back on the mainland, Gorham served on the 1961-2 Bahá'í National Interracial Service Committee, which held meetings in Nashville, Tennessee, arranging the Bahá'i community reaching out to African American leaders and developing a booklet "Fifty Years of Race Amity Among the Bahá'ís of the United States" by Allan Ward, hoping to use it in a Centennial Observance of the Emancipation Proclamation to be held in 1963. The National Spiritual Assembly also sponsored a "Short Course in Human Relation," at conferences held at the end of February which regularly presented a non-Bahá'í black speaker invited by local assemblies for these conferences.[259]

In January 1962, Gorham among faculty asking for Southern University to reconsider it's policy about students in protests.[260]

In 1962 Gorham had a poem published in Phylon, a semi-annual peer-reviewed academic journal covering culture in the United States from an African-American perspective:

Freedom[261]

This is freedom: a startled, fleeing rabbit,
The pure delight in a thing of beauty,
The yielding of discipline to force of habit;
The neglect by men of a thing called "duty”
To walk alone in majestic and wond'rous silence,
And, like Thoreau, philosophize and ponder
On the things that move ment to cruel violence,
While other phenomena excite only wonder.
This is freedom: a child's quick laughter,
A lilting dance, a bird's clear plaint,
The sudden surge to action that come after
The soft-spoken words of some soapbox saint;
Freedom is everything that oppressors abhor,

And one of life's few things worth fighting for.

In June she was visible visiting in Oklahoma City,[262] and gave a talk for the Race Unity Day observance of the community in Kansas City.[263] During 1962-3 she worked with the Opportunities Industrialization Center in Kansas City, Missouri, while being a teacher at Central High School.[1] That year Gorham also served on the South Central States Area Teaching Committee for Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska; they held more-than-monthly meetings and produced a monthly bulletin,[264] and was listed again for the spring of 1963.[265] That winter 1962-3 she was again visible visiting in Oklahoma & Kansas City,[266] and was back in April speaking on Witchita State University campus on “The Challenge of World Unity”.[267]

The summer of 1963, Gorham helped produce a St. Stephen Baptist Church history - she edited and wrote an introduction, and spoke at a June evening service of the church's Women’s Day program.[268] Gorham and son were noted living in Kansas City and visited in Minneapolis in July as guests of Mrs. Fern Hawkins,[269] and also doing studies for her PhD, and received at various luncheons as well as giving three Bahá'í firesides at a couple homes in August - Judy Phillips’, Mrs. John Hick - including comments and slides about activities in The South including challenges from the KKK.[270] An article of Gorham's from U.S. Negro World was published as a book, The Negro Press Review or The Negro press: past, present and future, was published,[271] made into a directory,[272] and became a report.[273]

Starting at Florida A&M University edit

The fall of 1963 Gorham started with the Florida Agriculture & Mechanical University, (FAMU),[24] as an associate professor.[1] When she moved there with her son, she was listed as an isolated member of the religion;[274] there was no Bahá'´í spiritual assembly. The closest one was probably Duval County on the Atlantic coast (Jacksonville.)[275] She did register as a group,[276] but they also had no Center - it’s first came in 1997.[277] One of her first public actions for the University was as Director of FAMU Public Relations, where she published information on disciplinary actions the university took against more than a hundred students involved in protests with judgments leveled by court actions.[278] In November she was still noted working with Set-Up magazine out of St. Louis.[279]

January 1964 FAMU staff, including Gorham and students, led by the marching band, went on a trip to Nassau welcomed by the Kiwanis Club and a local club of citizen leaders and were received by the Governor at the state mansion, among other receptions that were held.[280] In March, she was the publicity coordinator and MC of the 14th FAMU Interscholastic Press Workshop Conference.[281] That September Gorham suffered a household robery.[282] In November Gorham gave a talk for American Education Week in Panama City.[283]

January 1965 Gorham was publicity director during the visit of Nat and Julian Adderly, famous FAMU alumni musicians.[284] In her first documented appearance in Bahá'í circumstances in Tallahassee thus far specified, in Spring 1965 Gorham introduced Terah Cowart Smith at an event in Tallahassee at a Jack and Jill of America meeting at FAMU.[285] There was also a social reception among women FAMU leadership in July,[286] and she was a cosigner of plea to stop pool segregation in the city.[287]

It is also known that Gorham sent FAMU students with journalism interests to work with The Capital Outlook newspaper as well as contributed articles of her own, and acted as editor sometimes. Some other mentions are:[288]

  • Gorham was the Wedding Coordinator for Steve and Nickie Beasley during their July 1965.[citation needed]
  • Sharon Woodson-Bryant was recommended by Gorham for a Kellogg grant when she was granted and taught at FAMU and was an owner of The Capital Outlook though the date is not known.[citation needed]

That July, scholarly commentary of Gorham began to appear, starting with an early Who's Who listing of her at FAMU.[289] The same month, Gorham received a thank you from FAMU Dean Mahlon Rhaney for specing out two advanced undergraduate classes, and six in total, on journalism for the university when that was not her job but the need was urgent.[290] In November, Gorham gave a talk at the Junior College for Education Week.[291]

In March 1966, Gorham introduced the speaker for Negro History Week in Tallahassee,[292] and represented University of Minnesota at the inauguration of Florida State University(FSU) president John Champion.[293] In April Gorham was among the representatives at a regional conference of the Public Relations Association,[294] and co-chaired the FAMU Hospital conference.[295] In June there was coverage of expanding journalism classes at FAMU,[296] and Gorham was promoted to full-time staff.[297] And son Darryl T. Gorham was given an award too.[298] Gorham attended her Class of 1931 reunion for her Sumner High School in July.[299] In September Gorham spoke for World Peace Day,[300] and was listed as a student advisor, and the faculty leader with editors of student press at association conference,[301] and back to be part of Jack and Jill observance of UN Day,[302] where she and son were part of a panel of the Bahá'ís,[303] and Gorham was elected president of Friends of FAMU Hospital.[304] In November Gorham assisted the LeMoyne Art Gallery observance of UN Day,[305] and chaired a Jack and Jill UN Tea.[306] That December, Gorham was part of a panel talk for Human Rights Day.[307]

January 1967 Gorham was listed as an officer in Delta Kappa Alpha Sorority chapter,[308] and in February Darryl gave a talk on campus,[309] and for the Unitarian Universalists.[310] and a couple weeks later Gorham gave a talk at a meeting for the Bahá'í community,[311] followed by a talk by her son Darryl Gorham in early March.[312] That same day, Gorham portrayed the Fast in an article published in The Tallahassee Democrat.[313] A week later, Gorham gave a talk at a meeting entitled "The Veils That Cloud Men's Vision",[314] followed by another one "The 124th Year of the New Age is Here!”.[315]

In June, Gorham represented the Friends of FAMU Hospital, making a formal request that staff be retained under new county management,[316] and for July she was asked to preside at the town's Human Relations Council by its president.[317] In October Gorham was among UNA attendees of the observance of UN Week.[318] In November David West was noted in Tallahassee for a World Peace Day.[319] In December, Gorham was mentioned amid editorship strife at FAMU.[320]

January 20, 1968, there was a State Bahá'í Youth Conference in Tallahassee, Florida who elected a council that was given the task of setting the April Florida Bahá'í Spring Institute. Some 70 attended the January integrated, mostly college-aged, youth conference and also led some of theing one on "Blac classes, includk Power.” Recreation for the conference included areas at FSU. It is unstated if the Gorhams went.[321] In February Gorham received a $500 for FAMU journalism from Inez Kaiser, president of Inez Kaiser and Associates of Kansas City, Missouri, from Seven-Up Company of St. Louis, during the Interscholastic Press Workshop at FAMU creating the "Thelma Thurston Gorham Scholarship”.[322] There was a Race Unity observance in Tallahassee in the summer of 1968.[323] However Gorham attended a Bahá'í summer school near Duluth,[324] and around 1968-71, Gorham was at the University of Minnesota working on her PhD at least part of the time.[1] By November, she had written her son that she took a job with the Twin Cities Opportunities Industrialization Center (TCOIC) because she feared it closing, suited her skillset, and that its work was highly needed, closing saying "Take care of yourself and be a good Baha'i youth."[325] Meanwhile back in Tallahassee there was an Birth of Bahá'u'lláh observance.[326] November was also a transition to Gorham starting at the TCOIC.[327] However she did attend the Tennessee state Bahá'í convention in December[328] In Spring 1969 there was a Bahá'í conference at FAMU.[329] She was praised for her work.[330]

Back in Tallahassee, a September Race Unity observance was held again.[331] Tallahassee had not yet achieved assembly status.[332] That December there was a Human Rights Day panel including Darryl Gorham.[333] She applied for a passport listing her address in Minneapolis in 1970 and including an intention to travel into some African countries,[239] and had materials of a guided tour.[334] At the time, the War of Attrition of was ending between Egypt and Israel so any plans of pilgrimage would have been in limbo. While Gorham was away, the first Bahá'í Local Spiritual Assembly of Tallahassee was elected in 1970.[335] Around this time that Assembly produced a prayer book.[336] That summer, Gorham joined the Viking Chapter of the American Business Women's Association while being listed as executive director of Twin Cities Opportunities Industrialization Center in Minneapolis, pursuing her doctorate and working as a faculty of the University of Minnesota.[337] Her son married in July too.[338] In October a conference on promoting the religion was held in Gainesville and they chose Tallahassee for a project.[339]

Pictures of her attending Bahá'í winter school in the Wisconsin-Minnesota area, dated January 1971.[340] "It's Just the Beginning" was on a tv station in Tallahassee in March 1971.[341] However, she was asked to resign from TCOIC. In private there were accusations of a senior colleague's inappropriate behavior, but demands were made for her immediate resignation by February, 1971, a process completed my early May,[342] though financial closure was pending into June.[343] Publicly, that spring Gorham was listed as a guest lecturer with the Comparative Religions of the Twenthieth Century by Dr. Henry Allen at the Community School of Jewish Studies in Minneapolis, MN.[344] That April, a regional Bahá'í summer school was held in Tallahassee with Robert Entzminger as registrar.[345] There is mention that Gorham undertook a Bahá'í pilgrimage by the later 1971.[346] Pictures of hers from Jerusalem and Haifa and other sites still exist, including the Shrine of the Bab.[347] Probably on the way back, she also stopped to see the Bahá'í Temple in Frankfurt, Germany,[348] and in London, UK.[349] At some unknown date, perhaps part of the same travel plans, she stopped to see the Wilmette Bahá'í House of Worship.[350] There is also another undated trip, possibly around this decade to Green Acre Bahá'í School of which pictures survive including several with Stanwood Cobb as a very elderly man.[351] In September, she suffered a car accident and spent a month in a hospital before returning to FAMU.[352] Pictures of her attending Bahá'í winter school the end of 1971 into January 1972 in Florida.[353]

Returning to Tallahassee edit

When Gorham returned to Tallahassee by spring 1972, she was elected to the assembly,[354] and Gorham spoke at and hosted the community observance of the Martyrdom of the Báb.[355] In September Gorham gave a talk for the Tallahassee Chapter of American Business Women's Association,[356] and Gorham was again mentioned in several Who's Who reviews.[357] Come January 1973, Gorham was named secretary of the Tallahassee Spiritual Assembly,[358] though also as a jeopardized assembly with less than nine members.[359] In March Gorham gave a talk for the local Urban League.[360] The Assembly was preserved and Gorham was elected vice-chair.[361] Glenford Mitchell, acting as secretary of the National Spiritual Assembly, sent a letter of appreciation for Gorham's assistance over the previous year on the Public Information Committee and its being absorbed into the National Bahá'í Information Committee.[362] The Secretary of Assembly was Gayle Keller.[363] In December, Gorham was in a car accident at Orange St and Wahnish St.,[364] which was immediately outside Bethel AME Church where her mother was a member.[365]

In February 1974 Gorham gave a talk at FAMU with slides of her visit to Africa and her pilgrimage.[366] Gorham was again elected vice-chair of the assembly.[367]

Though there was no publicity at the time, in 1974 Gorham sued FAMU to be head of the new journalism department she had long worked to build.[368] There was some feedback that Gorham could initiate the program, but a white man should be hired with a PhD to chair the new department[369] by a reviewer at the state level,[370] and there was mention she was also still working on her PhD on the life and career of Thurgood Marshall.[371] Gorham initiated a complaint and also prepared a letter to the Regional Civil Rights Director of the Federal Department of Health, Education and Welfare.[372] Gorham also sought other positions in 1974: a Kansas City school system application,[373] a different position at FAMU,[374] an application to work with the state Extension Service.[375] and a Florida State University though no opening existed, though she was acknowledged as "highly desirable" and "well qualified".[376] That summer she sent a notice to FAMU professors of an imminent academic publication of hers,[377] and her son wrote in sympathy of her bad treatment in their views.[378] Meanwhile that fall Gorham was among the attendees at St. Louis National Bahá'í Conference in August,[379] and mentioned with the Bahá'ís holding a World Peace Day panel with Gorham in mid-September, back from the St. Louis Conference.[380] Gorham wrote a chapter entitled "The Black Press and Pressure Groups" in published in Perspectives of the Black Press by Henry LaBrie, III. The text was used in some college classes. A core statement of hers is that "No matter how one interprets or illustrates the interactions of the black media and its personnel with pressures in their environment, it is clear beyond the shadow of a doubt that the black press and black newsmen are sources of control as well as subjects of control.”[381] It was also mistakenly said she finished her PhD in 1971 from University of Minnesota. Gorham kept a newspaper clipping describing the Leon County observance of the Birth of the Báb from October 1974,[382] and was in a Church Women United meeting included Bahá'ís Georgia Allen and herself (who was there representing the Urban League.)[383] In November Gorham helped with the observance of Birth of Bahá'u'lláh at the Talley home.[384] And in December Gorham was helping with the Human Relations Council observance of Human Rights Day.[385]

A student of Gorham made some news in March 1975,[386] and Gorham arranged the internship of a student with the Dept of Commerce New Bureau in Tallahassee.[387] Gorham was also elected to the Bahá'í assembly,[388] and she spoke for the Declaration of the Báb.[389] In August Gorham among workshop presenters at the Weights and Measures Conference in Tallahassee,[390] and listed among the faculty of the new FAMU Journalism Department that fall.[391] Gorham was asked to be the convening chair of the district convention at which a delegate is elected to go to the national convention.[392] Come December Gorham was mentioned among the Bahá'í meetings for Human Rights Day,[393] and with an Assembly sponsored social reception who and wnet on to a project in nearby Quincy.[394]

For a US Bicentennial review Gorham forecast for herself both more activity and less prominence as she focused on publishing articles.[395] A couple weeks later she was at the St. James Missionary Baptists Church talking on "Meeting Some of the Challenges of the International Women's Year" for the Women in Action for Christ group,[396] and elected to the Spiritual Assembly too.[397] In September Gorham gave a talk at the FSU Bahá'í Club's observance of World Peace Day,[398] and received a ballot for a by-election for the Tallahassee Spiritual Assembly.[399] The Tallahassee Bahá'ís hosted the northern most of the three regions of that year's district conventions in Florida.[400] She also received a thank you letter from the Local Assembly of Gainesville for assisting in their efforts to present the religion to the public some time before November[401] and a department head at Jacksonville Community College was seeking permission for a presentation on the Bahá'ís of which Gorham was listed as one of the faculty for the fall class and would be attempting to create a film recording of the event in her class.[402]

In March 1977 she was visible teaching media classes at FAMU,[403] at least some of which focused on women,[404] and a regional Bahá'í conference included Gorham.[405] The following April, a septuagenarian made the news in Gorham's journalism class.[406] That June, her mother, Bertha Lee, died while living with Thelma and sister Erma.[365][407] In June Gorham was officially offered an associate professorship in the new department,[408] a colleague of Gorham was mentioned as a columnist,[409] and in July, Gorham was noted with the journalism department.[410] She was given a paid-year off, 1977-1978, to work on her PhD.[411]

In February 1978 Gorham gave a workshop at FAMU on careers.[412] This month she also got news that many of her Minnesota University credits had been accepted for her PhD degree progress at Florida State University.[413] In May Gorham hosted the radio program presenting Ann Schoonmaker on the Cavalcade radio show for the regional Bahá'í Women's Conference at Florida State University the week preceding the Declaration of the Bab.[414] Print coverage of the conference reached from Tallahassee to Georgia.[415] Gorham also appeared for a talk on "Wommen in Communications" with an FSU doctoral student.[416] FAMU and FSU were both colleges with known Bahá'í clubs that year.[417] Gorham was signed up for two graduate-level courses with Florida State for the summer of 1978.[418]

In 1979-1980 her salary was $17,899.[419] In May, an update on Gorham's progress on her PhD was circulated among relevant staff by Dr. Tom W. Hoffer of Florida State Univerity.[420] In June, Gorham again represented the University of Minnesota at an FSU inauguration.[421] That fall the Thelma Thurston Gorham Merit Award for Achievement was established by the FAMU Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists of the Department of Journalism, and the first award was given to student Erroll Brown, FAMU Student Government President.[422] In November, Gorham spoke on the UN-designated and Bahá'í supported International Year of the Child.[423]

In March 1980, the Tallahassee Spiritual Assembly advertised for pioneers.[424] In April Gorham was interviewed on TV11,[425] and she was part of the new Zonta International chapter in town.[426] She was again interviewed in September,[427] and an article of her own was published in March 1981 in The Tallahassee Democrat.[428] A couple weeks later Gorham's article profiling the Bahá'ís was published, including the Bahá'ís of Tallahassee, Leon County, Quincy, Havana, Monticello, and Perry, who together held Naw Ruz: "The Baha'is… believe that Baha'u'llah developed a religious system that will enable them to overcome their inbred divisiveness and achieve a long-awaited unity and harmony of purpose - the establishment of the kingdom of God on Earth."[429] It was also mentioned that Adelbert C. Jones of FAMU was also a Bahá'í since 1971.

Gorham wrote another article for the Democrat,[430] and her work on women's classes at FAMU also made the news.[431] This year, Gorham was elected as chair of the Tallahassee Assembly,[432] appointed as an assistant to the Auxiliary Board for the region operating under Ben Levy, who was operating under Counselors Sarah Pereira and Velma Sherrill in June, wrote an update to Levy about community activities,[433] and she was on a panel at the National Newspaper Publisher's Association meeting in July.[434] In August, Gorham was mentioned as presenting at a conference in her position as an assistant to the Auxiliary Board.[435]

There is mention of, but lack of access to, a series of articles Gorham did for September 24-30, and December 10-16, 1981, entitled “Universal Truths,” on religion and faith.[288]

In February 1982, Gorham was listed part of a fireside series of Bahá'í informational meetings at FAMU.[436] In April FAMU received word that it's new Print Journalism, Broadcast Journalism and Public Relations programs for the Department of Mass Communications, of which Gorham had been a part, and been approved by the Accreditation Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communication(ACEJMC) - the first HBCU to receive this accreditation.[437] In May she was a cosigner on the Equal Rights Amendment(ERA) support letter published by The Tallahassee Democrat.[438] In about May, the Minsiterial Alliance of Tallahassee wrote a resolution on the plight of the Bahá'ís in Iran,[439][440] though no public mention has been found locally. In July Darryl was honored at the Bosses Appreciation Day by the Department of Community Improvement of the City government. Gorham was elected to report for the Tallahassee Drifters, Inc.[441] In October Gorham helped aa teacher get a grant,[442] and again FAMU was one of the universities with a Bahá'í club.[443]

In January 1983, she complained about her salary,[444] after external comments in 1982 that her salary was too low.[419] This resulted in the highest raise in the department of journalism for that year and resulting in a 1983-1984 school year salary of $28,562.[419] In May, Gorham served in a county 4-H fair as a judge.[445] In June, Gorham wrote a letter to editor on the persecution of Bahá'ís in Iran,[446] as well as part of interviews about barrier at FAMU for students like processing financial aid.[447] This year Gorham was elected vice-chair of Tallahassee Assembly.[448] In August, she wrote again on persecution in Iran, remarking on the deaths of teenage girl Bahá'ís in Iran "resulting from the systematic and officially sanctioned persecution of the Baha'i religious minority in Iran" and that this had made a variety of media coverage including WFSU-TV. "Perhaps we can refuse to remain wrapped in silence, ignorant or unaware of what could happen elsewhere."[449] In September, she was listed with Bahá'í Club meetings and as their contact point.[450]

In January 1984, Gorham was on a Tony Brown panel discussion for WFSY.[451] In February, entering her thirtieth year as a member of the Bahá'í Faith, Gorham gave a talk at FAMU entitled "An African-American View of the Baha'i Faith”.[452] In September, there was a Bahá'í float was in a spring parade in Tallahassee.[453] In October, Gorham presented a press workshop at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.[454] Gorham wrote a summary of the Bahá'í wedding of Hilary Morris and Nasreen Akhtar-Khavari,[455] which also took place in October.[456]

Elder edit

For 1984-5, her university salary was $28,562, and she was given a raise for 1985-6 to $30,690,[457] which may have included a raise based on a salary comparison she performed against other staff.[458][419] She also passed her PhD preliminary exams in 1984.[459] Starting 1985 Gorham began to be sought out to comment on topics, on more boards, while also continuing as before giving talks and noted in various venues. In February 1985, Gorham was quoted commenting on the state of journalism,[460] and on past FAMU presidents.[461] In March Gorham consulted with regional press institute conference.[462] In April Gorham joined the governing directors of the Miss Collegiate Black American Pageant.[463] That year FAMU was the host of the regional Bahá'í district convention to elect a delegate to the next National Bahá'í Convention.[464] In November Gorham was mentioned helping a writer of novel.[465] Opening January 1986 through its first three editions, Gorham was on the editorial board of American Journalism.[466] In April Gorham was added to the inaugural Black Communicators Hall of Fame,[467] with that being heralded in Miami too.[468] A study on The Oklahoma Eagle included interviews of Gorham in 1986 was later published.[469] In September Gorham was asked to comment on FAMU history,[470] and she worked with the local Urban League magazine in early 1987.[471] In June she was asked by the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Gainsville to assist in their efforts to reach the local African American community.[472] In August, she was among the presenters during a local teaching conference designed to look at ways to promulgate the religion in the area in August.[473] In late 1987 the Tallahassee Bahá'ís gave the Promise of World Peace to Jack McLean, Tallahassee Mayor, and on December 10 the Mayor and city council proclaimed Human Rights Day.[474] That summer, she attended a Florida Folk Heritage Award ceremony by the state Bureau of Florida Folklife Programs, and as a result, was invited to a 3 day state Folklore Society Festival and a special reception they held.[475]

In March 1988 Gorham agreed to co-represent the Division of Journalism at the April FAMU Campus honors banquet.[476] That October Gorham gave a FAMU workshop on classroom stress,[477] and was asked to comment on the language “African American” vs "black" - she preferred "African American".[478]

In February 1989, Gorham was asked to be a judge for an oratorial contest for Black History Month.[479] In March, Gorham was among the nominations for Women in Communications Inc. Spotlight Award,[480] and in April, she was invited to the FAMU Presidential Scholars Association reception and fundraiser.[481] She was also the source for a newspaper article on the FAMU marching band appearing in France for their Bicentennial.[482] The five year sunset-time of her PhD prelimary test passes had lapsed without enough progress towards her degree so further work would require passing a new set of preliminary tests.[459] In August, Gorham received a by-election call from the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Tallahassee.[483] In September, Gorham was co-presenter at FAMU on the Bahá'ís,[484] listed with her own talk, and the Bahá'í club contact point.[485] In November she spoke for the Bahá'í observance of the Birth of Bahá'u'lláh at a park and at FAMU.[486] By then she was also a paid-up life member of the NAACP, and a member of the Honors Committee for the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Black Educationa Fund.[487]

In 1990 Gorham was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Women in Communication, Inc, what was once Theta Sigma Phi, the honors sorority of women journalists, which had asked her to leave after adopting a racist amendment in its charter document banning African Americans. The ban was lifted later, and after 12 years, she rejoined the organization. In her 1945 coverage of the formation of the United Nations was had signed on with eight newspapers to cover the event. Her piece for The Crisis about venereal disease at Fort Wachuca caused ire with the Fort command. She remembered her frustration at the unbalanced coverage and tone of coverage about blacks in Kansas when she was growing up. She was working on a book about African American journalists and publishers.[488] She also won the 1990-1991 NOW Black Woman Award by the 34th National Drifter Convention "to typify the versatility, courage and strength of a special kind of woman," with reviews of her local chapter activity, national organization actions, local community, personal and professional life, and hobbies and avocations.[489] She was also WTXL-TV's "Citizen of the Week".[490] The 1990 Bahá'í District Convention in Tallahassee was held at FSU.[491]

In early 1991, Gorham agreed to serve as a judge in reading papers for the local chapter of the NAACP,[492] and that year Gorham's sister also died in her home.[493]

Gorham was given another profile in The Florida Flambeau in October 1991. A journalist since the 1930s, editor of many publications, children's book author, high school teacher, and public information officer. Associate editor Lauren Lustig called her "popular and nurturing" at FAMU. "I have a number of gigs I have not played." She still hoped to finish her PhD on Thurgood Marshall and worked with him at an NAACP office in the 1940s. She had more than 30 plaques on her office wall in 1991. She was known to fill out application forms and put "human" when asked for race. "God, whomever he or she may be, only made one race.” She was one of three black women on campus that year and the only one studying journalism though there were other white women. Her first journalism job with the Kansas City Call was as a police reporter and rose to being an editor while there. She covered the UN during President Roosevelt's attendance mostly on Third World policies for 8 newspapers in the 1950s. Her directoriship of Opportunities Industrialization Center brought people into vocation and academic work - one rose to being a bank executive. Gorham believed Reagan and Bush (W) should have been impeached but had given up on politics years earlier when she ran for Kansas City Board of Educaiton. Gorham was registered as independent (unaffiliated), regular voted, felt Justice Thomas was not qualified and called Anita Hill "weak"; "Both were used by the white establishment."[33]

Posthumously edit

Died edit

Gorham was found dead January 7, 1992, after missing two classes at the beginning of her January classes at FAMU.[494] Police officers broken into the house to find her, found her dead in her bedroom of natural causes, while under doctor's care for a heart problem, dead for several days. She was last seen December 31, (also the date of a Feast of the Bahá'í community.) FAMU held a memorial January 9 at the Winterwood Theatre.[495]

Obituaries of Gorham began to be posted, including notices of twin memorials - at the Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, and of the Bahá'ís and Alpha Kappa Alpha at the Funeral Home.[496] "Any Florida A&M University journalism student or teacher will recognize [the words] 'God didn't make black and white people. God made just one race, the human race." that often came up in conversation with Thelma Thurston Gorham. They give a sense of the wisdom Gorham gained from her years of struggling to make a name for herself in the field of journalism when the idea of a female African-American reporter was unheard of."[497]

Her final interview back from October was published a couple days later in The Florida Flambeau. It noted she was the first woman awardee of the Lifetime Career Achievement Award by the local chapter of Women in Communications, Inc., and teacher of the year 1990-91. Police officers broke into the house to find her, found her dead in her bedroom of natural causes, while under doctor's care for a heart problem, already dead for several days. She was last seen December 31, also the date of a Feast of the Bahá'í community. FAMU held a memorial January 9 at the Winterwood Theatre.[495] She was listed in The American Bahá'í back dating her death to January 1.[498] Her grave is in the Southside Cemetery Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida,[499] with the Bethel Missionary Baptist Church officiating.[1] At time the Bahá'í community had no Center - it’s first came in 1997,[277] around which the regional Baha’i population was 68 across Tallahassee, Leon County, and nearby Havana.[500]

Gorham would have suffered through Hurricanes Dora(1964), Alma(1966), Agnes (1972), Kate (1985).[501]

Memorials edit

Memorials and testimonials began to appear quickly from local journalists and institutions.[502] Arthur Crowell, then of Hamden, Connecticut, said of Gorham that she "singlehandedly developed the journalism curriculum to train - and more, motivate - FAMU students."[503] FAMU gave a posthumous honorary doctorate to Gorham in April,[504] as well as a career Meritorious Achievement Award.[505] A scholarship in her name was established in June,[506] and a nonprofit.[507]

Other remembrances were published by further journalists across the South in the 1990s and on into the early 2000s.[508] Around 2004 news began to be circulated about the FAMU Journalism and Mass Media Department getting its own building initially named after Gorham about which there was some contrasting opinions.[509] Then she was mentioned in local Black History Month events.[510] The FAMU Journalism and Mass Media's Alumni Achievement Award in Gorham's name began to be given from 1995 and continues through 2023.[511][512]

While Gorham had struggled for recognition and the opportunity for leadership in her later decades of academic service, including unheard of raises in her salary when external interests reviewed her situation, Gorham had been praised for her decades in actual newspaper editorialship. Gorham's leading of the Apache Sentinel in the 1940s was the stand-out example given by Carlotta Bass, editor-publisher of The California Eagle: "The most radical changes in Negro journalism came about during World War II.… for the first time in history a Negro woman was editor of an Army newspaper…."[65] Her 1954 editorial series "How Ready Are We for Integration" was the reason for an award from the National Conference of Christians and Jews for Brotherhood Week of February 1955 was given to her newspaper.[149][6] In 1961-2 Gorham was named as part of the Bahá'í National Spiritual Assembly's first Public Information group,[244] and officially represented the Bahá'ís of the United States at a university hosted conference amidst a panel,[251] who also appeared[252] on a pioneering news program co-hosted by a woman journalist.[258] In the 1970s, though not named as leader, she helped found the first journalism program at FAMU and it went on to be the first HBCU to receive accreditation from the Council on Education in Journalism and Mass Communication's committee for accreditation (ACEJMC).[437] Whatever the Gale group had in mind, their biography notes: "Up until the early 1980s, she was the most exciting black female journalist in the country." and "By the early 1980s she was still listed as one of only fifteen black women to finish (their education attaining degrees) from major universities belonging to the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism."[513] She was posthumously granted the PhD that is most often talked about as to why she was not named head of the new FAMU school that included journalism,[504] as well as a career Meritorious Achievement Award.[505]

From a Baha'i perspective, her Tallahassee Bahá'í community went from her as the isolated adult in the capital of Florida, to the milestones of an assembly, albeit first elected without her living there, and then rising to hosting a Center, and ongoing activities. In some fashion, if the worldwide community was growing,[514] it would have grown without her. Yet it did, and with her. In Velda Piff Metelmann's 1997 biography Lua Getsinger, she details that there was a practice in the era around 1915 of naming “mothers” of regions and communities, sporadically done in other times, though this practice generally ended.[515][516] It may be that Gorham deserves this title "mother" for the Tallahassee Bahá'í community; that's up to them.

Estate edit

There was an Estate auction of her materials announced in July 2002,[517] which was acquired as the Gorham Collection at Museum in Library of Tallahassee Community College (TCC).[518]

Her son died October 22, 2009, and her granddaughter pre-deceased him, between 1992 and 2009.[519]

On what would have been her 100th birthday, the Bahá'ís of Tallahassee held a memorial with presenters Keith Miles, FAMU radio station manager, and James Hawkins, Dean of Journalism and Mass Media at FAMU.[520]

Bibliography edit

Unpublished and undated edit

  • Thelma T. Gorham (2024), Studies in Androgyny: Profiles of Four Black Women in the Mass Media, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library
  • Thelma T. Gorham (2024), Pressure Groups and the Black Press, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library

Further reading edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Joan C. Elliott (1996). "Thelma Thurston Gorham". In Smith, Jessie Carney; Phelps, Shirelle (eds.). Notable Black American Women. Vol. 2. Detroit: Gale Research. pp. 251–3. ISBN 9780810391772. OCLC 24468213.
  2. ^ a b c "Thelma Thurston, United States Census". FamilySearch.org. April 2, 1940. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.(registration required)
  3. ^ Gotham, Kevin Fox (2003). "Missed Opportunities, Enduring Legacies - School Segregation and Desegregation in Kansas City, Missouri". American Studies. 43 (2): 7–8. ISSN 0026-3079. OCLC 5544991866.
  4. ^ "Thelma M Thurston, United States Census, 1920". FamilySearch.org. Jan 12, 1920. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.(registration required)
  5. ^ a b c d e f Beth Barber (Feb 8, 1976). "Thelma Gorham is quiet black leader". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. pp. 49, 53. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "$100,000 in fellowships awarded to 18". Omaha Star. Omaha, Nebraska. Apr 3, 1959. pp. 1 2. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  7. ^ a b c "Thelma T Gorham Collection". TCC Riley Museum Archive. Sep 15, 2022. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  8. ^ David Sachs; George Erlich (1996). "Sumner Academy of Arts and Sciences". Society of Architectural Historian. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  9. ^ "Miss Scottie P. Davis…". The Kansas City American. Kansas City, Missouri. Dec 31, 1931. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  10. ^ "Scholastic Sorority invites 87 freshmen - Sigma Epsilon Sigma plans annual dinner". The Minnesota Daily. Minneapolis, MN. November 24, 1931. pp. 1, 2. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  11. ^ "Bi-Racial Group will meet at Shevlin Today". The Minnesota Daily. Minneapolis, MN. February 18, 1932. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  12. ^ "Coeds asked to aide in social services - YWCA issues request for settlement workers". The Minnesota Daily. University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. October 28, 1932. p. 8. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  13. ^ "Sunday, January 8th…". Twin-City Herald. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Jan 14, 1933. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  14. ^ "Gardner Appoints Advisory Council for Frosh(sic) Week". The Minnesota Daily. University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. June 6, 1933. pp. 1, 3. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  15. ^ "Kansas City Society; Charles Green Host to visitor in City". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Sep 22, 1933. p. 7. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  16. ^ Thelma Rea Thurston (Nov 24, 1933). "The Basic Vent; Four Cinquains". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. p. 7. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  17. ^ "We met sholarly Miss…". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Jul 20, 1934. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  18. ^ "Honorary Scholastic Sorority Issues Invitations to Banquet; Members of the Theta Sigma Phi…". The Minnesota Daily. University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. December 1, 1934. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  19. ^ "Negro Writer to talk today at Convocation". The Minnesota Daily. University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. January 31, 1935. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  20. ^ Thelma Rae Thurston (Feb 8, 1935). "Weldon Johnson urges Minnesota Anti-Lynching Law". Minneapolis Spokesman. Minneapolis, Minnesota. pp. 3(1), 4(2). Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  21. ^ "Purpose: 'To chat and nibble instead of scribble'". The Minnesota Daily. University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. May 23, 1935. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  22. ^ "Sorority hears Social Worker". Minneapolis Spokesman. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Feb 15, 1935. p. 2. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  23. ^ "AKA's annual affair to have French motif". Minneapolis Spokesman. Minneapolis, Minnesota. May 10, 1935. p. 2. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Lionel C. Barrow Jr (Apr 3, 2013) [2004]. "The role of minority women in the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication from 1968 to 2001". In Ramona R. Rush; Carol E. Oukrop; Pamela J. Creedon (eds.). Seeking Equity for Women in Journalism and Mass Communication Education: A 30-year Update (reprint ed.). Taylor & Francis. doi:10.4324/9781410610799-4. ISBN 9781135623999.
  25. ^ a b c d e Snorgrass, William (1982). "Pioneer Black Women Journalists from the 1850s to the 1950s". The Western Journal of Black Studies. 6 (3). Pullman, WA: Proquest: 155. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.
  26. ^ Mary A. Jones (Jun 21, 1935). "St. Paul Society News; Due to an oversight,…". Minneapolis Spokesman. Minneapolis, Minnesota. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  27. ^ "Many Grads get Journalism Jobs". The Minnesota Daily. University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. October 4, 1935. p. 2. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  28. ^ For more on the Kansas City Call, see: "KC Is Home To One Of The Oldest And Most Respected Black Newspapers In America". Kansas City Magazine. Kansas City. April 4, 2019. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.
  29. ^ "Scenes hereabouts". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Nov 29, 1935. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  30. ^ * "Start plans for 1938 fashion revue". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Feb 18, 1938. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  31. ^ "Group hears Thelma Thurston". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Mar 31, 1939. p. 8. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  32. ^ * "Voters to the Polls Tuesday; Two Race Candidates on ticket; Negro vote may decide election in some cases". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Mar 31, 1939. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  33. ^ a b Lauren V. Lustig (Oct 24, 1991). "A woman of many firsts, pioneer journalists isn't finished yet". Florida Flambeau. Tallahassee, Florida. pp. 1, 7. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  34. ^ * "Spirit of Old Mexico to be theme of Monravian's Show on March 31st". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Mar 24, 1939. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  35. ^ "Kansas Club Women talk with Mrs. Bethune". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. May 12, 1939. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  36. ^ "Complete separate unit for Negroes nears completion". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Nov 3, 1939. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  37. ^ "K C Women perfect Civic Organization". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Nov 10, 1939. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  38. ^ "E. Shannon is Wyandotte County young GOP head". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Dec 22, 1939. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  39. ^ "The Civil Rights Act of 1964: A Long Struggle for Freedom". Library of Congress. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.
  40. ^ a b Elizabeth Galbreath (Dec 19, 1942). "TypoVision". The Chicago Defender, (National edition). Chicago, IL. pp. 17–18.
  41. ^ R. B. Brown (Oct 4, 1940). "Commissioners fail to name Negros on Draft Board". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  42. ^ "Local School News; Sumner High". Plaindealer. Kansas City, Kansas. Feb 28, 1941. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  43. ^ a b c Thelma Thurston Gorham (Jan 2, 1943). "Requisites for wife of a man in service". The Pittsburgh Courier. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. p. 10. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  44. ^ "Thelma Thurston to Marry". St. Paul Recorder. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Aug 29, 1941. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.
  45. ^ "Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thurston…". Minneapolis Spokesman. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Sep 12, 1941. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  46. ^ a b c d "Visits parents". The Omaha Star. Omaha, Nebraska. Jan 15, 1943. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  47. ^ * "Staff Members named at Hampton". Richmond Times Dispatch. Richmond, Virginia. Nov 19, 1941. p. 8. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
    • "Hampton Names Four to Staff". The Pittsburgh Courier. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Nov 22, 1941. p. 24. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  48. ^ a b c "Gives Up Job". Jackson Advocate. Jackson, Mississippi. Jun 6, 1942. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  49. ^ Thelma Rae Thurston (Dec 13, 1941). "Revenge Isn't Sweet". The Pittsburgh Courier. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. p. 13. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  50. ^ Thelma Rea Thurston (Apr 25, 1942). "News of Theatres; Deep River Boys Tell Their Story". Jackson Advocate. Jackson, Mississippi. p. 8. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via GenealogyBank.com.
  51. ^ Thelma Thurston Gorham (January 16, 1961). "An American Negro explains why she is going to Ghana". The Minnesota Daily: Ivory Tower Edition. Minneapolis, MN. pp. 8–9, 13. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via University of Minnesota.
  52. ^ Thelma Rae Thurston (Jun 27, 1942). "Courier Verse". The Pittsburgh Courier. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. p. 11. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  53. ^ Elizabeth Galbreath (Dec 19, 1942). "TypoVision". The Chicago Defender, (National edition). Chicago, IL. pp. 17–18.
  54. ^ Thelma Thurston Gorham (Feb 27, 1943). "Give Points On Visits To Soldiers". The Chicago Defender (National edition). Chicago, IL. p. 16.
  55. ^ * Thelma Thurston Gorham (Jan 1943). Roy Wilkins (ed.). "Negro Army Wives". The Crisis. Vol. 50, no. 1. pp. 41–2. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  56. ^ * Gorham, Thelma Thurston (1999). "Negro Army Wives (reprinted from The Crisis, January 1943)". In Maureen Honey (ed.). Bitter fruit: African American women in World War II. University of Missouri Press. pp. 186–190. ISBN 0826212425.
  57. ^ Weatherford, Doris (2010). "Landladies". American Women During World War II: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge Press. p. 258. ISBN 0203870662. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.
  58. ^ "The Apache Sentinel". The Apache Sentinel. Fort Huachuca, Arizona. Jul 16, 1943. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  59. ^ "Sentinel to…, (continued)". The Apache Sentinel. Fort Huachuca, Arizona. September 15, 1944. p. 2. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via ChroniclingAmerica.loc.gov.
  60. ^ "Personable Clerk at Civ. Pers. has been here for 25 years". The Apache Sentinel. Fort Huachuca, Arizona. December 22, 1944. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via ChroniclingAmerica.loc.gov.
  61. ^ * Frank Grandfield (Feb 15, 1945). "Sequanile comes out tomorrow - Palo Alto High and Sequoia putting out a joint newspaper". The Peninsula Times Tribune. Palo Alto, California. p. 8. Retrieved Nov 18, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  62. ^ "Post's Editor a Negro Girl". The Christian Science Monitor. Jul 2, 1945. p. 8. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  63. ^ "Apache Sentinel Task Force". The Apache Sentinel. Fort Huachuca, Arizona. July 28, 1944. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via ChroniclingAmerica.loc.gov.
  64. ^ "Notes from Bonnie Blink". The Apache Sentinel. Fort Huachuca, Arizona. September 1, 1944. p. 7. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via ChroniclingAmerica.loc.gov.
  65. ^ a b Bass, Charlotta (1977) [1947]. "The Negro and Minority Press". In Harold J. Salemson (ed.). Thought Control in the USA. Beverly Hill, CA: Garland Publishing. p. 94. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  66. ^ * Thelma Thurston Gorham (August 28, 1943). "Capt. Joe Hordan to conduct symphony". The Oklahoma Eagle. Tulsa, OK. p. 2. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via OKhistory.org.
  67. ^ "Mr. and Mrs. Gorham, Jr., houseguests of the Evanses". The Pittsburgh Courier. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Oct 28, 1944. p. 10. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  68. ^ * (still living in San Francisco area) Thelma Thurston Gorham (Nov 1945). Roy Wilkins (ed.). "Negroes and Japanese Evacuees". The Crisis. Vol. 52, no. 11. pp. 312, 314–6, 330–1. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Archive.org.
    • Thelma Thurston Gorham (Jan 1946). Roy Wilkins (ed.). "Book Reviews; For Young Readers". The Crisis. Vol. 53, no. 1. pp. 23–4. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Archive.org.
    • (had been an assistant editor of The Crisis but moved to Berkeley,) Thelma Thurston Gorham (Mar 1946). Roy Wilkins (ed.). "It's Never too Early: a Trilogy". The Crisis. Vol. 53, no. 3. pp. 67, 82–3, 92. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  69. ^ Thelma Thurston Gorham (2011). "It's Never too Early: a Trilogy". In Judith Musser (ed.). "Girl, colored" and other stories: a complete short fiction anthology of African American women writers in The Crisis magazine, 1910-2010. McFarland & Co., Inc. pp. 13, 443–7. ISBN 9780786446063.(registration required)
  70. ^ "Young Writers' books add to Murphy Hall's Collection". The Minnesota Daily. University of Minnesota at Minneapolis. January 9, 1946. p. 7. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Conservancy.umn.edu.
  71. ^ "California Labor School; Trojan Horse Camouflage,". 3rd Report; UnAmerican Activities in California, 1947. Sacramento, CA: 1947 California Joint Fact-Finding Committee on UnAmerican Activities Report. 1947. pp. 77, 88–9. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  72. ^ "National AKA Offices go to three L. A. Chapter members". California Eagle. Los Angeles, CA. Aug 15, 1946. p. 10. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  73. ^ * "Building World Peace Theme of AKA Boule in Cleveland, Ohio". California Eagle. Los Angeles, CA. Aug 28, 1947. p. 16. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  74. ^ * "Baltimorean elected new head of AKA's". The Oklahoma Eagle. Tulsa, OK. August 24, 1946. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023 – via OKHistory.org.
  75. ^ "Three L. A. teachers take Lincoln University Post". California Eagle. Los Angeles, CA. Sep 18, 1947. p. 9. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  76. ^ "Patrons, Homecoming Lincoln C vs Tenn. State, Souvenir Program". Lincoln U. 1947. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  77. ^ "Mrs. R. R. Gorham returns here". The Berkeley Gazette. Berkeley, California. Jun 22, 1948. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 18, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  78. ^ a b Stanford University Application for Admission with Graduate Standing, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [April 9, 1959]
  79. ^ "Darryl Theodore Gorham Vital • Minnesota Birth Index, 1935-2002". FamilySearch.org. Sep 11, 1948. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023.(registration required)
  80. ^ "Lincoln University Journalism Forum". California Eagle. Los Angeles, CA. Mar 10, 1949. p. 9. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via Archive.org.
  81. ^ "Thelma Thurston Gorham, Lincoln Instructor, here". Minneapolis Spokesman. June 24, 1949. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via ChroniclingAmerica.lov.gov.
  82. ^ "Nelson Peery speaks on Communism to group". St. Paul Recorder. St. Paul, MN. July 29, 1949. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via ChroniclingAmerica.loc.gov.
  83. ^ "Social & Personal; St. Paul; Richard Gorham, Jefferson City…". St. Paul Recorder. St. Paul, MN. August 19, 1949. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 13, 2023 – via ChroniclingAmerica.loc.gov.
  84. ^ Parks, Arnold G. (Sep 18, 2012). ""The Foreign Students Association…"". Lincoln University: 1920-1970. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 55. ISBN 9781439618929.
  85. ^ Hayes, G. Aneita (May 11, 1950). "Doings about Omaha". California Eagle. Los Angeles, California. p. 30. Retrieved Nov 18, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  86. ^ "Mrs Alice Mayes Peters". St. Paul Recorder. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Aug 1, 1952. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 19, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
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  246. ^ Thelma Thurston Gorham (Jul 7, 1961). "A Great Woman Passes Away". The Black Dispatch. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  255. ^ "Whites in Louisiana who favor integration seen afraid to say so". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Honolulu, Hawaii. Nov 7, 1961. p. 33. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  256. ^ * "Universal Faith called key to Man's survival". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Honolulu, Hawaii. Nov 12, 1961. p. 2. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  264. ^ * "South Central States". Annual Report 1962-3. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United States. 1963. pp. 16–7. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  266. ^ "Weekending in Tulsa…". The Call. Kansas City, Missouri. Feb 15, 1963. p. 6. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  267. ^ "Around the Campus; Baha'i Lecture" (PDF). The Sunflower. Witchita, Kansas. April 5, 1963. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  268. ^ Thelma Thurston Gorham in collaboration with members of the History Committee, ed. (1963). Meeting the Challenge of Change - A Sixty-Year History of the St. Stephen Baptist Church. Kansas City, Missouri: Grimes-Joyce Printing Company. p. xiii–uiv, 320. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  269. ^ "Social and Personal; Minneapolis; Missouri Visitors". Minneapolis Spokesman. Minneapolis, MN. July 18, 1963. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  284. ^ "Band Alumni fetes fames Marching Unit Official". Florida Star. Jacksonville, FL. January 23, 1965. p. 7. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  285. ^ "News Briefs; Mrs. Terah Cowart-Smith of Greensboro…". Baha'i News. No. 411. June 1965. p. 14. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  291. ^ "SRJC notes Education Week". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Nov 6, 1965. p. 2. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  293. ^ "Negroes attend inaugural of Dr. Champion". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Mar 26, 1966. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  294. ^ "A&M officials attend meets". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Apr 6, 1966. p. 9. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  295. ^ * "FAMU sets hospital meeting". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Jun 19, 1966. p. 9. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  296. ^ * Barbara Widmar (Jun 24, 1966). "On the Campus - Journalism stepped up". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. p. 11. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  297. ^ * "Promote Two in PR Department at FAMU". JET. Jul 28, 1986. p. 54. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  298. ^ "Kappa Scholarship Winner". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Jul 2, 1966. p. 3. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  299. ^ Sumner High School Class of 1931 Thirty-Fifth Anniversary Reunion Program, 1966, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [July 1966]
  300. ^ * "Speaker Announced". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Sep 18, 1966. p. 12. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  302. ^ "Here and There". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Oct 23, 1966. p. 20. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  303. ^ "UN Panel Scheduled Sunday". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Oct 29, 1966. p. 6. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  305. ^ "Appreciation Tea held at LeMoyne". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Nov 8, 1966. p. 7. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  306. ^ "'UN on Parade' fashions shown". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Nov 19, 1966. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  307. ^ * "'World Faith for Modern Man' is topic". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Dec 10, 1966. p. 7. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  308. ^ "Clubs-- Events". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Jan 21, 1967. p. 1. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  310. ^ "Unitarian Church". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Feb 4, 1967. p. 6. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  315. ^ "Going to Church; Baha'i Faith". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Mar 25, 1967. p. 12. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  316. ^ * "County Zoning requests protested at Board meet". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Jun 13, 1967. p. 9. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  318. ^ "At LeMoyne Art Foundation - Reception will climax UN Week". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Oct 29, 1967. p. 25. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  319. ^ "World Peace Day observed in Many Ways". Baha'i News. No. 440. Nov 1967. p. 19. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  320. ^ Terry Frost (Dec 12, 1967). "Gore suspends Dean - Student Dissension flares up at A&M". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. p. 11. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  321. ^ Vinson Jamir (Jun 1968). "Florida Youth - A Beehive of Liveliness". National Baha'i Review. p. 6. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  323. ^ "Similar Race Unity Day…". Baha'i News. No. 450. Sep 1968. p. 23. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  329. ^ * "3 Day Session". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Apr 12, 1969. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  344. ^ List of Faculty and Courses Offered in Spring 1971 at the Community School of Jewish Studies, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [Spring 1971]
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  348. ^ Trip to Frankfurt Temple of Langenheim, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [July 1971]
  349. ^ NABWA Members, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [July 1971]
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  359. ^ * "Assemblies in Jeopardy". National Baha'i Review. No. 61. Jan 1973. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  364. ^ "Leon News of Record; City Accidents; Thursday; 3:38pm…". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Dec 26, 1973. p. 31. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  367. ^ "Baha'i Community". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. May 18, 1974. p. 11. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  368. ^ * "Award L Ruggles and FAMU will each receive $10,000". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Mar 24, 1999. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  369. ^ Memo from Lawrence A. Tanzi to Allan Tucker, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [January 21, 1974], p. 1
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  385. ^ "Human Rights Day observance planned". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Dec 7, 1974. p. 17. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  422. ^ "Gerri Major's Society World; Cocktail Chitchat". JET. Oct 4, 1979. p. 38. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  427. ^ "Cancer claims second local civil rights leader". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Sep 18, 1980. pp. 11 12. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  430. ^ * Thelma Gorham (Mar 31, 1981). "Black high school students shunning music activities". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. p. 5. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  436. ^ "Third in a series…". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Feb 20, 1982. p. 10. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  438. ^ "An Open Letter…". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. May 2, 1982. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  442. ^ "Achievements; Harriet Norrie…". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Oct 24, 1982. p. 58. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  445. ^ Letter from Elaine C. Shook (ed - Florida Cooperative Extension Service Program Leader for 4-H) to Thelma T. Gorham, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [May 5, 1983]
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  451. ^ "Tony Brown visits WFSY for special". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Jan 24, 1984. p. 13. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  459. ^ a b Letter from Edward Wotring to Thelma Gorham, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [March 28, 1989]
  460. ^ R. C. Morgan-Wilde (Feb 19, 1985). "Black Newspapers". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. p. 9. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  461. ^ "The first seven FAMU presidents, Andy Lindstrom". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Feb 28, 1985. p. 23, 25. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  463. ^ Starla Vaughns (April 11, 1985). "New Pageant seeks to glorify inner beauty". The Miami Times. Miami, FL. p. 8. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  467. ^ * "FAMU journalism professor first Hall of Fame inductee". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Apr 23, 1986. p. 41. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  468. ^ "Thelma Gorham inducted into Hall of Fame". The Miami Times. Miami, FL. June 5, 1986. p. 29. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  469. ^ Brown, Karen F. (27 Feb 2009) [1988]. "The Oklahoma Eagle: A study of black press survival" (PDF). Howard Journal of Communications. 1 (2): 1–11. doi:10.1080/10646178809359674. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  474. ^ "On the cover…". Baha'i News. Feb 1988. p. i. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  476. ^ Ruggles, Robert M., Dean (2024) [August 20, 1989], "Robert M. Ruggles, Dean (letter)", Appointment Book of 1988 for Thelma Thurston Gorham, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, p. 14{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  490. ^ Letter from Sherry Jones to Thelma Gorham, Thelma T. Gorham Collection, Tallahassee, Florida.: John G. Riley House Archives, Tallahassee Community College Library, 2024 [February 19, 1990]
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  497. ^ "A wise Lady". Florida Flambeau. Tallahassee, Florida. Jan 10, 1992. p. 4. Retrieved Nov 24, 2023.
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  499. ^ Graves (3 Apr 2012). "Thelma T Gorham". Findagrave.com. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  500. ^ Barbara Hogan (Apr 25, 1998). "Flowers of one garden". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. pp. 13, 18. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  501. ^ "History of Tropical Storms & Hurricanes at FSU". FSU.edu. 2023. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
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  505. ^ a b Barrington Salmon (Apr 26, 1992). "Record number of FAMU grads clutch diplomas". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. p. 37, 44. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  506. ^ * "Scholarship fund established for late FAMU professor". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Jun 29, 1992. p. 10. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  507. ^ "Thelma Thurston Gorham Foundat, Incn". OpenCorporates.com. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  508. ^ * Keith L. Thomas (Jan 9, 1992). "Gorham's life offered lessons of lasting value". The Atlanta Constitution. Atlanta, Georgia. p. 31. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  509. ^ * Mark Riordan (Mar 18, 2004). "Politics may stain FAMU journalism building". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. p. 37. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  510. ^ * "Black History Month - Thelma Thurston Gorham". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Feb 17, 2006. p. 11. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  511. ^ "Thelma Thurston Gorham Distinguished Alumni Award". SJGC.FAMU.edu. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  512. ^ * Cara Hackett (November 4, 2022). "SJGC Honors Alumni Spanning 40 Years with Thelma Thurston Gorham Award". FAMUSJGC.com. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  513. ^ "Thelma Thurston Gorham." Notable Black American Women. Gale, 1996. Gale Biography In Context. Web. 14 Dec. 2011.
  514. ^ Johnson, Todd M.; Grim, Brian J. (26 March 2013). "Global Religious Populations, 1910–2010". The World's Religions in Figures: An Introduction to International Religious Demography. John Wiley & Sons. doi:10.1002/9781118555767.ch1. ISBN 9781118555767. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 11 September 2022. The Baha'i Faith is the only religion to have grown faster in every United Nations region over the past 100 years than the general population; Bahaʼi (sic) was thus the fastest-growing religion between 1910 and 2010, growing at least twice as fast as the population of almost every UN region.
  515. ^ Lua Getsinger - Herald of the Covenant, pp336
  516. ^ See also Baharieh Rouhani Ma'ani (1998). "Interdependence of Baháʼí communities - services of North American Baháʼí women in Írán; Early American Baháʼí women who rendered outstanding service to Írán” in The Bahaʼi World. v20, pp. 1092–3
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  518. ^ * "Museum, TCC plan research center". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Sep 13, 2003. pp. 13, 14. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  519. ^ "Darryl T. Gorham". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Oct 25, 2009. p. 13. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.
  520. ^ "Bahai (sic) community to honor the late Thelma Thurston Gorham". Tallahassee Democrat. Tallahassee, Florida. Feb 18, 2012. p. 12. Retrieved Nov 17, 2023.