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Matthew W. Bullock

Matthew Washington Bullock (September 11, 1881 – December 17, 1972) was an American lawyer, politician and human rights activist.

Matthew W. Bullock
Bullock c. 1927
Born(1881-09-11)September 11, 1881
DiedDecember 17, 1972(1972-12-17) (aged 91)
Occupation(s)American football coach (1904–1908), lawyer (from 1912), college professor/dean (1908–1917), Boston Urban League (from 1919), assistant to the Massachusetts Attorney General (1924–1927), State Parole Board (1927–1937), State Department of Corrections (1937–1943) and regional board of the Massachusetts Bar Association (from 1937), State Parole Board (1943–1949) (chair from 1944), national board of the Urban League, (from 1945) National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States: 1952–1953; 1953–1954 (resigned 1953 to pioneer to Curaçao), and Zoning Commission Board (1965–1966)
SpouseKatherine Wright Bullock
Children2

Early life edit

Childhood edit

Matthew Washington Bullock was born September 11, 1881, in Dabney, North Carolina. His parents, Jesse and Amanda (Sneed) Bullock[1][2][3][4][5] were born enslaved.[6][7][8] In 1889, the family moved to Boston "with seven children and a ten dollar bill.”[9] Bullock attended public schools and in 1896, he graduated from Everett Center Grammar School.[10] He then attended Everett High School,[3] where he was the first African-American captain of the high school team as well as captaining the hockey("ice polo") and baseball teams.[9][8] Bullock was recognized as among the best athletes of the school.[6] His brother Henry was also a star athlete at Everett.[3] Bullock was listed as a member of the Center School Alumni association of Fall 1899.[11]

In June 1900, the US Census Records recorded that six children between the ages of 29 and 15 lived with Jesse and Joseph. Jesse and Joseph, the eldest, were day laborers although they have also been unemployed some months of the previous year. Jesse and Amanda were listed as illiterate while all children were listed as literate.[12]

Dartmouth College edit

 
Bullock while coach at Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical School

Bullock was to start his time at Dartmouth College in 1901. His father sent him $50 for his tuition (equivalent to about $1,300 in 2021) and enrolled him at Dartmouth College. He had to start working to pay his tuitions. He enrolled at Dartmouth in the autumn and was elected to the Glee Club for his singing abilities, as well as serving on the track team for all four years. Bullock was the first African American to play football at Dartmouth,[13] but he played a game his freshman year. He finished second in the high jump at an event that year.[14]

The following year he started as a defensive end on the football team,[15] and played well.[16] In his Sophomore year he won first place in the broad jump and was successful in football.[15] Bullock sang as a baritone soloist at a Vermont Church in April, 1903.[17] He had greater success in his junior year,[15] despite playing only the first six games.[16]

In his senior year Bullock was on the varsity football team and achieved national recognition.[6] He was part of the Dartmouth football team that defeated Harvard at the dedication event of the Dartmouth stadium in later 1903.[18] A picture of Bullock was printed in a November issue of the Boston Post at the age of 22.[19] A week later Bullock was refused accommodations during a game at Princeton University and also called out during the game; events that were covered in newspapers in various states across the nation.[20] He broke a collarbone in the first play of this third game of the year in this Princeton game and it was widely believed he had been targeted.[15] Dartmouth cut athletic ties with Princeton for several years.[15] This was all during Woodrow Wilson's presidency at Princeton there and his investment in segregationally practices in the school.[21] However Bullock was not named an All-American despite qualifying.[15][16] His senior year he was also a member Palaeopity Senior Society as a distinguished individual,[15] other by-invitation boards and committees,[6] and was the associate editor of The Aegis.[22]

Bullock graduated in 1904,[3][2][7] with a Bachelor of Arts degree[6][1] and scholastic and athletic distinctions,[9] but only honorable mention in Walter Camp's All-American football listing for 1904.[3] Sports commentator and NAACP leader Edwin Henderson in 1939 observed of Bullock's performance in 1901-3 "Why Bullock did not receive All-American selection has never been understood. Bullock was one of the brainiest men of football ability the game has ever had.”[23][9] Indeed Bullock released his own list of All-American footballers in 1911.[23]

Bullock then attended Harvard Law School 1904-1907 ultimately earning an LLB degree[1][6] while James Barr Ames was Dean of the school. Along the way he paid is tuition by coaching football.[15][6][9] He soon coached for the Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical College (now University of Massachusetts at Amherst)[8] starting in the fall of 1904[24] and was credited with the comment "the outlook is the most encouraging in years" in the school newspaper.[25] By that winter it said it "has been without doubt the most successful (season) in the history of the college” credited to Bullock after defeating 5 larger institutions and play in the championship bout and the team presented Bullock with an inscribed watch fob and charm.[26] He was the first black football coach of an integrated college team and had a winning record,[15] and was one of a handful of African-American football figures in the eastern white colleges.[27] He then coached at Malden High School in 1905,[15][6][1][8] as its first black football coach[2][3] and was presented with a bonus for his improvement of the team in the year.[28] They were undefeated early in 1906-7 school year.[29]

Bullock finished at Harvard in the summer of 1907,[30][31][3][7] with a Bachelor of Law degree[2] studied at Cornell University,[2] and returned to Agriculture & Mechanics College[15][32] where he was set to coach more seasons. There was also a report he was heading out to Oklahoma to practice law.[33] However by early 1909 he was in the South. That May his father died while the family was living on Winter Street.[34]

Atlanta service edit

In 1908 Bullock accepted a position at Morehouse College (then Atlanta Baptist College) as athletic director and teacher.[9][15][1]

In 1910 he was thanked in the preface of a book The Negro in Literature and Art by Benjamin Griffith Brawley.[35] In September he married Katherine Wright in Boston.[4][6][1] Katherine was born in Middlesboro, Kentucky, to Peter Wright and Julie Heatherlee.[4] The Bullocks continued to live in Atlanta and by 1911 he had worked for three years in the Interscholastic Athletic Association's field games,[36] and was faculty at the Atlanta Baptist College.[37][38][39] His work in athletics was called an example of an HBCU "farm school" through which athletes could earn a place in white schools.[16] Ultimately he taught Latin, History and Social Sciences[1] serving for 4 years with distinction.[6][1] He then worked as a lawyer in Atlanta from 1912 to 1915,[1][6][9] including submitting an amendment to the school charter of 1913 to change the name of the college from the Atlanta Baptist College to Morehouse College.[40] He was again thanked by Brawley for being one of the reviewers of his book A short history of the American Negro published in 1913.[41]

He then served two years, from 1915 to 1917, as dean of The State Agricultural and Mechanical College for Negroes—now known as Alabama A&M University—in Normal, Alabama.[42][1][6][7][43]

World War I and YMCA service edit

Bullock was registered with the Massachusetts State Bar in August 1917,[44] and in February 1918 he was resident in Roxbury, a neighborhood in Boston, working as a lawyer.[5]

He tried to volunteer to serve in a combat unit for World War I but was called "too old" to serve[2] about age 36, and had a heart murmur, but worked via the YMCA's war effort,[3] seeking to work in France and England.[5] He was marked 6’1” tall on his passport application and his first witness was a clerk of the 1st Circuit Court of Boston.[5] His mother was living with his family.[5]

He was booked to leave from New York on the French SS Rochambeau on February 20 and appointed a secretary of the National War Council of the YMCA of the US to serve with American troops,[5] however he served as a YMCA Educational Secretary at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland,[6][9][1] first, initially as a breakfast guest of former law practice associate Charles Ford.[45] He worked at Camp Meade to coach athletics, led singing, and taught French language.[46] After 3 months he went to France with the 369th US Infantry (aka 15th NY Regiment) and served as a Physical Director for 15 months.[6][1][9][47][1] He was one of eight such YMCA Secretaries.[48] Bullock had a staff of four assistants one of which was a colored woman who was protested of in the military based on issues of southern-extraction army officials in Bordeaux.[48] The situation caused an initial limit of participation of women to just three to act as nurses for 150,000 soldiers.[48] He was an organizing personality in the Leave area in part because of his fame in sports but also his service with the women working in the circumstances.[48]

Bullock and another of the YMCA designée followed the 369th all the way to the banks of the Rhine leading other units and accorded distinction because of the quality of its trenches.[49] Bullock was singled out for noting his steadfast support of the soldiers during the worst of the battle.[49] Bullock was called of "especially valiant service” noting he "could be seen at all times making his way under tremendous shell fire that he might reach his men with necessary supplies; … (and) in giving first aid to the wounded.”[48] Bullock was recommended for the Croix de Guerre medal for leadership and bravery but it wasn't approved by the white colonel as described in the autobiography of John Hope.[9] Hope had been stationed in Paris.[49] Rev. Benjamin Robeson wrote about the issue in a letter to the New York Age.[50] Robeson begins "It is not long ago that all New York anxiously, confidently bade adieu to this history-making regiment. Believing them capable, knowing them to be fearless, depending upon them to brighten the memory of their fathers, you watched, waited, and listened.…"[50]

I wish to speak of one who still plods the path of duty with an infectious smile, happy and patient because he knows time will dip her pen in the ink of justice and rightly reward him.

I refer to Secretary Bullock (we call him Matt) who wears the badge of the faithful and walks with the step of the worthy.… Just before that memorial drive of September 25 … Bullock went to Chalons, faced the authorities, and said: 'I have nothing to give my men and they storm the heights tomorrow. I must have something or I cannot go back.' (eventually received his requests and) the campaign was on.

Every morning as the cannon were belching, men falling and bullets whizzing, over the hill came a human form. On his back were strapped (supplies…) On he came, now and then dropping for shelter.… Men wondered why he came into that region of death. When twilight wrapped the hills in its shadows, back came the same form empty handed; weary, but game. His coming and going stopped when there was no regiment to serve.

He wears no Croix de Guerre upon his breast, but within his breast throbs the spirit of devotion - devotion to God, country and race. The multitudes will see no D. S. C. to testify to his courage in that hour, but listen to the reflective melody sung by the boys of the old Fifteenth and you will hear of a faithfulness and service approaching that of the lowly Nazarene. No Legion of Honor will proclaim his rank with the worthy, but as long as one member of this grand old regiment breathes the breath of life the name of Matthew W. Bullock will be heard and its worth will be sung.

Let us all honor the uncrowned here.[50]

He had served in the Champagne and Alsace fronts of later 1917 through May 1918,[51] and was recommended for the Croix de Guerre for the September–October battle.[1]

Bullock arrived at Ellis Island two months later from Brest, France, on the USS Mobile noting his home residence at Sarsfield Street, Roxbury.[52] He retired from war service June 4, 1919,[7] and by then German was added to his language skills.[7] He was then a member of Baptist Church,[7] and had been paid over $1200, ($18k in 2021 dollars,[53]) for his service.

Years later he recalled the bitter disappointment of the relatively integrated service in the military and returning home to a more deeply segregated society.[54]

He spoke at the convention of the Northeastern Federation of Colored Women's Clubs of Maine held in Washington, D.C., speaking of the military service of soldiers in France.[55]

Boston service in the African American Community edit

Bullock cofounded the Boston chapter of the National Urban League in 1919[1][56] and was appointed its first executive officer in January 1920.[57][58] which he served as into 1921,[1][59] and gained a reputation of "an unusually high humanitarian idealism”.[6] Later, in the words of Helen Elsie Austin, it was noted as the start of a career of public services of "more than twenty years, constantly pioneering for social justice and human dignity."[9]

The January 1920 US Census had the couple married renting a home on Sarsfield Street and he was employed as a lawyer.[60] Bullock was also credited with founding a branch of the YMCA to serve the South End-Roxbury black community which ran 1920-1922, and then was closed to preserve a non-segregated program with the main branch.[61] In March Bullock was recognized in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin as the Secretary of the Boston Urban League, noted his service in France during WWI but thought that he had indeed received the Croix de Guerre from the French government,[62] Son Matthew Jr. was born April 4, 1920,[1][6] and a couple weeks later Bullock gave a talk on the history of the Urban League to a Boston Club,[63] and spoke at St. Bartholomew's Church in late May.[64] He filed to run for office in state government in July,[65][3] was on the ballot with Andrew Lattimore,[66] and had spent alittle over $17 on the registering for the election.[67] He was also on the list of those available for the position of assistant director for the Department of Corporations and Taxation with the state.[68] In October he addressed the Ellot Club as a member of the Boston Urban League on “What does the Negro Want? The Answer"[69] while running for office.[70] Bullock and Lattimore campaigned across Ward 13.[71] Meanwhile his wife was visible at a fundraiser for Atlanta University.[72] In November Bullock got more votes than Lattimer for the Republicans but both lost against the Democratic ticket.[73] The two claimed they had been voted against for being black and the case had thought to be in contest because of increased Republican women registering to vote. Then governor John Jackson Walsh spoke out against the race issue prejudice in voting.[74] Bullock and Lattimer advanced a recall petition against the Democrats in January 1921.[75][3] In February Bullock returned to Everett to talk for the Board of Trade about “The Negro, a great asset” and the article covering his talk recalled his 1896-1900 service at the Everett High School, then on to athletic success and now lawyer.[76] A few days later Bullock and Lattimer testified about their challenge to the election and offered biographical summaries of their lives.[77] Bullock detailed that he graduated from Everett High School, Dartmouth College, Harvard Law School and had a post-graduate class at Cornell. He tried to serve during WWI but was rejected "because of an 'athlete's heart'" as he put it but worked at a YMCA secretary overseas. Their petition had a hearing for the House Committee on Elections claiming illegal means had been used to complete the election. Depositions were taken of witnesses after a significant delay.[78] The majority of the committee did not support the petition though at least one member did.[79] Bullock and Lattimer escalated with the state Speaker of the House seeking a chance to address the whole House.[80] The progress of the petition had cost $225 in legal fees,[81] (near three thousand dollars in 2021 dollars.[53])

Generally from 1921 to 1924 Bullock worked as an attorney.[6][1] This may be when he worked with the Cardozo and Tucker firm.[3][31] In June Bullock spoke at the Everett High School graduation ceremony as a graduate of the 1900 class.[82] In July at the request of a committee of the Urban League Bullock was asked to be a district chair for the city of Boston and it was said of him that "The feature of the work in his district was the fine co-operation he received from the ministers and all social welfare organizations."[83] He also served with the [Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa and Australia, a fraternal service society and source of a life insurance company in another decade, on their Committee Credentials for those seeking election in the organization.[84][6] The Bullock's daughter Julia Amanda was born September 3, 1921.[1][6] Bullock voiced his support for a candidate for Mayor in December.[85] Around this time there was another Matthew Bullock involved in North Carolina and Canada including threats from the KKK and a lynching c. 1921–1922.[86] The two Bullocks were occasionally confused as in a funeral biography of Bullock in 1972.[3] Meanwhile Bullock again challenged the Democrat for the state representative position.[87] In August he was on the primary for the Republican position, and spoke for a bank formation in Roxbury,[88] for Suffolk County.[89] Before the voting in November, in October Bullock submitted a bill to the state House of Representatives as a public citizen to prohibit the Ku Klux Klan from forming an organization in the state because it was a "menace to the public peace”; the presentation drew widespread national attention.[90] Meanwhile the governor appointed special supervisors for the Ward 13 election.[91] The election was held and Jessie Emery won.[92]

In February 1923 hearings on the anti-Klan bill began. At Bullock's own testimony for the bill he said that a grandfather of his had been murdered by Klansmen and he urged passage of the bill as a private citizen.[93] He mentioned this incident again in 1966 saying that his mother's mother had found the body of his grandfather in an abandoned well.[8] Bullock addressed a conference of the Knights of Pythias at their May 1923 meeting.[94] He then joined in the mass organization across Massachusetts called for by then Governor Channing H. Cox on the relief effort for the Great Kanto Earthquake of September 1 in Japan through the Red Cross.[95]

Assistant State Attorney General edit

The Massachusetts Attorney General Jay R. Benton appointed Bullock as one of two special assistants in July 1924,[1][6][2][3][31] first focusing on the legal issues of the new construction of the northern traffic highway from Boston to Wellington Bridge in Somerville.[51] Today this is a segment of Interstate 93. The biographical article about him in the new position noted much of his familiar career in public service ending that he was the executive secretary of the Boston Urban League association and practiced law with Charles Williams, clerk of the Boston Juvenile Court. This appointment made some news in other places too.[96]

Bullock was added to the committee of the Republican party of Massachusetts and addressed them about the Klan issue on its platform.[97] It was the last plank considered in an otherwise quiet session.[98] Bullock spoke at another Republican party meeting in later October.[99] In November Bullock presided at a meeting of political speakers held at People's Baptist Church.[100]

In February 1925 Bullock attended the Everett High school reception for colored athletes.[101] In September Bullock represented a community effort opposing a cleaning and dyeing business trying to set up shop because of its environmental effects.[102] In November Bullock was a charter member co-founding the Boston chapter of Omega Psi Phi fraternity.[103][1][6] He then spoke at an Omega Psi Phi meeting at Tuskegee highlighting the progress the African Americans had made.[104]

 
Queen Marie at Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, October 19, 1926

In January 1926 Bullock spoke for a program arranged by the NAACP at Union Congregational Church in New York city.[105] Bullock again protested the impact of a company on a neighborhood at a city council meeting in March.[106] He also attended the dedication of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery.[107][1][8] This may have been at the 1926 dedication. In October Bullock addressed the National Equal Rights League on the situation of segregation.[108]

In February 1927 Bullock spoke to a Knights of Pythias regional conference.[109]

State Parole Board edit

Bullock was called "among the best trained and most successful lawyers of the Negro race at the present time…” in 1927.[6] He then started serving on the Massachusetts State Parole Board which extended for nine years, then was re-appointed in 1943, and then named chair in 1944,[3][1][6] at which point he was the first African-American head of a department of state government.[31][2]

It began in March when Bullock was named to the State Parole Board by then Governor Avlan T. Fuller.[110] This too made news. It was thought in coverage at the time he was born in Morganton, North Carolina (Dabney is north of Raleigh vs Morgontown in the far west) and recalled his Dartmouth football career and graduating in 1904.[107] While that coverage continued to echo over a month, Bullock gave a talk at the Unitarian Universalist Church on “A challenge to Christianity”.[111] In July Bullock addressed a regional conference of the Knights of Pythias on the economic plight of the blacks and the issue of mob violence.[112]

Bullock was re-appointed to the State Parole Board in January 1928.[113] That month Bullock also was named as a court advocate on the staff of the Greater Boston Police Post VFW.[114] In February Bullock wrote a letter that was read into the Federal Congressional Record to support the establishment of a Memorial to African Americans for the country.[115] A couple weeks later Bullock returned for a talk for the Knights of Pythias.[116] In September the Bullocks hosted the Omega Psi College fraternity at their home on Windsor Street.[117] In the fall Bullock was on the schedule of the Second Congregational Church's speakers list, described as the former secretary of the Urban League.[118]

In January 1929 Bullock was recognized as chair of the Republican party for Ward 9.[119] In June he addressed the United Negro Welfare Council on the conditions of the northeast, listed as one of those assistants to the Attorney General, though it is more correct to say he was now a member of the Parole Board.[120] With the Parole Board membership came questions and reports in the media about plea cases. In July one of Bullock's first comments was agreeing in a case that someone had committed murder in a unanimous rejection of innocence by the Board.[121] Another newspaper report in July mentioned the Board heard testimony about a case who's perpetrator had gained some support from prison personnel.[122] Bullock was among the speakers at the dedication of a new community center in Cambridge made out of the old school in August,[123] and that month Bullock's salary as an associate Board member was raised from $2000 to $2250/yr and could have increased higher,[124] (about $34000 in 2021 dollars.[53]) In September Bullock attended a Better Homes Association prize meeting about a neighborhood success story saving vacant lots.[125] In October Bullock was among many appointed to a commission to advance raising a national memorial as a tribute to the contributions of African Americans in the history of the country.[126] In November Bullock was one of many that endorsed Frederick Mansfield.[127]

Bullock was called the party leader of Ward 9 and State Parole Board Commissioner when he was going to attend the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity meeting in Baltimore in January 1930,[128] with the beginning of the Great Depression in the United States. Bullock was one of the speakers at a Women's Republican Club meeting in March.[129] That month Bullock publicly criticized President Hoover for segregating travels to Europe and observed that the women had been more true to Lincoln and Sumner's influence on the Republican party.[130][131] The next day Bullock attended a Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Baptist Church where he gave a talk/eulogy for the local lodge of the Knights of Pythias.[132] The April 1930 US Census has attorney Matthew with wife Katherine and children both born in Massachusetts, Matthew Bullock Jr (9 years old), and Julie(8 years old,) owning a home worth an estimated $5500[133] ($86k in 2021 dollars.[53]) The Knights of Pythias met again in July at another Baptist Church in Providence, Rhode Island, and there Bullock was among the association's "Pythian Temple Commission”.[134] A couple weeks later the Parole Board had newspaper coverage when it heard the plea about a convict that had escaped jail and voluntarily returned.[135] In August the Parole Board heard a plea from a man convicted of arson and insurance fraud who claimed he was innocent.[136] In September a tableaux drama was held with Bullock as the voice announcer reviewing the role of African Americans in the Civil War.[137] The same month Bullock was appointed to a resolutions committee for the Republican party perhaps for his "dry" political views on alcohol drinks supporting prohibition against that of others who had “wet” views which again made some news.[138] In October Bullock was part of a Republican party set of rallies meeting at Springfield's Central High School,[139] for William Butler.[140] In November Bullock was nominated on re-appointment on the Parole Board.[141] In December the Parole Board heard the pardon appeal for a murderer of a policeman - there was support for and against the shooter saying he was innocent.[142]

In March 1931, the Great Depression deeply affecting America, Bullock spoke at an Omega Psi Phi Fraternity at a memorial of Col. Charles Young at a Congregational Church in New York.[143] In April the Parole Board submitted its suggestions for paroles amounting to 200 out of 433 hearings of the 4343 cases presented to the Board while noting that some cases were not suited to the Board as the right tool for interventions.[144] In September the Parole Board heard a pardon petition for the assaulter of two girls when the girls testified their earlier testimony was untrue.[145] In October Bullock lead the evening session celebrating of the Robert Gould Shaw House,[146] a community center in the black community.[147] In December the Parole Board heard a petition plea which was a fraud case of a man some thought was likable.[148]

Bullock was scheduled to talk to the Cambridge Civic Club February 3, 1932.[149] In March the Parole Board heard the parole plea for a case of abuse of a 16 year old girl, who, now 20 years old, plead for the case on a promise to her father on his death bed,[150] and that month Bullock complained of women having gotten the right to vote without a sense of political party loyalty,[151] though this complaint was in the context of a disenfranchisement of the black community in Boston following 1895's redistricting.[152] In May Bullock was elected president of the Pan-Hellenic Council which is the national association of several fraternities.[153] Charles Ponzi, the originator of the Ponzi scheme, plead a case for parole before the Board on technicalities.[154] This year the Board's annual summary referred to their job being "increasingly difficult owing to the steady stream of pressure brought to bear upon it by relatives and influential friends” and having to defend itself against those who argue they are too lenient or too severe and “unfavorable newspaper coverage” with issues of re-employment, and alcoholic recidivism.[155] They noted a 1.1% revocations of paroles were of felons and was about the same as previous years. They had 4351 cases considered and 3192 granted and 1086 revoked with drunkenness accounting for most of the revocations. Bullock's place on the Parole Board was again up for re-appointment in late 1932.[156]

In February 1933 Bullock supported a bill prohibiting car insurance discrimination for clients based on race, color, religion, or place of living in light of the requirement of insurance.[157] He specifically addressed the State House Committee on Insurance about it.[158] The same month the Parole Board held meetings at Norfolk State Prison noting cases of larceny and others.[159]

Community Church edit

Continuing his service on the State Parole Board, Bullock began a relationship of service with the Boston Community Church. He first appears speaking there on "Is the negro being driven into Communism?" in February.[160] The talk was summarized. He noted that though there was a culture of the community, younger people had left the Republican Party and joined the Democratic Party seeking aide and even became socialists or communists and was concerned that if the situation of the blacks in the country was not advanced to equality the youth would become communists.[161] In May he spoke at a Lexington church at the Young People's Fellowship meeting.[162] Bullock missed a meeting of the Board in early June though it is unknown why.[163] The Bullocks were among the patrons of the Cambridge Community Center in September.[164] Bullock's birthday was also noted in Pasadena, California, that year.[165] A case of a murderer of a husband was brought to the Board in September.[166] The Dartmouth football team of 1903 including Bullock, pictured in the newspaper, was remembered for its victory over Harvard at the new stadium in October.[167] Bullock addressed the Mount Vernon Congregational Church Young People's Society in December,[168] during a toy donation gathering meant for children in a particular church in North Carolina and Christmas Supper of the community on topic of "Giving him a second chance".[169] Bullock then addressed the Community Church at its Christmas Service on "Can races, creeds and classes live together in Peace" noting he was the Director of the Community Church and having invited a Rabbi and a leader of the Massachusetts Federation of Labor as additional speakers, with music by the Greater Boston Negro Chorus.[170] Bullock's comments spoke of the race problem tracing back to the roots of civilization and unfolding in various ways around the world, and that in America we could do better than segregation, limited access to courts, voting suppression and picking up on the problems in Germany being imported ideologically into America, and the stirring of the Ku Klux Klan.[171]

February 1934 opens mention of Bullock giving another talk at the Community Church held with a meeting of the church leadership.[172] The Parole Board heard the case of a murderer who was mentally compromised.[173] In March Bullock contributed to a fundraiser for the Coast Guard,[174] and April he was one of the speakers at the Robert Gould Shaw House for a mass meeting on community issues,[175] followed a week later when the Parole Board heard of Portuguese citizen who had killed a policeman.[176] In May Bullock spoke at a Rhode Island Republican gathering,[177] and then in June Bullock resigned from the State Republican Party committee.[178] In July Bullock was up for reappointment to the Parole Board.[179] was repointed,[180] and in October and November it heard two cases of murderers.[181] In November Bullock spoke of male culture at the morning Men's Day service at the African American Shiloh Baptist Church.[182] In December Bullock was invited to a hotel to visit a representative at a National Crime Conference, denied access at first because he was black, and this made the news widely.[183] A week later the Parole Board hear a case of an escaped prisoner.[184]

In January 1935 Bullock proposed a change to the parole law for automatic paroles to be reviewed,[185] and the case of the Bullock part of the election contest of 1921 was recalled via second-hand comments.[186] In February Bullock spoke at the Community Church anniversary.[187] He was among many that contributed to a general emergency fundraiser as well,[188] before speaking at a Race Relations Institute in the evening service at Park Avenue Congregational Church.[189] In April Bullock attended the graduation ceremonies of the Bigelow Evening School in South Boston,[190] and in May was again elected as president of the Community Church then located at 6 Byron Street.[191]

Though the year isn't known, it is known Bullock attended a dinner reception for Ludmila Bechtold by the Bahá'ís, as she was known then, and they struck up friendship - this happened while Bullock was president of the Community Church[9][192][193] which could be here in the mid-1930s. After an initial exchange of questions Bechtold encouraged him to read the book of the religion, Some Answered Questions, and he and Mrs. Bullock visited Green Acre Bahá'í School,[9] (Green Acre), possibly for one of the annual Race Amity Convention meetings. It is known that about 1929 Bahá'í Doris McKay had met him briefly with a letter of introduction from James Hubert, Secretary of the Harlem chapter of the National Urban League, but that his reception was cool to her meeting him.[194]

In September Bullock, as president of the Community Church, presided over the second annual conference of church workers supporting social action.[195] The Parole Board also heard another murderer's case for parole.[196] In October Bullock oversaw meetings at the Community Church as president and at other churches.[197] One meeting became controversial as Communists stormed a meeting and took it over by strength of numbers.[198] In November the Parole Board heard another case of a murderer.[199] In December Bullock joined in the Board statement of not hearing the appeals of "persistent and habitual criminals” after a prison riot among many who were not eligible for parole.[200] On the other hand an arsonist was paroled on wide recommendation save by clerics.[201] Bullock was photographed during testimony of the Parole Board to the Governor's Council on the need of the existence of the Parole Board which it was considering ending it, though the Council did pass a recommended change in the law of sentencing. The concern was over strictness of the parole board being a reason for the recent prison riot.[202] The situation was largely dismissed by late January 1936 among factioning of Democrats.[203]

Mrs. Bullock attended a fundraiser concert given by Marian Anderson for the Cambridge Community Center in February.[204] The Community Church meetings continued with Bullock as president.[205] In early 1936 Bullock declined to serve on Board of the Boston NAACP chapter.[151] In March Bullock was among area church leaders addressing a youth conference of the Youth Council of the Greater Boston Federation of Churches on "Christianity and Racial barriers”.[206] About a week later Bullock spoke on the problem of race to the Wesley Foundation of Cambridge.[207] It is known that well known African American Bahá'í Louis Gregory gave talks in Boston in October and November.[208] Meanwhile Bullock's annual term on the Parole Board was ending in December and the new governorship of the Democrat James Michael Curley and was part of widely advertised listings in the state.[209] There were debates about whom to fill the position of by Democrats.[210] His replacement was named at the end of December,[211] which situation was still making news in April and May.[212]

Bullock had held the position since 1927 and most of the way through the Great Depression, until the change in political parties controlling the offices.

While all that was changing, Bullock was named a member of the board of the Boston Center for Adult Education in January, 1937.[213] The Bullocks were then also among those attending the reception for Maude Royden of London.[214] In February Bullock spoke in support of Clarence Skinner,[215] and was named to a committee to investigate ways to advance reemployment of the blacks of the state (after the Great Depression).[216] In March Bullock was named to the replacement on the State Department of Corrections while still living in Roxbury with his family.[217][31] That evening Bullock was announced to attend recognition ceremony set for mid-April in Cambridge.[218] A week later he spoke at the Wesley Foundation evening meeting at the Epworth Methodist Episcopal Church.[219] In May Bullock was again at the Boston Youth Conference,[220] and in June he was again named a member of the Board for the Adult Education Center.[221] In October Mrs. Bullock attended a Community Church Tea for the Women's International League.[222] Then Bullock was named vice president of the Community Church and scheduled to give a talk at the North Cambridge Community Church.[223] Meanwhile Bullock spoke publicly of his boss’ new plans on a budget for the Department of Corrections and was named leading the division on segregating hardened criminals away from others.[224] In November Bullock was named first vice president of the Boston Urban League,[225] and attended an Omega Psi Phi reception listed as a leader of the Community Church.[226] That winter Bullock was named regional director of the National Bar Association.[227]

In January 1938 Bullock was among speakers at an Athletic Night event in Cambridge.[228] In February Bullock spoke on the issue of race in America at the evening meeting of the Cambridge Baptist Church Sunday Evening Club.[229] In April Bullock spoke at Baptist rally in Malden,[230] and attended the funeral of Parole Board co-worker.[231] In May he was listed as vice president of Community Church as one of speakers at an exhibit on un-American propaganda.[232] The rest of the year went by after that without mention of Bullock noted in the newspapers yet found.

In February 1939 Bullock chaired an inter-church goodwill dinner.[233] His son also won a scholarship attending college in Maine that month.[234] In March a list of members of the Urban League, NAACP, and others, included Bullock for passage of house bill to end discrimination in public utilities.[235] Bullock was named a member of a 100-count committee for an Edvard Beneš lecture in town after his fleeing Nazi Germany occupation the previous year.[236] In May the Bullocks attended a prominent social affair at an exclusive club.[237] Sometime during the year Bullock served on the Board of the Boston NAACP,[151] and also helped register a forming association of black women beauticians with the state.[152] In June the Bullocks' son was noted at Bowdoin College in Maine.[238] In August Bullock was named a counselor of the board of the Samuel Coleridge Taylor Music Association for its 20th anniversary.[239]

January 1940 Bullock was invited to the Cambridge Community Center celebration of sports with leading political figures.[240] A few days later the Community Church held a presentation on the history of the church noting the congregation had elected a black president for his qualities and diversity but didn't name him or list him as a member.[241] A few days later Bullock spoke at the Groton federation of clubs for members of area clubs.[242] In February Bullock was among leaders present for a Conference of Civil Liberties.[243] In March news came of Bullock's son on graduating from Bowdoin college and speaker at commencement;[244] he was summa cum laude.[245]

Joined the Bahá'í Faith edit

The April 1940 US Census has the Bullock family living and owning a home on Monroe Street worth about $3000 (about $56000 in 2021 dollars.[53]) He had finished a 4 year college degree while their son was in his 3rd year of college and their daughter was in her 2nd year. They were living in the same place as in April 1935. He was then an Assistant Commissioner of the Department of Correction earning $4375 the previous year,[246] (about $82k in 2021 dollars.[53])

Bullock later called Bechtold his "spiritual mother"[9] when he accepted the Bahá'í Faith in 1940.[9][247] The only written record of Bullock's choice, mentioned in 1966, says that the distinction that the religion did not have clergy was important to him.[8] Bullock's membership in political and other religious organizations had undergone changes already, he had already resigned active political party status in 1934,[178] a standard that was in the process of being promulgated among Bahá'ís as well.[248][249] In 1939-1940 there were 3 assemblies, the local administrative organization of communities of Bahá'ís, in the state - Boston, Springfield and Worcester - plus three communities with registered groups of Bahá'ís between 2 and 9 adults, and five isolated Bahá'ís (amounting to about 47 Baha'is in the state.)[250] By 1943-4 Boston was one of 37 assemblies in the US to incorporate and the only one in Massachusetts.[251] There were five assemblies in Massachusetts 1943-4: Beverly, Brookline, Boston, Springfield, and Worcester,[252] 22 registered groups, and 18 locations with a single alone Bahá'ís including Everett amounting to roughly an estimated 150 Bahá'ís in the state and there were about 2500-4000 Bahá'ís in the entire country.[253][254]

The Bullocks next appear in October 1940 among patrons of reception for Roland Hall Sharp speech,[255] a staff correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor who had been reporting on Fascism in South America.[256] In November Katherine was visible aiding the Women's International League Thanksgiving fundraiser.[257] In December Bullock was a nominee for vice-president of the Massachusetts Law Society.[258]

In February 1941 Bullock gave a talk at the Everett First Congregational Church,[259] and offered another talk as part of the reception for North Carolina Palmer Memorial Institute chair Charlotte Brown.[260] In May Bullocks was master of ceremonies at a memorial for Edward Dugger.[261] It was known Bullock was in New York mid-June, though not what he was doing.[262] In August he was among remembered black sports stars,[263] while he himself was among the August principle speakers at the Green Acre Bahá'í School for the annual Race Amity Convention,[264] along with Louis Gregory, NAACP leader and The Crisis editor Roy Wilkins, and Dorothy Beecher Baker.[54] In December he gave a talk to youth at the Copley Church in Boston during Advent season,[265] and at a Methodist Church,[266] on the heels of the news of the Attack on Pearl Harbor.

In mid-January, 1942, Bullock joined in a fundraiser for the Adult Education Center.[267] In May he was next visible giving a talk “Negro and the current Crisis” at the Greater Boston Adult Education Center's luncheon.[268] In August Bullock, listed as a vice-president of the Boston Urban League, was the leading co-signer of a letter published in the Boston Globe supporting the program for the Boston Soldiers and Sailors Committee recreational program for the city.[269] Bullock was also a member of the National Committee of the Urban League in 1942-3.[270] Meanwhile Bullock chaired the Sunday program of the Race Amity Conference at Green Acre in early August reading selections from 'Abdu'l-Bahá's talks,[271] from 1912, and on some points on African American history, and of how he was honored to be at the gathering sharing that he had read on the Bahá'í teachings for some years. Other presenters included African-American and Bostonian Bahá'í Mabry Oglesby, Ludmila Bechtold, Horace Holley, and Dorothy Beecher Baker.[272] In October Bullock was among the Massachusetts Law Society in procession for the Red Mass.[273] Later in the month it was announced that Bullock would serve on a state commission reviewing barriers to employment of blacks that reported to Governor Leverett Saltonstall, listed as member of State Department of Corrections.[274] That December Bullock was also listed as an officer of the Massachusetts Law Society.[275]

In January 1943, Bullock gave a talk on race relations at a Methodist church.[276] In April Bullock was again nominated to the State Parole Board.[277] The biographical article recalled he was vice-president of the Boston Urban League, a member of the USO Soldiers' and Sailors' Committee, vice-president of the Law Society of Massachusetts, past president of the Community Church, member of the Board of the Boston Center for Adult Education, a graduate of Everett Schools, Dartmouth, Harvard Law School, had taught in the South, tried to serve in WWI but barred for "athlete's heart" and instead worked with YMCA War program, his service as assistant to the Attorney General Jay Benton, Parole Board member nominated by Gov. Fuller, appointed to the Department of Correction in 1937 and that his son was a Bowdoin honors graduate and now serving as a private at Fort Devens while his daughter was a librarian at the Virginia Hampton Institute,[278] as it was called then. His nomination was confirmed,[279] and his salary was $4500 a year,[280] (about $68000 in 2021 dollars.[53]) In May Bullock spoke to a youth group at the Unitarian church in Exeter New Hampshire on "The Race Problem and Democracy".[281] In June he was remembered on a black Harvard graduates list that also noted Leslie Pinckney Hill but missed mention of Alain Locke.[282] In August Bullock co-taught a class with Bechtold on the Advent of Divine Justice at the summer Green Acre session that year.[283] In September Bullock was the object of another biographical article as a State Parole Commissioner, varsity football coach, and his success at Dartmouth.[284] In October he was again listed as a vice-president of the Law Society of Massachusetts.[285] Their son married in New York in November,[286] and Bullock was a co-speaker at an A.M.E. church service in Roxbury.[287] Bullock's position on the Parole Board was up for renewal in June 1944.[288] The year closed out with mention of Bullock on the executive committee for resolving USO integration policy issues when a USO club refused to integrate,[289] and was among speakers for a Baptist hosted reception for William H. Hastie.[290]

In February 1944 Bullock attended the USO Rec. Center reception at the Buddies Club,[291] and was among the many Bar Association members who spoke at a luncheon for Judge F. Ellis Rivers.[292] Bullock was indeed re-nominated to Parole Board in June.[293] In August Bullock gave a talk "Forward March of Humanity" with Bahá'í Terah Cowart Smith then of Atlanta amidst the next Race Amity Convention held at Green Acre.[294] He spoke of his experience in WWI seeking justice and fairness and being sore disappointed and social problems had only increased but how he had great joy having encountered the Bahá'í Faith.[295] When he returned home Bullock presided over a Race Unity meeting in Boston in November hosted by the Bahá'ís at which one speaker was Harlan Ober.[296] In November Bullock was nominated for Chair of the Parole Board.[297] It was pointed out in a local newspaper it was the highest office in state government by an appointed person of color when he was named Chair of the Parole Board.[298] That December Bullock was a member of the Bahá'í State Convention Committee for Massachusetts to elect its delegate to the next National Bahá'í Convention.[299] He also gave a talk in Springfield with the mention of the importance of accepting "the immutable fact that humanity is one" and racism as America's "most challenging issue",[300] a phrase Shoghi Effendi as then head of the religion had introduced in 1938 in The Advent of Divine Justice.[301] Bullock also served as chair of the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Boston during some unknown years since 1940.[9]

In January 1945 Bullock gave a talk in Ipswich entitled "The Negro and his place in Democracy Today”.[302] He was also visible among a group supporting a sentencing tribunal study.[303] In February Bullock gave a talk at a Community Church fundraiser,[304] and was also elected to the National Board of the Urban League.[305][306] It was also announced that Bullock was named to a Massachusetts committee for application of the Fair Employment Practice Act.[307] In March Bullock signed recommendations to curb/regulate alcohol sales "with reservations", (the law regulated but opened further drinking.)[308] In June Bullock was among sponsors of the New England Institute of International Relations at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts College.[309] Bullock's wife Katherine died August 10.[310][9] His children long since moved on with lives of their own, and now alone, a month later he off on Pacific survey for then Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal,[311][9] as one among several touring about progress in race conditions in the military,[312] with Harry McAlpin.[313] Bullock was back in Boston for a reception in honor of Julius E. Warren mid-late November.[314] Perhaps in December, the Boston Bahá'í meeting on World peace was chaired by Bullock.[315] Bullock, speaking as Chair of Parole Board, defended decisions of the Board from Rev. Robinson comments by detailing the background of the convict who had complained to Robinson.[316] In February Bullock spoke for the Parole Board on women camp followers of military areas,[317] and on further decisions in March,[318] and then in July.[319] Amidst these Bullock was also with the Albany Interracial Council meeting in April,[320] and on radio WBZ on May 23 as part of a program of many on the show.[321] Bullock served under the chairship of Louis Gregory on the 1946-7 Bahá'í National Assembly's Race Unity Committee while they planned three projects for the year - a large seminar on the theme of race amity, participate in other large conferences addressing problems of prejudice and create a pamphlet on the issue and the religion.[322] In August Bullock was a speaker at a New England Conference on probation.[323] In early November Bullock was a speaker at a meeting for the Bahá'ís and this year was scheduled for a talk for the Bahá'í community observance of the Birth of Bahá'u'lláh in Binghamton.[324] Newspapers as well as radio WNBF coverage occurred there with 175 people attending, only 40 of which were Bahá'ís.[325] About a week later Bullock was public standing by a decision of the Parole Board on a case,[326] and then spoke on Parole Board policy opposed to the demands of a sit down prison strike.[327] In December news coverage occurred that Bullock had been attacked during a parolee's interview which was echoed regionally.[328]

In January 1947 Bullock endorsed a scholarship program of some prisons for screened inmates to take school classes.[329] Then Bullock was quoted on Parole Board statements about prisons and sentences and the need for psychiatric reviews of prisoners.[330] In February Bullock attended a reception,[331] and was also named as part of a national committee for the Association for the Study of African American Life and History for a membership drive during what was then Negro History Week.[332] The month closed with news of the birth of a granddaughter born to Bullock.[333] In March Bullock commented in the news on Parole Board business about pressures to release prisoners.[334] That month the Bullock's son was admitted to Bar Association of Massachusetts.[335] The April–May 1947 Bahá'í national convention noted an anecdote of youth walking together as an interracial group in Los Angeles being stopped and harassed by police and Bullock was a delegate from Massachusetts that year.[54][336] He spoke up that “walking together is not indiscrete” in the face of the comments at the convention that proposed caution and not opposing society's standards and earning the attention of police. In June there was a Bahá'í advertisement for a talk by Bullock at the community's Center.[337] A couple weeks later Bullock spoke on "Consciousness of World Citizenship”[338] at the 35th "Souvenir" Bahá'í meeting in Teaneck, New Jersey, commemorating 'Abdu’l-Bahá’s talk in 1912.[339] In July it was mentioned that Bullock was a member of the Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Boston and had just been promoted to National Probation Association Board.[340] In October Bullock spoke on crime before the prison conference held by the Republican Women's Club of Lexington.[341] Bullock called for reform in the prison system especially about mixing minors and hardened criminals.[342] In November coverage began of the Noxon pardon petition which carried on for 2 plus years - a lawyer who had killed a son born with medical complications compromising mental development.[343]

In January 1948 Bullock appeared on WNAC-TV speaking on Parole Board policies.[344] A few days later there was news that Bullock was on a committee for fundraising for a New York based study centered on medical needs of African-Americans in Harlem.[345] In February Bullock spoke as chair of the Parole Board and said a law on indenture of women in some situations to the state should be taken down.[346] In March he acted as moderator of a Bahá'í meeting at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.[347] Approaching mid-April Bullock gave a talk at the Boston Bahá'í Center on "The Baha'i Revelation”.[348] In early May he gave a talk at a public forum in Akron, Ohio, on "Is there a solution to the nation's racial problems?”.[349] A few weeks later Bullock testified on Parole Board needs to the state government.[350] In June Bullock's daughter and granddaughter were pictured in Detroit news and briefly profiled; she was a Simmons and Fisk college graduate and her husband was a teacher in Detroit.[351] Meanwhile Bullock was among many who publicly supported Thomas E. Dewey for president in African American community coverage.[352] In August he spoke of the Parole Board advise against a parole case,[353] and was part of a panel at a conference organizing committee on crime prevention.[354] The month closed with coverage of him speaking at the conference about how simple punishment of a prison system has not reduced the crime rate,[355] and on supporting programs for prisoners to return to society as most prisoners were paroled one way or another.[356] In September Bullock was the second runner up in the by-election to replace the deceased George Latimer on the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States behind Leroy Ioas and Katherine True.[357] In local and national Bahá'í elections, as opposed to the norm in general in America, there is no nomination process, no electioneering, in Bahá'í elections.[358] In October Bullock spoke of a case of a revoked parole.[359] The month closed with mention of Bullock as a member of fundraising support for Red Feather Campaign for societal relief and aide.[360] In November was notice that Bullock's appointed position was to expire in April.[361] Later that month he gave a talk at the Boston Bahá'í Center on "God's love for mankind”.[362] In December came news of a Parole Board hearing on case.[363]

January 1949 came news of another parole case commented on by Bullock.[364] In March he gave a talk at the Bahá'í Center on "Progressive Religion”,[365] and commented on another parole case.[366] Mid-month Bullock spoke to the issue of women on the Parole Board as cases were mostly of men and some cases were harsh but if the law requiring women participation was passed he would not object to ensuring women were on board.[367] Closing March there was newspaper coverage of Bullock's opposition to the Parole Board reviewing life sentences.[368] March and early April Bullock joined an internationally diverse representation of the Bahá'í Faith to the UN meeting at Lake Success for the Third International Conference of NGOs which led to the Bahá'í participation on a committee on holding further events.[369] Along with Bullock came Mildred Mottahedeh and Hilda Yen and others. In May Bullock received the next highest votes after the nine of the National Spiritual Assembly at the national convention[370] - again it should be minded that Bahá'í elections have no electioneering.[358] A few days later it was announced Bullock would be among faculty of Green Acre in May through June.[371] Amidst these Bullock gave a talk at the Boston Bahá'í Center on "Why I am a Baha'i”.[372] Bullock was mentioned at Green Acre in early June,[373] and other talks in the vicinity too.[374] A bit later there was a comment of Bullock's on a parole case,[375] and June closed with notice that his appointment on the Parole Board had in fact expired June 2.[376] Despite this expiration he had not been replaced yet and was quoted in the news on another case which also made national news.[377] Some time over the previous year Bullock had been in Springfield giving a talk for the Bahá'ís as well.[378] News on Bullock's position on the Parole Board remained uncertain,[379] and he was still serving as chair of Parole Board in August.[380] In September Bullock, with a biographical summary noting his life - as lawyer and vice-president of the Greater Boston Urban League, executive board member of Massachusetts Law Society, member of National Probation and Parole Association, WWI service, former USO trustee of Greater Boston, and on the Board of Adult Education Center - spoke at the Foreman home in Everett for the Bahá'ís.[381] One hundred attended the meeting came from as far away as New York city and West Chester, Pennsylvania.[382] In October Bullock was part of series of meetings at Boston Bahá'í Center for the fall,[383] and continued to comment on parole cases as chair.[384] Finally near the close of October his replacement on the Parole Board was named.[385] Meanwhile Bullock gave a talk for UN Day entitled "The Earth is one Country”,[386] and still he spoke out against a bill on prison sentencing reform as chair.[387] With his imminent retirement there was mention of some interviews that were published in the Sunday Post and the Atlantic Monthly.[388]

Retired and Bahá'í pioneer edit

Finally Bullock's replacement on the Parole Board was confirmed in November, 1949.[389] Soon he chose to pioneer to Haiti and be a traveling promoter of the religion in the Caribbean area at request of the US National Spiritual Assembly with news in the Boston newspapers,[390][9] followed by mention in the Bahá'í News.[391] By May 1950 he was listed as a pioneer to Haiti,[392] and by July Bullock participated in a Panama Bahá'í conference collecting presenters from across the region that mentioned he was coming from Port-au-Prince.[393] He was back in Boston that summer and gave a talk "Security through religion” in the Bahá'í Center,[394] and returned to Haiti where he was listed with another couple Bahá'í pioneers.[395]

Back in the United States edit

Bullock was back in America in August first visible as an honorary pallbearer,[396] and wrote a letter to editor about a Nazi and Communist refugee.[397] In September he was finishing the work he had begun in December in Haiti.[398] In October Bullock chaired a meeting for the Bahá'ís in Boston with a majority non-Bahá'í audience of 120.[399] In later October Bullock served on an Easter Seal fundraising committee in Boston.[400] In November Bullock gave a talk for the Boston community observance of the Birth of Bahá’u’lláh entitled "Baha'u'llah, the Christ of the 19th Century”.[401] Bullock recalled the early April 1951 regional convention of the Bahá'ís of Central America, Mexico and the Antilles highlighting two points - first the overall orderliness of the convention and second the apparentness of spiritual virtues among the delegates.[402] Then Bullock attended the US national convention as one of the Massachusetts delegates with others including Harlan Ober.[403] The article covering this mentioned other news of and upcoming activities for Bullock: he had been chair of the Boston Bahá'í Assembly and of the Bahá'í Regional Teaching Committee for Massachusetts; and he went on a speaking tour in June of Salem, Beverly, Hamilton, Ipswich and Green Acre. He also was just appointed to a national Bahá'í committee focused on East and West Africa, and would be attending the dedication of the Panama City conference and election of their Regional National Assembly in Lima, Peru. Bullock's next appearance in the news was as a talk at the Boston Bahá'í Center entitled "A New Message for a New Day” and noted aiding Bahá'ís going to Africa while still associated with religion's development in Haiti and Caribbean.[404] In July Bullock did a class at the Bahá'í summer school in Colorado focused on Bahá'í pioneering and then another at Louhelen Bahá'í School.[405] In November Bullock joined others in giving a talk "World Conditions in light of the Bahá'í World Faith" and noting his career of service.[406] In December he was a moderator of the panel of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity on "Securing World Peace by Strengthening Democracy".[407]

In January and into April 1952 Bullock was in Cuba for both the Havana and Cienfuegos communities of Bahá'ís until the regional convention to elect the Central American National Assembly.[408] He was the first delegate to arrive to the Costa Rica site of the convention for the regional National Spiritual Assembly and the hotel refused to admit him because of his skin color. The Bahá'ís quickly made other arrangements that would allow all races to attend.[409] This might have been the 1952 convention.[410]

Elected the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States edit

In the US national convention Bullock was elected to National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States,[411] and spoke at the convention on the African Committee's work and commenting on the need for Bahá'í pioneering of means as well as the importance of keeping up a correspondence with such pioneers to help bolster their spirits.[412] It was also announced it was to be a Holy Year for Bahá'ís from October 1952 to October 1953 recalling the originating religious experience of Bahá'u'lláh[253] as Bullock was listed as member of the National Spiritual Assembly and a member of several national committees - the United Nations Committee to aid representing the religion at the UN, the National Interracial Teaching Committee to manage reaching out to people of color and the understanding of the Bahá'í principle of the oneness of humanity under Sarah Pereira and serving alongside Helen Elsie Austin and Robert B. Powers, on the Legal Aid Committee to aid and advise on matters referred to the National Assembly along with Helen Elsie Austin and Horace Holley, and the Africa Teaching Committee under Austin on the African context of the Ten Year Crusade.[413] In July Bullock read the talk given by 'Abdu'l-Bahá in Boston at their new Bahá'í Center commemorating the visit.[414] In August speakers at a Green Acre summer session focused on Africa were with Bullock and others.[415] By now it was known he had helped the religion in Haiti, Cuba and Costa Rica.[416][9] A September newspaper article of Bullock because he was giving a talk on the religion recalled how he was asked by Secretary of the Navy Forrestal to review Pacific situation after WWII, and some former associations and currently active in Urban League.[417] He spoke again at the end of September at the Boston Bahá'í Center on "The Distinguishing features of the Baha'i Faith”.[418] In October he was again on tour around several Bahá'í communities but started with an AME Church giving a talk for Rt. Rev. Edgar Amos Love, and went on to the DC Bahá'í community where there was mention of future plans to speak at the Bahá'í House of Worship in Wilmette, and going to the intercontinental Uganda Conference in 1953.[419] In December Bullock spoke in Lansing Michigan for the Omega Psi Phi meeting about "Democracy - now or never”.[420] He also spoke at the Bahá'í Michigan state convention.[421] He was one of the Massachusetts delegates to the national convention.[422]

Pilgrimage, Knight of Bahá'u'lláh, Jubilee Year service edit

In 1953 he went on Baháʼí pilgrimage before attending the Intercontinental Bahá'í Conference in Uganda.[9] He said of it: "The Guardian has cleared up many things for me. My visit to him and to the Holy Shrines are experiences beyond words. I don't think I will ever be able to express what it meant to me; nor do I think that any Bahá'í is the same after being with the Guardian. I wish every Bahá'í could have the bounty which has been mine.”[9] Then he was at the Ugandan Conference with mention in the Pittsburgh Courier.[423] Helen Elsie Austin and he were representatives of the American National Spiritual Assembly to the conference; African Committee member Van Sombeek was also present.[424] Bullock and Dorothy Beecher Baker led the second public meeting. News coverage of the event was slanted leading to lively comment and a chance to correct the statement. They spoke at the second public event of February.[425] Bullock presided over the meeting while Baker gave a talk.[426] For the next few months Bullock traveled around Africa including the Belgian Congo,[9] and then he visited Liberia where he helped with contact with President Tubman so that Bahá'í pioneers were reinstated at their jobs at a hospital they lost December 1952 over circumstances and confusions of their intents and choices.[427] Bullock was also invited to a special diplomatic dinner and addressed the audience on the religion.[9] By March it was announced Bullock would give a weekend session at Louhelen Bahá'í School in Michigan in mid-July on "The New Africa”.[428] Come April he and Austin were again elected to the US Bahá'í National Assembly. This part of the holy year and dedication of the Bahá'í House of Worship in Wilmette, Illinois.[429][253] Bullock chaired the public evening program held at Medina Temple, N. Wahabsh Ave, April 29, followed by being the fifth reader of the session after the keynote by Rúhiyyih Khánum May 2 and read from the Qur'an recalling Louis Gregory's reading in 1944: "O our Lord! punish us not if we forget, or fall into sin… O our Lord!… lay not on us that for which we have not strength: but blot out our sins and forgive us, and have pity on us.” (Al-Baqarah - The Cow - 2:286 ).[430][431] A major announcement at the time was of the Ten Year Crusade.[9] The Ten Year Crusade had the goal of expanding the service of pioneers, whose goal was to promulgate the religion by aiding the establishment of Bahá'í communities based in the local population, by expanding the horizon of goals to embrace the world wide society of humanity and raise regional and national institutions of the religion based on those local developments.[253] In July Bullock spoke at Louhelen Bahá'í School on “The New Africa".[432] By August 31 three members of the US National Spiritual Assembly announced their retirement from the assembly in order to pioneer in honor of the Ten Year Crusade: Bullock, Baker and Austin,via a telegraph to which Shoghi Effendi responded to by telegraph: "Overjoyed remarkable achievements American Baha'i Community, safeguarding primacy, enhancing prestige, setting magnificent example sister communities East West. Assure three Assembly members, also Lofoten valiant pioneer, abiding appreciation, fervent loving prayers."[433] In October Bullock gave a talk back in Boston at the Bahá'í Center entitled "Mount your steeds”.[434] Bullock was noted arrived in the Dutch West Indies November 20, 1953.[435] It was a virgin location[436][9] so he was named a Knight of Bahá'u'lláh.[437] This was on a tourist visa so he regularly had to leave the island and seek to return.[409] By January 1954 the resignations from the national assembly had reached 5 adding William Kenneth Christian and Mamie Setto.[438][9][439][440] Inbetween being in Curaçao he gave a talk in Boston on the book Portals to Freedom by Howard Colby Ives.[441] Bullock returned to Curacao December 6, 1954.[442] He gave a World Religion Day talk in early January.[409] He left again in mid-April and was able to return in the fall. A stable active Bahá'í community soon formed while he was there with the assistance of other pioneers.[409][9] Around 1955 while pioneering in the Dutch West Indies Bullock also assisted the Iberian National Assembly incorporate with registration with the Spanish government so that it could perform weddings,[409] and traveled among other West Indies communities.[9]

Tours and schools edit

Bullock was appointed to lifetime position of directors of the Greater Boston Urban League in March 1955.[443] Across July–August Bullock was mentioned attended Bahá'í meetings in Falmouth and Plymouth.[444] In January 1956 Bullock visited his son in Philadelphia.[445] In August, noting his history in and outside of America, Bullock spoke to the Bahá'ís of Marshfield,[446] and a couple weeks later taught a class at Green Acre mentioning he had traveled to Spain and Curacao in the West Indies.[447] In October he officiated funeral of Anna Tucker in Amesbury.[448] In December mention came of Bullock at the Van Sombeek home in Durham, North Carolina, and though a short article it was on the front page.[449]

In June 1957 Bullock was among Red Feather Organization directors in the Boston area.[450] This was the year of the death of Shoghi Effendi in November. The next news on Bullock came in June 1958 when he gave the keynote talk at the Bahá'í Race Amity Day observance in Hackensack, New Jersey.[451] There was a quote and summary published in the newspaper - "Only through spiritual civilization will we create world harmony.… World harmony will eventually lead to world peace as promised by the prophets of God…. We should learn to love one another beginning with our family. If everyone in the world did this there would be no wars or worldwide disputes."[452] About 100 people attended the event. In October Bullock gave a talk at the Boston Education Center on the theme "Visits with interesting people".[453] Bullock was known to visit St. Thomas Island in December.[454]

In August 1959 Bullock taught class at the Laurentian Bahá'í School in Canada.[455] In October Bullock spoke for the community observance of the Birth of the Báb in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.[456] In later 1959 Bullock toured four cities of North Carolina speaking to an estimated 1460 people all together,[457] in Durham, Raleigh, Greensboro, and Charlotte he spoke at colleges and homes.[458]

In March 1960 he aided the Easter Seals fundraising campaign in Boston.[459] The Bahá'ís held a UN Day in October with a symposium with Bullock saying adding spirituality to the UN activities was important.[460]

In 1960 he moved to Jamaica briefly and then visited Curacao several times until 1964 while living in Boston.[461] His health was troubled and he was aided by members of the Boston Bahá'í community in his care "through the dark days of pain and incapacity” as Austin puts it.[9]

There was no word from Bullock for a few years. He next appears in 1963 back in Raleigh, North Carolina,[462] and then in Greenville, South Carolina, saying: "In order to find truth and know God, we must give up all kinds of prejudices”.[463] A memoir of a Bahá'í recalls meeting Bullock in these later years of Bullock in this visit to Greenville: “Matthew was, without doubt, the most dignified and proper gentleman I’ve ever met. He wore a suite and tie ‘’every single day’’. He's the only man I’ve ever seen eat a hamburger with a knife and fork."[464] In October Bullock attended at luncheon for Dartmouth,[465] and in November officiated at funeral of a Bahá'í in Nashua.[466] In December he gave a talk at Human Rights Day cosponsored by the Bahá'ís and the NAACP chapter in Connecticut again giving a profile of his life and work inside and outside America.[467] A few days later he gave a talk entitled "The Negro Awakening” in Hartford.[468]

In August 1964 Bullock was a co-presenter of Bahá'ís at the Gravity Research Foundation Institute in New Boston, New Hampshire, August 29, 1964.[469] In September Bullock spoke at the dedication of a cabin at Camp Atwater in New York state out of his old friendship with Rev. Dr. William DeBerry.[470] Then he returned to North Carolina in 1965 as the main speaker at the World Religion Day observance held at what is today the University of North Carolina at Durham.[471] Inbetween his visits to Durham the first Local Spiritual Assembly of Durham had been elected which included Van Sombeek.[472] Later in February Bullock was hosted by Van Sombeek and gave talks in the area some two weeks.[473] In April Bullock gave a talk entitled "What it means to be a Baha'i" at the Community Church in Boston.[474]

 
Bullock (left) shaking hands with Boston mayor John F. Collins after being appointed to the Boston Zoning Board

In June Bullock was named to a Zoning Commission following the meeting of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King at Boston with Mayor Collins.[475][476]

In May 1966 Bullock's history was profiled and with personal quotes in The Boston Globe in a series entitled "Whatever became of…" - of more detail than previous published. Bullock spoke of how he had been captain of the football, baseball and ice polo teams, and played left tackle in football at Everett High School, how at Dartmouth he had been in football, track, and sang in the Glee Club and had been mentioned with All-American football lists. He recalled he had coached in University of Massachusetts at Amherst Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical School and then to Malden. And Bullock mentioned his parents had been born into slavery and that his grandfather Washington Sneed had been killed by the KKK by being thrown into an abandoned well and Bullock's mother's mother had found it all during the first rise of the KKK in North Carolina.[477] He spoke of being turned down for WWI service for age or what he called an "athlete's heart" and served via the YMCA and attended the dedication of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington Cemetery. He spoke of how he chose the Bahá'í Faith which had no clergy and how he had embarked on a "personal crusade" for 10 years traveling for the promotion of the religion, and a long service amidst which he helped dedicate the Bahá'í Temple in Wilmette and hoped yet to go to Scandinavia and Brazil.[8]

Bullock's brother William Henry died in January 1967.[478] In June Bullock made an appearance in among the Bahá'ís in Durham, North Carolina.[479] That year he moved to be cared for by his daughter in Detroit and then a nursing home.[9]

Last years edit

Bullock co-writer of 5 page biographical article of Bahá'í Harlan Ober, a founder of the Boston Bahá'í community, that was published in 1970.[480] The Boston Assembly obtained an incorporation and granted the authority to hold legal marriages in 1946. Ober married his second wife Elizabeth Kidder Ober in June 1941 and went on his third pilgrimage in 1956 after which they pioneered to Pretoria, South Africa, and helped raise its first all-African spiritual assembly. Harlan died July 20, 1962, buried in Pretoria.

In 1970 came his first honorary degree for Bullock - from Harvard University.[9] This was followed by Dartmouth in 1971[9] with an honorary law degree[481][482] where he received a standing ovation among the 5000 present.[9] The citation read in part:

Concern for your fellow man continued to occupy your energies after retirement. You are a recognized leader of the Bahá'í Faith, and you have traveled all over the world at your own expense in the interest of that religion. You believe very deeply that the establishment of universal justice and freedom requires the spiritual and moral awakening of all people….”[9]

Bullock had met Dartmouth President John Kemeny who noted his achievements.[483] Bullock died December 17, 1972, at the home of his daughter in Detroit.[3][9][31] He provided the program for his own funeral,[9] and a testimonial telegram came from the Universal House of Justice:

GRIEVED PASSING KNIGHT BAHAULLAH MATTHEW BULLOCK DISTINGUISHED PROMOTER FAITH CONVEY FAMILY ASSURANCE PRAYERS HOLY THRESHOLD PROGRESS HIS SOUL ADVISE HOLD MEMORIAL GATHERING MASHRIQULADHKAR[9]

The memorial requested was held February 17, 1973.[9]

Son Bullock Jr. was a judge in Philadelphia and his daughter lived on in Detroit.[3] He died in 2013.[484]

Bullock Sr. was buried in Mt. Hope Cemetery, Mattapan, Massachusetts.[3][31]

Remembrance edit

It was remembered that Bullock had criticized the prison system for its mixing of hardened criminals with misguided youngsters,[3] as well as that in 1946 he was attacked by a parole seeker and subdued the prisoner himself at the age of 65.[3]

In 1974 the Bahá'ís remembered him being part of national assembly that left that service to pioneer,[485][486] as well as being part of the dedication of the Bahá'í Temple with media coverage noting Bullock and Baker in 1975.[487] A three page biography with pictures was published next in Baha’i News largely similar to the Baha’i World article by Austin.[488] This was extended in 1983 a few black community newspapers including in The National Leader had a historical review of Bahá'ís who were black with mention of Bullock alongside Robert Sengstacke Abbott, Alain LeRoy Locke, Glenford Mitchell, Louis Gregory, Helen Elsie Austin, Dizzy Gillespie, Robert Hayden, and others.[489][490]

In 2006 Bullock's achievement as black coach at Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical College, now the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, was remembered distantly. It would be 71 years before the next such coach who then was called a conqueror of racial hostility.[491] A decade later Bullock's time at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst was remembered briefly as part of a general review of diversity among students at the college.[492]

In 2017 a biographical article on Bullock was published in The Bay State Banner was published,[476] and Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association also sponsored an article.[493] Bullock's time at Dartmouth was featured in an audio podcast with scholar Derrick White.[494]

In 2020 the Everett community sponsored an article on Bullock.[495]

Most recently, in February 2021, the University of Massachusetts Athletics Department noted Bullock.[496]

Head coaching record edit

College edit

[citation needed]

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs
Massachusetts Aggies (Independent) (1904)
1904 Massachusetts 5–2–1
Massachusetts Aggies (Independent) (1907–1908)
1907 Massachusetts 5–3–1
1908 Massachusetts 3–3–3
Massachusetts: 13–8–5
Morehouse Maroon Tigers (Independent) (1909–1911)
1909 Morehouse 5–0–1
1910 Morehouse 4–1
1911 Morehouse 4–1
Morehouse: 12–2–1
Alabama A&M Bulldogs (Independent) (1924–1926)
1924 Alabama A&M 0–2
1925 Alabama A&M 0–1
1926 Alabama A&M 0–1
Alabama A&M: 0–4
Total: 26–14–6

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Yenser 1944.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Matthew Bullock, 91, rites, former Parole Chairman". Boston Herald. Boston, MA. December 20, 1972. p. 29. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s *William Buchanan (December 19, 1972). "Matthew Bullock, 91, athlete, parole official". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. p. 29. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Matthew Bullock dies; ex-Parole Board Chief". Hartford Courant. Hartford, Connecticut. December 20, 1972. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c "Matthew W Bullock Massachusetts Marriages, 1841-1915". Familysearch.org. September 21, 1910. Retrieved March 14, 2021.(registration required)
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Matthew W Bullock United States Passport Applications, 1795-1925". Familysearch.org. February 6, 1918. Retrieved March 14, 2021.(registration required)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Bullock, Ralph W. (1927). "Matthew W. Bullock". In spite of handicaps: brief biographical sketches with discussion outlines of outstanding Negroes now living who are achieving distinction in various lines of endeavor. New York: Association Press. pp. 85–9. OCLC 1154539859.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Matthew Washington Bullock United States, YMCA World War I Service Cards, 1917-1919". Familysearch.org. June 4, 1919. Retrieved March 14, 2021.(registration required)
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Ted Ashby (May 29, 1966). "Whatever became of… Bullock introduced passing at Malden". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. p. 39. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am * Elsie Austin (December 1975). "In love with justice - the story of Matthew Bullock, Bahá'í pioneer, coach, and lawyer". Baha'i News. No. 537. pp. 6–8. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • Helen Elsie Austin (1975). "Matthew W. Bullock, 1881-1972, Knight of Bahá'u'lláh". Bahá'í World. An International Record. Vol. 15. Haifa, Israel: Bahá'í World Centre. pp. 535–9. ISBN 0853980594.
    • Elsie Austin (1993). Annemarie Honnold (ed.). Why They became Bahá'ís - The First Generation Bahá'ís by 1963. National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of India. pp. 301–2. ISBN 8185091722.
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  13. ^ Johnson, Wardell; Jackson, Vanessa Prier (December 30, 2016), "Race and Racism: The Black Male Experience in Sports", Critical Race Theory: Black Athletic Sporting Experiences in the United States, New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, pp. 153–170, doi:10.1057/978-1-137-60038-7_6, ISBN 978-1-137-60037-0, retrieved April 24, 2023
  14. ^ Johnson, Wardell; Jackson, Vanessa Prier (December 30, 2016), "Race and Racism: The Black Male Experience in Sports", Critical Race Theory: Black Athletic Sporting Experiences in the United States, New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, pp. 153–170, doi:10.1057/978-1-137-60038-7_6, ISBN 978-1-137-60037-0, retrieved April 24, 2023
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  86. ^ Compare pictures of the Bullocks at "The Story". Warren County, NC Racial Justice. Retrieved March 20, 2021. and "Fuller names Bullock to State Parole Board". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. March 24, 1927. p. 19. Retrieved March 21, 2021., and read further on the other at Weaver, John C. (1996). "Black Man, White Justice: The Extradition of Matthew Bullock, an African-American Residing in Ontario, 1922". Osgoode Hall Law Journal. 34 (4) (4 ed.): 627–660. doi:10.60082/2817-5069.1616. S2CID 148392006.
  87. ^ * "Candidate for old position". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. May 27, 1922. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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    • "Boston solon don't like the Ku Klux Klan". Oklahoma Herald. Muskogee, Oklahoma. October 31, 1922. p. 3. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Matthew W. Bullock…". The Berkshire Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. November 3, 1922. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Bills are aimed at Ku Klux Klan". Fall River Daily Evening News. Fall River, Massachusetts. November 29, 1922. p. 5. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  108. ^ "Work for abolishment of segregation discussed". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 19, 1926. p. 15. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  132. ^ * "People's Baptist Church". The Portsmouth Herald. Portsmouth, New Hampshire. March 22, 1930. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  137. ^ "Tableaux reflect negro war roles". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. September 6, 1930. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  138. ^ * "Woman charges wet views barred her from GOP post". The Tampa Tribune. Tampa, Florida. September 25, 1930. p. 3. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Mrs. Putname 'hurt', bolts dry group". Reading Times. Reading, Pennsylvania. September 25, 1930. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "GOP refuses place to Mrs. W. L. Putnam". The Standard Union. Brooklyn, New York. September 25, 1930. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Wants to know their stand". The Berkshire Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. September 25, 1930. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  140. ^ "Butler says tariff aids show business". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 31, 1930. p. 32. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  141. ^ "Other nominations". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. November 19, 1930. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  145. ^ "Hearing for McCue and O'Donnell". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. September 24, 1931. p. 9. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  146. ^ * "New Robert Gould Shaw house ready". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 9, 1931. p. 3. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  147. ^ Named after Robert Gould Shaw, "Robert Gould Shaw House". BlackFacts Details. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  149. ^ "The Cambridge Civic Club…". Cambridge Sentinel. January 16, 1932. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  153. ^ "Matthew W. Bullock reelected head of Pan-Hellenic Council". The New York Age. New York, New York. May 14, 1932. p. 5. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  154. ^ * "Ponzi asks court to set him free". Rutland Daily Herald. Rutland, Vermont. May 24, 1932. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  155. ^ "Great pressure put on State Parole Board". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. June 28, 1932. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  156. ^ "200 places to be filled by Gov Ely". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 28, 1932. p. 12. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  157. ^ "Charge discrimination in automobile insurance". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 1, 1933. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  158. ^ "Matthew W. Bullock…". The Berkshire Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. February 2, 1933. p. 16. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  162. ^ "Churches of Lexington; Church of Our Redeemer; Sunday". Lexington Minute-Men. Lexington, MA. May 11, 1933. p. 3. Retrieved March 14, 2021.[permanent dead link]
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  164. ^ "Ladies - and the community spirit". Cambridge Sentinel. September 9, 1933. pp. 1, 8. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  166. ^ "Pardon hearing for Mrs Dorothy Murphy". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. September 15, 1933. p. 26. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  167. ^ "Victors in first game ever played in Harvard stadium". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 26, 1933. p. 18. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  168. ^ "Christmas party held in Mount Vernon church". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 11, 1933. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  170. ^ ""Good will to all men"". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 23, 1933. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  171. ^ "Community Church hears three speak". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 25, 1933. p. 13. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  172. ^ "Church group told of "Labor and New Deal"". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 9, 1934. p. 19. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  173. ^ "Pardon hearing given lifer". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 15, 1934. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  174. ^ "'Rescue at sea' for campaign carnival". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. March 7, 1934. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  175. ^ "Roxbury District". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. April 13, 1934. p. 13. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  177. ^ "Mr. Bullock speaks at registration rally". Newport Mercury. Newport, Rhode Island. May 25, 1934. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  178. ^ a b "GOP committee endorses platform". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. June 29, 1934. p. 33. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  179. ^ * "Milk Control Board nominations by Ely". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. July 11, 1934. p. 19. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  180. ^ "Dillon names New Suffolk probate judge". Revere Journal. Revere MA. July 20, 1934. p. 5. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  181. ^ * "Pardon Board hears 2 lifers". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 30, 1934. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  183. ^ * "Bay State negro was excluded". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 11, 1934. p. 9. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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    • "Flare over a racial ban". The Kansas City Star. Kansas City, Missouri. December 11, 1934. p. 3. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "FDR leads fresh attack on criminals". The Chattanooga News. Chattanooga, Tennessee. December 11, 1934. p. 1,3. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Negro barred, protest follows". Biddeford Daily Journal. Biddeford, Maine. December 11, 1934. p. 7. Retrieved March 21, 2021.
    • "Hotel allows negro to enter guest's suite". The Town Talk. Alexandria, Louisiana. December 12, 1934. p. 5. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Bullock resents hotel incident". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 12, 1934. p. 22. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Negro barred from hotel; whites balk". The Paducah Sun-Democrat. Paducah, Kentucky. December 12, 1934. p. 12. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Threatened to walk out". Montpelier Evening Argus. Montpelier, Vermont. December 12, 1934. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  184. ^ "Girl asks Board parole Gilbert". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 19, 1934. p. 12. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  185. ^ "Willis asks new recount… Bullock would change law regarding parole". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. January 3, 1935. p. 14. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  186. ^ "Francis J. Burke confirmed as judge". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. January 16, 1935. p. 13. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  189. ^ "Arlington; In the Park Avenue…". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 25, 1935. p. 9. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  196. ^ "Another lifer given hearing". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. September 20, 1935. p. 22. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  197. ^ * "Rev Teinhold Neibuhr". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 19, 1935. p. 9. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Organized negro workers nold (sic) services at Church". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 21, 1935. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Prof Murray speaks on utilities act". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 3, 1935. p. 5. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Community Church has unique even planned". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. January 3, 1936. p. 17. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Out of the West". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 15, 1936. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  198. ^ * "Communists 'seize' peace conference". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 23, 1935. pp. 1, 15. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Peace meeting in an uproad". The Kansas City Star. Kansas City, Missouri. October 23, 1935. p. 27. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Peace meeting is turned into protest against Italians". Standard-Speaker. Hazleton, Pennsylvania. October 23, 1935. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Force action by anti-war meeting". St. Albans Daily Messenger. St. Albans, Vermont. October 23, 1935. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Boston peace group to picket consulate". The Tribune. Scranton, Pennsylvania. October 23, 1935. p. 11. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Peace gathering in Boston church thrown in uproad". Hartford Courant. Hartford, Connecticut. October 23, 1935. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Bostonians vote to picket Italian consulate at peace conference". The Courier-Journal. Louisville, Kentucky. October 23, 1935. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Peace meeting is turned in protest against Italians". Standard-Speaker. Hazleton, Pennsylvania. October 23, 1935. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Peace meeting ends in uproar". Reading Times. Reading, Pennsylvania. October 23, 1935. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Vote to picket Italian offices". The Brattleboro Reformer. Brattleboro, Vermont. October 23, 1935. p. 8. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Peace meeting become uproar". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Fort Worth, Texas. October 23, 1935. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  199. ^ "Lifer, Caruso, pleads for pardon". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. November 21, 1935. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  200. ^ "No clemency for McDonald". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. December 5, 1935. pp. 1, 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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    • "Asks Councile to postpone action today". The North Adams Transcript. North Adams, Massachusetts. January 7, 1936. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  203. ^ "No Parole Board action expected". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. January 22, 1936. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  204. ^ "Marian Anderson Concert will aid community center". Cambridge Tribune. February 14, 1936. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  207. ^ "Welsley Foundation". Cambridge Tribune. March 20, 1936. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  208. ^ * "Baha'i Faith". Boston Herald. Boston, MA. October 17, 1936. p. 18. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Baha'i Faith". Boston Herald. Boston, MA. November 14, 1936. p. 14. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  209. ^ * "Murphy and Howard to retain positions". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. November 10, 1936. p. 13. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Twenty good paying berths await filling by Gov. Curley this month". The Berkshire Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. December 1, 1936. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Terms expire for 20 state post holders". The North Adams Transcript. North Adams, Massachusetts. December 1, 1936. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Council accepts 35 appointments". The North Adams Transcript. North Adams, Massachusetts. December 10, 1936. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  210. ^ "Judge in failing health, witnesses tell governor". The Berkshire County Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. December 30, 1936. p. 20. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  211. ^ "Judges remain in office, appointments confirmed". The Berkshire Eagle. Pittsfield, Massachusetts. December 31, 1936. p. 16. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  212. ^ * "Swelling State Parole Board". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. April 26, 1937. p. 14. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Parole Board Bill stands". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. May 11, 1937. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  213. ^ "Adult education Center's exhibits". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. January 4, 1937. p. 17. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  214. ^ "Peace campaign to open here tomorrow". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. January 11, 1937. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  215. ^ "Church he founded to honor Dr. Skinner". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 4, 1937. p. 10. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  216. ^ "Committee to survey negro reemployment". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 4, 1937. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  217. ^ * "Bullock appointed Lyman's assistant". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. March 18, 1937. p. 36. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
    • "Boston lawyer wins post on State Correction Board". Statesville Daily Record. Statesville, North Carolina. April 9, 1937. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  218. ^ "Nathaniel A Brewer to be honored". Cambridge Tribune. April 9, 1937. p. 1. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  219. ^ "Epworth M E Church". Cambridge Tribune. April 16, 1937. p. 7. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  220. ^ "'Beacon Hill scenes'". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. May 6, 1937. p. 32. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  221. ^ "Sees communism or fascism ahead". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. June 11, 1937. p. 12. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  222. ^ "Tea this afternoon". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 14, 1937. p. 16. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  223. ^ "Matthew Bullock to speak Sunday, Oct 31". Cambridge Tribune. October 22, 1937. p. 6. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  224. ^ "Opposes State Bastille plan". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. October 19, 1937. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  225. ^ "Today in Society - The Boston Urban League…". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. November 19, 1937. p. 17. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  227. ^ "19 regional heads of National Bar Associ., chose by president". The New York Age. New York, New York. December 25, 1937. p. 2. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  228. ^ "Annual dinner dance; Athletic night". Cambridge Tribune. Cambridge, MA. January 21, 1938. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  229. ^ "Old Cambridge Baptist Church". Cambridge Tribune. February 4, 1938. p. 8. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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  231. ^ "Rites at Roxbury for C. F. Butler". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. April 26, 1938. p. 12. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  232. ^ "Un-American propaganda here revealed in exhibit". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. May 2, 1938. p. 10. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  233. ^ "Boston Area Council of Churches dinner". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts. February 14, 1939. p. 9. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
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matthew, bullock, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, b. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message The article s lead section may need to be rewritten Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Matthew Washington Bullock September 11 1881 December 17 1972 was an American lawyer politician and human rights activist Matthew W BullockBullock c 1927Born 1881 09 11 September 11 1881Dabney North Carolina U SDiedDecember 17 1972 1972 12 17 aged 91 Detroit Michigan U SOccupation s American football coach 1904 1908 lawyer from 1912 college professor dean 1908 1917 Boston Urban League from 1919 assistant to the Massachusetts Attorney General 1924 1927 State Parole Board 1927 1937 State Department of Corrections 1937 1943 and regional board of the Massachusetts Bar Association from 1937 State Parole Board 1943 1949 chair from 1944 national board of the Urban League from 1945 National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of the United States 1952 1953 1953 1954 resigned 1953 to pioneer to Curacao and Zoning Commission Board 1965 1966 SpouseKatherine Wright BullockChildren2 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Dartmouth College 1 3 Atlanta service 1 4 World War I and YMCA service 1 5 Boston service in the African American Community 1 6 Assistant State Attorney General 1 7 State Parole Board 1 8 Community Church 1 9 Joined the Baha i Faith 1 10 Retired and Baha i pioneer 1 11 Back in the United States 1 12 Elected the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of the United States 1 13 Pilgrimage Knight of Baha u llah Jubilee Year service 1 14 Tours and schools 1 15 Last years 2 Remembrance 3 Head coaching record 3 1 College 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editChildhood edit Matthew Washington Bullock was born September 11 1881 in Dabney North Carolina His parents Jesse and Amanda Sneed Bullock 1 2 3 4 5 were born enslaved 6 7 8 In 1889 the family moved to Boston with seven children and a ten dollar bill 9 Bullock attended public schools and in 1896 he graduated from Everett Center Grammar School 10 He then attended Everett High School 3 where he was the first African American captain of the high school team as well as captaining the hockey ice polo and baseball teams 9 8 Bullock was recognized as among the best athletes of the school 6 His brother Henry was also a star athlete at Everett 3 Bullock was listed as a member of the Center School Alumni association of Fall 1899 11 In June 1900 the US Census Records recorded that six children between the ages of 29 and 15 lived with Jesse and Joseph Jesse and Joseph the eldest were day laborers although they have also been unemployed some months of the previous year Jesse and Amanda were listed as illiterate while all children were listed as literate 12 Dartmouth College edit nbsp Bullock while coach at Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical School Bullock was to start his time at Dartmouth College in 1901 His father sent him 50 for his tuition equivalent to about 1 300 in 2021 and enrolled him at Dartmouth College He had to start working to pay his tuitions He enrolled at Dartmouth in the autumn and was elected to the Glee Club for his singing abilities as well as serving on the track team for all four years Bullock was the first African American to play football at Dartmouth 13 but he played a game his freshman year He finished second in the high jump at an event that year 14 The following year he started as a defensive end on the football team 15 and played well 16 In his Sophomore year he won first place in the broad jump and was successful in football 15 Bullock sang as a baritone soloist at a Vermont Church in April 1903 17 He had greater success in his junior year 15 despite playing only the first six games 16 In his senior year Bullock was on the varsity football team and achieved national recognition 6 He was part of the Dartmouth football team that defeated Harvard at the dedication event of the Dartmouth stadium in later 1903 18 A picture of Bullock was printed in a November issue of the Boston Post at the age of 22 19 A week later Bullock was refused accommodations during a game at Princeton University and also called out during the game events that were covered in newspapers in various states across the nation 20 He broke a collarbone in the first play of this third game of the year in this Princeton game and it was widely believed he had been targeted 15 Dartmouth cut athletic ties with Princeton for several years 15 This was all during Woodrow Wilson s presidency at Princeton there and his investment in segregationally practices in the school 21 However Bullock was not named an All American despite qualifying 15 16 His senior year he was also a member Palaeopity Senior Society as a distinguished individual 15 other by invitation boards and committees 6 and was the associate editor of The Aegis 22 Bullock graduated in 1904 3 2 7 with a Bachelor of Arts degree 6 1 and scholastic and athletic distinctions 9 but only honorable mention in Walter Camp s All American football listing for 1904 3 Sports commentator and NAACP leader Edwin Henderson in 1939 observed of Bullock s performance in 1901 3 Why Bullock did not receive All American selection has never been understood Bullock was one of the brainiest men of football ability the game has ever had 23 9 Indeed Bullock released his own list of All American footballers in 1911 23 Bullock then attended Harvard Law School 1904 1907 ultimately earning an LLB degree 1 6 while James Barr Ames was Dean of the school Along the way he paid is tuition by coaching football 15 6 9 He soon coached for the Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical College now University of Massachusetts at Amherst 8 starting in the fall of 1904 24 and was credited with the comment the outlook is the most encouraging in years in the school newspaper 25 By that winter it said it has been without doubt the most successful season in the history of the college credited to Bullock after defeating 5 larger institutions and play in the championship bout and the team presented Bullock with an inscribed watch fob and charm 26 He was the first black football coach of an integrated college team and had a winning record 15 and was one of a handful of African American football figures in the eastern white colleges 27 He then coached at Malden High School in 1905 15 6 1 8 as its first black football coach 2 3 and was presented with a bonus for his improvement of the team in the year 28 They were undefeated early in 1906 7 school year 29 Bullock finished at Harvard in the summer of 1907 30 31 3 7 with a Bachelor of Law degree 2 studied at Cornell University 2 and returned to Agriculture amp Mechanics College 15 32 where he was set to coach more seasons There was also a report he was heading out to Oklahoma to practice law 33 However by early 1909 he was in the South That May his father died while the family was living on Winter Street 34 Atlanta service edit In 1908 Bullock accepted a position at Morehouse College then Atlanta Baptist College as athletic director and teacher 9 15 1 In 1910 he was thanked in the preface of a book The Negro in Literature and Art by Benjamin Griffith Brawley 35 In September he married Katherine Wright in Boston 4 6 1 Katherine was born in Middlesboro Kentucky to Peter Wright and Julie Heatherlee 4 The Bullocks continued to live in Atlanta and by 1911 he had worked for three years in the Interscholastic Athletic Association s field games 36 and was faculty at the Atlanta Baptist College 37 38 39 His work in athletics was called an example of an HBCU farm school through which athletes could earn a place in white schools 16 Ultimately he taught Latin History and Social Sciences 1 serving for 4 years with distinction 6 1 He then worked as a lawyer in Atlanta from 1912 to 1915 1 6 9 including submitting an amendment to the school charter of 1913 to change the name of the college from the Atlanta Baptist College to Morehouse College 40 He was again thanked by Brawley for being one of the reviewers of his book A short history of the American Negro published in 1913 41 He then served two years from 1915 to 1917 as dean of The State Agricultural and Mechanical College for Negroes now known as Alabama A amp M University in Normal Alabama 42 1 6 7 43 World War I and YMCA service edit Bullock was registered with the Massachusetts State Bar in August 1917 44 and in February 1918 he was resident in Roxbury a neighborhood in Boston working as a lawyer 5 He tried to volunteer to serve in a combat unit for World War I but was called too old to serve 2 about age 36 and had a heart murmur but worked via the YMCA s war effort 3 seeking to work in France and England 5 He was marked 6 1 tall on his passport application and his first witness was a clerk of the 1st Circuit Court of Boston 5 His mother was living with his family 5 He was booked to leave from New York on the French SS Rochambeau on February 20 and appointed a secretary of the National War Council of the YMCA of the US to serve with American troops 5 however he served as a YMCA Educational Secretary at Fort George G Meade Maryland 6 9 1 first initially as a breakfast guest of former law practice associate Charles Ford 45 He worked at Camp Meade to coach athletics led singing and taught French language 46 After 3 months he went to France with the 369th US Infantry aka 15th NY Regiment and served as a Physical Director for 15 months 6 1 9 47 1 He was one of eight such YMCA Secretaries 48 Bullock had a staff of four assistants one of which was a colored woman who was protested of in the military based on issues of southern extraction army officials in Bordeaux 48 The situation caused an initial limit of participation of women to just three to act as nurses for 150 000 soldiers 48 He was an organizing personality in the Leave area in part because of his fame in sports but also his service with the women working in the circumstances 48 Bullock and another of the YMCA designee followed the 369th all the way to the banks of the Rhine leading other units and accorded distinction because of the quality of its trenches 49 Bullock was singled out for noting his steadfast support of the soldiers during the worst of the battle 49 Bullock was called of especially valiant service noting he could be seen at all times making his way under tremendous shell fire that he might reach his men with necessary supplies and in giving first aid to the wounded 48 Bullock was recommended for the Croix de Guerre medal for leadership and bravery but it wasn t approved by the white colonel as described in the autobiography of John Hope 9 Hope had been stationed in Paris 49 Rev Benjamin Robeson wrote about the issue in a letter to the New York Age 50 Robeson begins It is not long ago that all New York anxiously confidently bade adieu to this history making regiment Believing them capable knowing them to be fearless depending upon them to brighten the memory of their fathers you watched waited and listened 50 I wish to speak of one who still plods the path of duty with an infectious smile happy and patient because he knows time will dip her pen in the ink of justice and rightly reward him I refer to Secretary Bullock we call him Matt who wears the badge of the faithful and walks with the step of the worthy Just before that memorial drive of September 25 Bullock went to Chalons faced the authorities and said I have nothing to give my men and they storm the heights tomorrow I must have something or I cannot go back eventually received his requests and the campaign was on Every morning as the cannon were belching men falling and bullets whizzing over the hill came a human form On his back were strapped supplies On he came now and then dropping for shelter Men wondered why he came into that region of death When twilight wrapped the hills in its shadows back came the same form empty handed weary but game His coming and going stopped when there was no regiment to serve He wears no Croix de Guerre upon his breast but within his breast throbs the spirit of devotion devotion to God country and race The multitudes will see no D S C to testify to his courage in that hour but listen to the reflective melody sung by the boys of the old Fifteenth and you will hear of a faithfulness and service approaching that of the lowly Nazarene No Legion of Honor will proclaim his rank with the worthy but as long as one member of this grand old regiment breathes the breath of life the name of Matthew W Bullock will be heard and its worth will be sung Let us all honor the uncrowned here 50 He had served in the Champagne and Alsace fronts of later 1917 through May 1918 51 and was recommended for the Croix de Guerre for the September October battle 1 Bullock arrived at Ellis Island two months later from Brest France on the USS Mobile noting his home residence at Sarsfield Street Roxbury 52 He retired from war service June 4 1919 7 and by then German was added to his language skills 7 He was then a member of Baptist Church 7 and had been paid over 1200 18k in 2021 dollars 53 for his service Years later he recalled the bitter disappointment of the relatively integrated service in the military and returning home to a more deeply segregated society 54 He spoke at the convention of the Northeastern Federation of Colored Women s Clubs of Maine held in Washington D C speaking of the military service of soldiers in France 55 Boston service in the African American Community edit Bullock cofounded the Boston chapter of the National Urban League in 1919 1 56 and was appointed its first executive officer in January 1920 57 58 which he served as into 1921 1 59 and gained a reputation of an unusually high humanitarian idealism 6 Later in the words of Helen Elsie Austin it was noted as the start of a career of public services of more than twenty years constantly pioneering for social justice and human dignity 9 The January 1920 US Census had the couple married renting a home on Sarsfield Street and he was employed as a lawyer 60 Bullock was also credited with founding a branch of the YMCA to serve the South End Roxbury black community which ran 1920 1922 and then was closed to preserve a non segregated program with the main branch 61 In March Bullock was recognized in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin as the Secretary of the Boston Urban League noted his service in France during WWI but thought that he had indeed received the Croix de Guerre from the French government 62 Son Matthew Jr was born April 4 1920 1 6 and a couple weeks later Bullock gave a talk on the history of the Urban League to a Boston Club 63 and spoke at St Bartholomew s Church in late May 64 He filed to run for office in state government in July 65 3 was on the ballot with Andrew Lattimore 66 and had spent alittle over 17 on the registering for the election 67 He was also on the list of those available for the position of assistant director for the Department of Corporations and Taxation with the state 68 In October he addressed the Ellot Club as a member of the Boston Urban League on What does the Negro Want The Answer 69 while running for office 70 Bullock and Lattimore campaigned across Ward 13 71 Meanwhile his wife was visible at a fundraiser for Atlanta University 72 In November Bullock got more votes than Lattimer for the Republicans but both lost against the Democratic ticket 73 The two claimed they had been voted against for being black and the case had thought to be in contest because of increased Republican women registering to vote Then governor John Jackson Walsh spoke out against the race issue prejudice in voting 74 Bullock and Lattimer advanced a recall petition against the Democrats in January 1921 75 3 In February Bullock returned to Everett to talk for the Board of Trade about The Negro a great asset and the article covering his talk recalled his 1896 1900 service at the Everett High School then on to athletic success and now lawyer 76 A few days later Bullock and Lattimer testified about their challenge to the election and offered biographical summaries of their lives 77 Bullock detailed that he graduated from Everett High School Dartmouth College Harvard Law School and had a post graduate class at Cornell He tried to serve during WWI but was rejected because of an athlete s heart as he put it but worked at a YMCA secretary overseas Their petition had a hearing for the House Committee on Elections claiming illegal means had been used to complete the election Depositions were taken of witnesses after a significant delay 78 The majority of the committee did not support the petition though at least one member did 79 Bullock and Lattimer escalated with the state Speaker of the House seeking a chance to address the whole House 80 The progress of the petition had cost 225 in legal fees 81 near three thousand dollars in 2021 dollars 53 Generally from 1921 to 1924 Bullock worked as an attorney 6 1 This may be when he worked with the Cardozo and Tucker firm 3 31 In June Bullock spoke at the Everett High School graduation ceremony as a graduate of the 1900 class 82 In July at the request of a committee of the Urban League Bullock was asked to be a district chair for the city of Boston and it was said of him that The feature of the work in his district was the fine co operation he received from the ministers and all social welfare organizations 83 He also served with the Knights of Pythias of North America South America Europe Asia Africa and Australia a fraternal service society and source of a life insurance company in another decade on their Committee Credentials for those seeking election in the organization 84 6 The Bullock s daughter Julia Amanda was born September 3 1921 1 6 Bullock voiced his support for a candidate for Mayor in December 85 Around this time there was another Matthew Bullock involved in North Carolina and Canada including threats from the KKK and a lynching c 1921 1922 86 The two Bullocks were occasionally confused as in a funeral biography of Bullock in 1972 3 Meanwhile Bullock again challenged the Democrat for the state representative position 87 In August he was on the primary for the Republican position and spoke for a bank formation in Roxbury 88 for Suffolk County 89 Before the voting in November in October Bullock submitted a bill to the state House of Representatives as a public citizen to prohibit the Ku Klux Klan from forming an organization in the state because it was a menace to the public peace the presentation drew widespread national attention 90 Meanwhile the governor appointed special supervisors for the Ward 13 election 91 The election was held and Jessie Emery won 92 In February 1923 hearings on the anti Klan bill began At Bullock s own testimony for the bill he said that a grandfather of his had been murdered by Klansmen and he urged passage of the bill as a private citizen 93 He mentioned this incident again in 1966 saying that his mother s mother had found the body of his grandfather in an abandoned well 8 Bullock addressed a conference of the Knights of Pythias at their May 1923 meeting 94 He then joined in the mass organization across Massachusetts called for by then Governor Channing H Cox on the relief effort for the Great Kanto Earthquake of September 1 in Japan through the Red Cross 95 Assistant State Attorney General edit The Massachusetts Attorney General Jay R Benton appointed Bullock as one of two special assistants in July 1924 1 6 2 3 31 first focusing on the legal issues of the new construction of the northern traffic highway from Boston to Wellington Bridge in Somerville 51 Today this is a segment of Interstate 93 The biographical article about him in the new position noted much of his familiar career in public service ending that he was the executive secretary of the Boston Urban League association and practiced law with Charles Williams clerk of the Boston Juvenile Court This appointment made some news in other places too 96 Bullock was added to the committee of the Republican party of Massachusetts and addressed them about the Klan issue on its platform 97 It was the last plank considered in an otherwise quiet session 98 Bullock spoke at another Republican party meeting in later October 99 In November Bullock presided at a meeting of political speakers held at People s Baptist Church 100 In February 1925 Bullock attended the Everett High school reception for colored athletes 101 In September Bullock represented a community effort opposing a cleaning and dyeing business trying to set up shop because of its environmental effects 102 In November Bullock was a charter member co founding the Boston chapter of Omega Psi Phi fraternity 103 1 6 He then spoke at an Omega Psi Phi meeting at Tuskegee highlighting the progress the African Americans had made 104 nbsp Queen Marie at Tomb of the Unknown Soldier October 19 1926 In January 1926 Bullock spoke for a program arranged by the NAACP at Union Congregational Church in New York city 105 Bullock again protested the impact of a company on a neighborhood at a city council meeting in March 106 He also attended the dedication of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery 107 1 8 This may have been at the 1926 dedication In October Bullock addressed the National Equal Rights League on the situation of segregation 108 In February 1927 Bullock spoke to a Knights of Pythias regional conference 109 State Parole Board edit Bullock was called among the best trained and most successful lawyers of the Negro race at the present time in 1927 6 He then started serving on the Massachusetts State Parole Board which extended for nine years then was re appointed in 1943 and then named chair in 1944 3 1 6 at which point he was the first African American head of a department of state government 31 2 It began in March when Bullock was named to the State Parole Board by then Governor Avlan T Fuller 110 This too made news It was thought in coverage at the time he was born in Morganton North Carolina Dabney is north of Raleigh vs Morgontown in the far west and recalled his Dartmouth football career and graduating in 1904 107 While that coverage continued to echo over a month Bullock gave a talk at the Unitarian Universalist Church on A challenge to Christianity 111 In July Bullock addressed a regional conference of the Knights of Pythias on the economic plight of the blacks and the issue of mob violence 112 Bullock was re appointed to the State Parole Board in January 1928 113 That month Bullock also was named as a court advocate on the staff of the Greater Boston Police Post VFW 114 In February Bullock wrote a letter that was read into the Federal Congressional Record to support the establishment of a Memorial to African Americans for the country 115 A couple weeks later Bullock returned for a talk for the Knights of Pythias 116 In September the Bullocks hosted the Omega Psi College fraternity at their home on Windsor Street 117 In the fall Bullock was on the schedule of the Second Congregational Church s speakers list described as the former secretary of the Urban League 118 In January 1929 Bullock was recognized as chair of the Republican party for Ward 9 119 In June he addressed the United Negro Welfare Council on the conditions of the northeast listed as one of those assistants to the Attorney General though it is more correct to say he was now a member of the Parole Board 120 With the Parole Board membership came questions and reports in the media about plea cases In July one of Bullock s first comments was agreeing in a case that someone had committed murder in a unanimous rejection of innocence by the Board 121 Another newspaper report in July mentioned the Board heard testimony about a case who s perpetrator had gained some support from prison personnel 122 Bullock was among the speakers at the dedication of a new community center in Cambridge made out of the old school in August 123 and that month Bullock s salary as an associate Board member was raised from 2000 to 2250 yr and could have increased higher 124 about 34000 in 2021 dollars 53 In September Bullock attended a Better Homes Association prize meeting about a neighborhood success story saving vacant lots 125 In October Bullock was among many appointed to a commission to advance raising a national memorial as a tribute to the contributions of African Americans in the history of the country 126 In November Bullock was one of many that endorsed Frederick Mansfield 127 Bullock was called the party leader of Ward 9 and State Parole Board Commissioner when he was going to attend the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity meeting in Baltimore in January 1930 128 with the beginning of the Great Depression in the United States Bullock was one of the speakers at a Women s Republican Club meeting in March 129 That month Bullock publicly criticized President Hoover for segregating travels to Europe and observed that the women had been more true to Lincoln and Sumner s influence on the Republican party 130 131 The next day Bullock attended a Portsmouth New Hampshire Baptist Church where he gave a talk eulogy for the local lodge of the Knights of Pythias 132 The April 1930 US Census has attorney Matthew with wife Katherine and children both born in Massachusetts Matthew Bullock Jr 9 years old and Julie 8 years old owning a home worth an estimated 5500 133 86k in 2021 dollars 53 The Knights of Pythias met again in July at another Baptist Church in Providence Rhode Island and there Bullock was among the association s Pythian Temple Commission 134 A couple weeks later the Parole Board had newspaper coverage when it heard the plea about a convict that had escaped jail and voluntarily returned 135 In August the Parole Board heard a plea from a man convicted of arson and insurance fraud who claimed he was innocent 136 In September a tableaux drama was held with Bullock as the voice announcer reviewing the role of African Americans in the Civil War 137 The same month Bullock was appointed to a resolutions committee for the Republican party perhaps for his dry political views on alcohol drinks supporting prohibition against that of others who had wet views which again made some news 138 In October Bullock was part of a Republican party set of rallies meeting at Springfield s Central High School 139 for William Butler 140 In November Bullock was nominated on re appointment on the Parole Board 141 In December the Parole Board heard the pardon appeal for a murderer of a policeman there was support for and against the shooter saying he was innocent 142 In March 1931 the Great Depression deeply affecting America Bullock spoke at an Omega Psi Phi Fraternity at a memorial of Col Charles Young at a Congregational Church in New York 143 In April the Parole Board submitted its suggestions for paroles amounting to 200 out of 433 hearings of the 4343 cases presented to the Board while noting that some cases were not suited to the Board as the right tool for interventions 144 In September the Parole Board heard a pardon petition for the assaulter of two girls when the girls testified their earlier testimony was untrue 145 In October Bullock lead the evening session celebrating of the Robert Gould Shaw House 146 a community center in the black community 147 In December the Parole Board heard a petition plea which was a fraud case of a man some thought was likable 148 Bullock was scheduled to talk to the Cambridge Civic Club February 3 1932 149 In March the Parole Board heard the parole plea for a case of abuse of a 16 year old girl who now 20 years old plead for the case on a promise to her father on his death bed 150 and that month Bullock complained of women having gotten the right to vote without a sense of political party loyalty 151 though this complaint was in the context of a disenfranchisement of the black community in Boston following 1895 s redistricting 152 In May Bullock was elected president of the Pan Hellenic Council which is the national association of several fraternities 153 Charles Ponzi the originator of the Ponzi scheme plead a case for parole before the Board on technicalities 154 This year the Board s annual summary referred to their job being increasingly difficult owing to the steady stream of pressure brought to bear upon it by relatives and influential friends and having to defend itself against those who argue they are too lenient or too severe and unfavorable newspaper coverage with issues of re employment and alcoholic recidivism 155 They noted a 1 1 revocations of paroles were of felons and was about the same as previous years They had 4351 cases considered and 3192 granted and 1086 revoked with drunkenness accounting for most of the revocations Bullock s place on the Parole Board was again up for re appointment in late 1932 156 In February 1933 Bullock supported a bill prohibiting car insurance discrimination for clients based on race color religion or place of living in light of the requirement of insurance 157 He specifically addressed the State House Committee on Insurance about it 158 The same month the Parole Board held meetings at Norfolk State Prison noting cases of larceny and others 159 Community Church edit Continuing his service on the State Parole Board Bullock began a relationship of service with the Boston Community Church He first appears speaking there on Is the negro being driven into Communism in February 160 The talk was summarized He noted that though there was a culture of the community younger people had left the Republican Party and joined the Democratic Party seeking aide and even became socialists or communists and was concerned that if the situation of the blacks in the country was not advanced to equality the youth would become communists 161 In May he spoke at a Lexington church at the Young People s Fellowship meeting 162 Bullock missed a meeting of the Board in early June though it is unknown why 163 The Bullocks were among the patrons of the Cambridge Community Center in September 164 Bullock s birthday was also noted in Pasadena California that year 165 A case of a murderer of a husband was brought to the Board in September 166 The Dartmouth football team of 1903 including Bullock pictured in the newspaper was remembered for its victory over Harvard at the new stadium in October 167 Bullock addressed the Mount Vernon Congregational Church Young People s Society in December 168 during a toy donation gathering meant for children in a particular church in North Carolina and Christmas Supper of the community on topic of Giving him a second chance 169 Bullock then addressed the Community Church at its Christmas Service on Can races creeds and classes live together in Peace noting he was the Director of the Community Church and having invited a Rabbi and a leader of the Massachusetts Federation of Labor as additional speakers with music by the Greater Boston Negro Chorus 170 Bullock s comments spoke of the race problem tracing back to the roots of civilization and unfolding in various ways around the world and that in America we could do better than segregation limited access to courts voting suppression and picking up on the problems in Germany being imported ideologically into America and the stirring of the Ku Klux Klan 171 February 1934 opens mention of Bullock giving another talk at the Community Church held with a meeting of the church leadership 172 The Parole Board heard the case of a murderer who was mentally compromised 173 In March Bullock contributed to a fundraiser for the Coast Guard 174 and April he was one of the speakers at the Robert Gould Shaw House for a mass meeting on community issues 175 followed a week later when the Parole Board heard of Portuguese citizen who had killed a policeman 176 In May Bullock spoke at a Rhode Island Republican gathering 177 and then in June Bullock resigned from the State Republican Party committee 178 In July Bullock was up for reappointment to the Parole Board 179 was repointed 180 and in October and November it heard two cases of murderers 181 In November Bullock spoke of male culture at the morning Men s Day service at the African American Shiloh Baptist Church 182 In December Bullock was invited to a hotel to visit a representative at a National Crime Conference denied access at first because he was black and this made the news widely 183 A week later the Parole Board hear a case of an escaped prisoner 184 In January 1935 Bullock proposed a change to the parole law for automatic paroles to be reviewed 185 and the case of the Bullock part of the election contest of 1921 was recalled via second hand comments 186 In February Bullock spoke at the Community Church anniversary 187 He was among many that contributed to a general emergency fundraiser as well 188 before speaking at a Race Relations Institute in the evening service at Park Avenue Congregational Church 189 In April Bullock attended the graduation ceremonies of the Bigelow Evening School in South Boston 190 and in May was again elected as president of the Community Church then located at 6 Byron Street 191 Though the year isn t known it is known Bullock attended a dinner reception for Ludmila Bechtold by the Baha is as she was known then and they struck up friendship this happened while Bullock was president of the Community Church 9 192 193 which could be here in the mid 1930s After an initial exchange of questions Bechtold encouraged him to read the book of the religion Some Answered Questions and he and Mrs Bullock visited Green Acre Baha i School 9 Green Acre possibly for one of the annual Race Amity Convention meetings It is known that about 1929 Baha i Doris McKay had met him briefly with a letter of introduction from James Hubert Secretary of the Harlem chapter of the National Urban League but that his reception was cool to her meeting him 194 In September Bullock as president of the Community Church presided over the second annual conference of church workers supporting social action 195 The Parole Board also heard another murderer s case for parole 196 In October Bullock oversaw meetings at the Community Church as president and at other churches 197 One meeting became controversial as Communists stormed a meeting and took it over by strength of numbers 198 In November the Parole Board heard another case of a murderer 199 In December Bullock joined in the Board statement of not hearing the appeals of persistent and habitual criminals after a prison riot among many who were not eligible for parole 200 On the other hand an arsonist was paroled on wide recommendation save by clerics 201 Bullock was photographed during testimony of the Parole Board to the Governor s Council on the need of the existence of the Parole Board which it was considering ending it though the Council did pass a recommended change in the law of sentencing The concern was over strictness of the parole board being a reason for the recent prison riot 202 The situation was largely dismissed by late January 1936 among factioning of Democrats 203 Mrs Bullock attended a fundraiser concert given by Marian Anderson for the Cambridge Community Center in February 204 The Community Church meetings continued with Bullock as president 205 In early 1936 Bullock declined to serve on Board of the Boston NAACP chapter 151 In March Bullock was among area church leaders addressing a youth conference of the Youth Council of the Greater Boston Federation of Churches on Christianity and Racial barriers 206 About a week later Bullock spoke on the problem of race to the Wesley Foundation of Cambridge 207 It is known that well known African American Baha i Louis Gregory gave talks in Boston in October and November 208 Meanwhile Bullock s annual term on the Parole Board was ending in December and the new governorship of the Democrat James Michael Curley and was part of widely advertised listings in the state 209 There were debates about whom to fill the position of by Democrats 210 His replacement was named at the end of December 211 which situation was still making news in April and May 212 Bullock had held the position since 1927 and most of the way through the Great Depression until the change in political parties controlling the offices While all that was changing Bullock was named a member of the board of the Boston Center for Adult Education in January 1937 213 The Bullocks were then also among those attending the reception for Maude Royden of London 214 In February Bullock spoke in support of Clarence Skinner 215 and was named to a committee to investigate ways to advance reemployment of the blacks of the state after the Great Depression 216 In March Bullock was named to the replacement on the State Department of Corrections while still living in Roxbury with his family 217 31 That evening Bullock was announced to attend recognition ceremony set for mid April in Cambridge 218 A week later he spoke at the Wesley Foundation evening meeting at the Epworth Methodist Episcopal Church 219 In May Bullock was again at the Boston Youth Conference 220 and in June he was again named a member of the Board for the Adult Education Center 221 In October Mrs Bullock attended a Community Church Tea for the Women s International League 222 Then Bullock was named vice president of the Community Church and scheduled to give a talk at the North Cambridge Community Church 223 Meanwhile Bullock spoke publicly of his boss new plans on a budget for the Department of Corrections and was named leading the division on segregating hardened criminals away from others 224 In November Bullock was named first vice president of the Boston Urban League 225 and attended an Omega Psi Phi reception listed as a leader of the Community Church 226 That winter Bullock was named regional director of the National Bar Association 227 In January 1938 Bullock was among speakers at an Athletic Night event in Cambridge 228 In February Bullock spoke on the issue of race in America at the evening meeting of the Cambridge Baptist Church Sunday Evening Club 229 In April Bullock spoke at Baptist rally in Malden 230 and attended the funeral of Parole Board co worker 231 In May he was listed as vice president of Community Church as one of speakers at an exhibit on un American propaganda 232 The rest of the year went by after that without mention of Bullock noted in the newspapers yet found In February 1939 Bullock chaired an inter church goodwill dinner 233 His son also won a scholarship attending college in Maine that month 234 In March a list of members of the Urban League NAACP and others included Bullock for passage of house bill to end discrimination in public utilities 235 Bullock was named a member of a 100 count committee for an Edvard Benes lecture in town after his fleeing Nazi Germany occupation the previous year 236 In May the Bullocks attended a prominent social affair at an exclusive club 237 Sometime during the year Bullock served on the Board of the Boston NAACP 151 and also helped register a forming association of black women beauticians with the state 152 In June the Bullocks son was noted at Bowdoin College in Maine 238 In August Bullock was named a counselor of the board of the Samuel Coleridge Taylor Music Association for its 20th anniversary 239 January 1940 Bullock was invited to the Cambridge Community Center celebration of sports with leading political figures 240 A few days later the Community Church held a presentation on the history of the church noting the congregation had elected a black president for his qualities and diversity but didn t name him or list him as a member 241 A few days later Bullock spoke at the Groton federation of clubs for members of area clubs 242 In February Bullock was among leaders present for a Conference of Civil Liberties 243 In March news came of Bullock s son on graduating from Bowdoin college and speaker at commencement 244 he was summa cum laude 245 Joined the Baha i Faith edit See also Bahaʼi Faith in Greater Boston The April 1940 US Census has the Bullock family living and owning a home on Monroe Street worth about 3000 about 56000 in 2021 dollars 53 He had finished a 4 year college degree while their son was in his 3rd year of college and their daughter was in her 2nd year They were living in the same place as in April 1935 He was then an Assistant Commissioner of the Department of Correction earning 4375 the previous year 246 about 82k in 2021 dollars 53 Bullock later called Bechtold his spiritual mother 9 when he accepted the Baha i Faith in 1940 9 247 The only written record of Bullock s choice mentioned in 1966 says that the distinction that the religion did not have clergy was important to him 8 Bullock s membership in political and other religious organizations had undergone changes already he had already resigned active political party status in 1934 178 a standard that was in the process of being promulgated among Baha is as well 248 249 In 1939 1940 there were 3 assemblies the local administrative organization of communities of Baha is in the state Boston Springfield and Worcester plus three communities with registered groups of Baha is between 2 and 9 adults and five isolated Baha is amounting to about 47 Baha is in the state 250 By 1943 4 Boston was one of 37 assemblies in the US to incorporate and the only one in Massachusetts 251 There were five assemblies in Massachusetts 1943 4 Beverly Brookline Boston Springfield and Worcester 252 22 registered groups and 18 locations with a single alone Baha is including Everett amounting to roughly an estimated 150 Baha is in the state and there were about 2500 4000 Baha is in the entire country 253 254 The Bullocks next appear in October 1940 among patrons of reception for Roland Hall Sharp speech 255 a staff correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor who had been reporting on Fascism in South America 256 In November Katherine was visible aiding the Women s International League Thanksgiving fundraiser 257 In December Bullock was a nominee for vice president of the Massachusetts Law Society 258 In February 1941 Bullock gave a talk at the Everett First Congregational Church 259 and offered another talk as part of the reception for North Carolina Palmer Memorial Institute chair Charlotte Brown 260 In May Bullocks was master of ceremonies at a memorial for Edward Dugger 261 It was known Bullock was in New York mid June though not what he was doing 262 In August he was among remembered black sports stars 263 while he himself was among the August principle speakers at the Green Acre Baha i School for the annual Race Amity Convention 264 along with Louis Gregory NAACP leader and The Crisis editor Roy Wilkins and Dorothy Beecher Baker 54 In December he gave a talk to youth at the Copley Church in Boston during Advent season 265 and at a Methodist Church 266 on the heels of the news of the Attack on Pearl Harbor In mid January 1942 Bullock joined in a fundraiser for the Adult Education Center 267 In May he was next visible giving a talk Negro and the current Crisis at the Greater Boston Adult Education Center s luncheon 268 In August Bullock listed as a vice president of the Boston Urban League was the leading co signer of a letter published in the Boston Globe supporting the program for the Boston Soldiers and Sailors Committee recreational program for the city 269 Bullock was also a member of the National Committee of the Urban League in 1942 3 270 Meanwhile Bullock chaired the Sunday program of the Race Amity Conference at Green Acre in early August reading selections from Abdu l Baha s talks 271 from 1912 and on some points on African American history and of how he was honored to be at the gathering sharing that he had read on the Baha i teachings for some years Other presenters included African American and Bostonian Baha i Mabry Oglesby Ludmila Bechtold Horace Holley and Dorothy Beecher Baker 272 In October Bullock was among the Massachusetts Law Society in procession for the Red Mass 273 Later in the month it was announced that Bullock would serve on a state commission reviewing barriers to employment of blacks that reported to Governor Leverett Saltonstall listed as member of State Department of Corrections 274 That December Bullock was also listed as an officer of the Massachusetts Law Society 275 In January 1943 Bullock gave a talk on race relations at a Methodist church 276 In April Bullock was again nominated to the State Parole Board 277 The biographical article recalled he was vice president of the Boston Urban League a member of the USO Soldiers and Sailors Committee vice president of the Law Society of Massachusetts past president of the Community Church member of the Board of the Boston Center for Adult Education a graduate of Everett Schools Dartmouth Harvard Law School had taught in the South tried to serve in WWI but barred for athlete s heart and instead worked with YMCA War program his service as assistant to the Attorney General Jay Benton Parole Board member nominated by Gov Fuller appointed to the Department of Correction in 1937 and that his son was a Bowdoin honors graduate and now serving as a private at Fort Devens while his daughter was a librarian at the Virginia Hampton Institute 278 as it was called then His nomination was confirmed 279 and his salary was 4500 a year 280 about 68000 in 2021 dollars 53 In May Bullock spoke to a youth group at the Unitarian church in Exeter New Hampshire on The Race Problem and Democracy 281 In June he was remembered on a black Harvard graduates list that also noted Leslie Pinckney Hill but missed mention of Alain Locke 282 In August Bullock co taught a class with Bechtold on the Advent of Divine Justice at the summer Green Acre session that year 283 In September Bullock was the object of another biographical article as a State Parole Commissioner varsity football coach and his success at Dartmouth 284 In October he was again listed as a vice president of the Law Society of Massachusetts 285 Their son married in New York in November 286 and Bullock was a co speaker at an A M E church service in Roxbury 287 Bullock s position on the Parole Board was up for renewal in June 1944 288 The year closed out with mention of Bullock on the executive committee for resolving USO integration policy issues when a USO club refused to integrate 289 and was among speakers for a Baptist hosted reception for William H Hastie 290 In February 1944 Bullock attended the USO Rec Center reception at the Buddies Club 291 and was among the many Bar Association members who spoke at a luncheon for Judge F Ellis Rivers 292 Bullock was indeed re nominated to Parole Board in June 293 In August Bullock gave a talk Forward March of Humanity with Baha i Terah Cowart Smith then of Atlanta amidst the next Race Amity Convention held at Green Acre 294 He spoke of his experience in WWI seeking justice and fairness and being sore disappointed and social problems had only increased but how he had great joy having encountered the Baha i Faith 295 When he returned home Bullock presided over a Race Unity meeting in Boston in November hosted by the Baha is at which one speaker was Harlan Ober 296 In November Bullock was nominated for Chair of the Parole Board 297 It was pointed out in a local newspaper it was the highest office in state government by an appointed person of color when he was named Chair of the Parole Board 298 That December Bullock was a member of the Baha i State Convention Committee for Massachusetts to elect its delegate to the next National Baha i Convention 299 He also gave a talk in Springfield with the mention of the importance of accepting the immutable fact that humanity is one and racism as America s most challenging issue 300 a phrase Shoghi Effendi as then head of the religion had introduced in 1938 in The Advent of Divine Justice 301 Bullock also served as chair of the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of Boston during some unknown years since 1940 9 In January 1945 Bullock gave a talk in Ipswich entitled The Negro and his place in Democracy Today 302 He was also visible among a group supporting a sentencing tribunal study 303 In February Bullock gave a talk at a Community Church fundraiser 304 and was also elected to the National Board of the Urban League 305 306 It was also announced that Bullock was named to a Massachusetts committee for application of the Fair Employment Practice Act 307 In March Bullock signed recommendations to curb regulate alcohol sales with reservations the law regulated but opened further drinking 308 In June Bullock was among sponsors of the New England Institute of International Relations at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts College 309 Bullock s wife Katherine died August 10 310 9 His children long since moved on with lives of their own and now alone a month later he off on Pacific survey for then Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal 311 9 as one among several touring about progress in race conditions in the military 312 with Harry McAlpin 313 Bullock was back in Boston for a reception in honor of Julius E Warren mid late November 314 Perhaps in December the Boston Baha i meeting on World peace was chaired by Bullock 315 Bullock speaking as Chair of Parole Board defended decisions of the Board from Rev Robinson comments by detailing the background of the convict who had complained to Robinson 316 In February Bullock spoke for the Parole Board on women camp followers of military areas 317 and on further decisions in March 318 and then in July 319 Amidst these Bullock was also with the Albany Interracial Council meeting in April 320 and on radio WBZ on May 23 as part of a program of many on the show 321 Bullock served under the chairship of Louis Gregory on the 1946 7 Baha i National Assembly s Race Unity Committee while they planned three projects for the year a large seminar on the theme of race amity participate in other large conferences addressing problems of prejudice and create a pamphlet on the issue and the religion 322 In August Bullock was a speaker at a New England Conference on probation 323 In early November Bullock was a speaker at a meeting for the Baha is and this year was scheduled for a talk for the Baha i community observance of the Birth of Baha u llah in Binghamton 324 Newspapers as well as radio WNBF coverage occurred there with 175 people attending only 40 of which were Baha is 325 About a week later Bullock was public standing by a decision of the Parole Board on a case 326 and then spoke on Parole Board policy opposed to the demands of a sit down prison strike 327 In December news coverage occurred that Bullock had been attacked during a parolee s interview which was echoed regionally 328 In January 1947 Bullock endorsed a scholarship program of some prisons for screened inmates to take school classes 329 Then Bullock was quoted on Parole Board statements about prisons and sentences and the need for psychiatric reviews of prisoners 330 In February Bullock attended a reception 331 and was also named as part of a national committee for the Association for the Study of African American Life and History for a membership drive during what was then Negro History Week 332 The month closed with news of the birth of a granddaughter born to Bullock 333 In March Bullock commented in the news on Parole Board business about pressures to release prisoners 334 That month the Bullock s son was admitted to Bar Association of Massachusetts 335 The April May 1947 Baha i national convention noted an anecdote of youth walking together as an interracial group in Los Angeles being stopped and harassed by police and Bullock was a delegate from Massachusetts that year 54 336 He spoke up that walking together is not indiscrete in the face of the comments at the convention that proposed caution and not opposing society s standards and earning the attention of police In June there was a Baha i advertisement for a talk by Bullock at the community s Center 337 A couple weeks later Bullock spoke on Consciousness of World Citizenship 338 at the 35th Souvenir Baha i meeting in Teaneck New Jersey commemorating Abdu l Baha s talk in 1912 339 In July it was mentioned that Bullock was a member of the Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of Boston and had just been promoted to National Probation Association Board 340 In October Bullock spoke on crime before the prison conference held by the Republican Women s Club of Lexington 341 Bullock called for reform in the prison system especially about mixing minors and hardened criminals 342 In November coverage began of the Noxon pardon petition which carried on for 2 plus years a lawyer who had killed a son born with medical complications compromising mental development 343 In January 1948 Bullock appeared on WNAC TV speaking on Parole Board policies 344 A few days later there was news that Bullock was on a committee for fundraising for a New York based study centered on medical needs of African Americans in Harlem 345 In February Bullock spoke as chair of the Parole Board and said a law on indenture of women in some situations to the state should be taken down 346 In March he acted as moderator of a Baha i meeting at Brown University in Providence Rhode Island 347 Approaching mid April Bullock gave a talk at the Boston Baha i Center on The Baha i Revelation 348 In early May he gave a talk at a public forum in Akron Ohio on Is there a solution to the nation s racial problems 349 A few weeks later Bullock testified on Parole Board needs to the state government 350 In June Bullock s daughter and granddaughter were pictured in Detroit news and briefly profiled she was a Simmons and Fisk college graduate and her husband was a teacher in Detroit 351 Meanwhile Bullock was among many who publicly supported Thomas E Dewey for president in African American community coverage 352 In August he spoke of the Parole Board advise against a parole case 353 and was part of a panel at a conference organizing committee on crime prevention 354 The month closed with coverage of him speaking at the conference about how simple punishment of a prison system has not reduced the crime rate 355 and on supporting programs for prisoners to return to society as most prisoners were paroled one way or another 356 In September Bullock was the second runner up in the by election to replace the deceased George Latimer on the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of the United States behind Leroy Ioas and Katherine True 357 In local and national Baha i elections as opposed to the norm in general in America there is no nomination process no electioneering in Baha i elections 358 In October Bullock spoke of a case of a revoked parole 359 The month closed with mention of Bullock as a member of fundraising support for Red Feather Campaign for societal relief and aide 360 In November was notice that Bullock s appointed position was to expire in April 361 Later that month he gave a talk at the Boston Baha i Center on God s love for mankind 362 In December came news of a Parole Board hearing on case 363 January 1949 came news of another parole case commented on by Bullock 364 In March he gave a talk at the Baha i Center on Progressive Religion 365 and commented on another parole case 366 Mid month Bullock spoke to the issue of women on the Parole Board as cases were mostly of men and some cases were harsh but if the law requiring women participation was passed he would not object to ensuring women were on board 367 Closing March there was newspaper coverage of Bullock s opposition to the Parole Board reviewing life sentences 368 March and early April Bullock joined an internationally diverse representation of the Baha i Faith to the UN meeting at Lake Success for the Third International Conference of NGOs which led to the Baha i participation on a committee on holding further events 369 Along with Bullock came Mildred Mottahedeh and Hilda Yen and others In May Bullock received the next highest votes after the nine of the National Spiritual Assembly at the national convention 370 again it should be minded that Baha i elections have no electioneering 358 A few days later it was announced Bullock would be among faculty of Green Acre in May through June 371 Amidst these Bullock gave a talk at the Boston Baha i Center on Why I am a Baha i 372 Bullock was mentioned at Green Acre in early June 373 and other talks in the vicinity too 374 A bit later there was a comment of Bullock s on a parole case 375 and June closed with notice that his appointment on the Parole Board had in fact expired June 2 376 Despite this expiration he had not been replaced yet and was quoted in the news on another case which also made national news 377 Some time over the previous year Bullock had been in Springfield giving a talk for the Baha is as well 378 News on Bullock s position on the Parole Board remained uncertain 379 and he was still serving as chair of Parole Board in August 380 In September Bullock with a biographical summary noting his life as lawyer and vice president of the Greater Boston Urban League executive board member of Massachusetts Law Society member of National Probation and Parole Association WWI service former USO trustee of Greater Boston and on the Board of Adult Education Center spoke at the Foreman home in Everett for the Baha is 381 One hundred attended the meeting came from as far away as New York city and West Chester Pennsylvania 382 In October Bullock was part of series of meetings at Boston Baha i Center for the fall 383 and continued to comment on parole cases as chair 384 Finally near the close of October his replacement on the Parole Board was named 385 Meanwhile Bullock gave a talk for UN Day entitled The Earth is one Country 386 and still he spoke out against a bill on prison sentencing reform as chair 387 With his imminent retirement there was mention of some interviews that were published in the Sunday Post and the Atlantic Monthly 388 Retired and Baha i pioneer edit Finally Bullock s replacement on the Parole Board was confirmed in November 1949 389 Soon he chose to pioneer to Haiti and be a traveling promoter of the religion in the Caribbean area at request of the US National Spiritual Assembly with news in the Boston newspapers 390 9 followed by mention in the Baha i News 391 By May 1950 he was listed as a pioneer to Haiti 392 and by July Bullock participated in a Panama Baha i conference collecting presenters from across the region that mentioned he was coming from Port au Prince 393 He was back in Boston that summer and gave a talk Security through religion in the Baha i Center 394 and returned to Haiti where he was listed with another couple Baha i pioneers 395 Back in the United States edit Bullock was back in America in August first visible as an honorary pallbearer 396 and wrote a letter to editor about a Nazi and Communist refugee 397 In September he was finishing the work he had begun in December in Haiti 398 In October Bullock chaired a meeting for the Baha is in Boston with a majority non Baha i audience of 120 399 In later October Bullock served on an Easter Seal fundraising committee in Boston 400 In November Bullock gave a talk for the Boston community observance of the Birth of Baha u llah entitled Baha u llah the Christ of the 19th Century 401 Bullock recalled the early April 1951 regional convention of the Baha is of Central America Mexico and the Antilles highlighting two points first the overall orderliness of the convention and second the apparentness of spiritual virtues among the delegates 402 Then Bullock attended the US national convention as one of the Massachusetts delegates with others including Harlan Ober 403 The article covering this mentioned other news of and upcoming activities for Bullock he had been chair of the Boston Baha i Assembly and of the Baha i Regional Teaching Committee for Massachusetts and he went on a speaking tour in June of Salem Beverly Hamilton Ipswich and Green Acre He also was just appointed to a national Baha i committee focused on East and West Africa and would be attending the dedication of the Panama City conference and election of their Regional National Assembly in Lima Peru Bullock s next appearance in the news was as a talk at the Boston Baha i Center entitled A New Message for a New Day and noted aiding Baha is going to Africa while still associated with religion s development in Haiti and Caribbean 404 In July Bullock did a class at the Baha i summer school in Colorado focused on Baha i pioneering and then another at Louhelen Baha i School 405 In November Bullock joined others in giving a talk World Conditions in light of the Baha i World Faith and noting his career of service 406 In December he was a moderator of the panel of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity on Securing World Peace by Strengthening Democracy 407 In January and into April 1952 Bullock was in Cuba for both the Havana and Cienfuegos communities of Baha is until the regional convention to elect the Central American National Assembly 408 He was the first delegate to arrive to the Costa Rica site of the convention for the regional National Spiritual Assembly and the hotel refused to admit him because of his skin color The Baha is quickly made other arrangements that would allow all races to attend 409 This might have been the 1952 convention 410 Elected the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of the United States edit In the US national convention Bullock was elected to National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of the United States 411 and spoke at the convention on the African Committee s work and commenting on the need for Baha i pioneering of means as well as the importance of keeping up a correspondence with such pioneers to help bolster their spirits 412 It was also announced it was to be a Holy Year for Baha is from October 1952 to October 1953 recalling the originating religious experience of Baha u llah 253 as Bullock was listed as member of the National Spiritual Assembly and a member of several national committees the United Nations Committee to aid representing the religion at the UN the National Interracial Teaching Committee to manage reaching out to people of color and the understanding of the Baha i principle of the oneness of humanity under Sarah Pereira and serving alongside Helen Elsie Austin and Robert B Powers on the Legal Aid Committee to aid and advise on matters referred to the National Assembly along with Helen Elsie Austin and Horace Holley and the Africa Teaching Committee under Austin on the African context of the Ten Year Crusade 413 In July Bullock read the talk given by Abdu l Baha in Boston at their new Baha i Center commemorating the visit 414 In August speakers at a Green Acre summer session focused on Africa were with Bullock and others 415 By now it was known he had helped the religion in Haiti Cuba and Costa Rica 416 9 A September newspaper article of Bullock because he was giving a talk on the religion recalled how he was asked by Secretary of the Navy Forrestal to review Pacific situation after WWII and some former associations and currently active in Urban League 417 He spoke again at the end of September at the Boston Baha i Center on The Distinguishing features of the Baha i Faith 418 In October he was again on tour around several Baha i communities but started with an AME Church giving a talk for Rt Rev Edgar Amos Love and went on to the DC Baha i community where there was mention of future plans to speak at the Baha i House of Worship in Wilmette and going to the intercontinental Uganda Conference in 1953 419 In December Bullock spoke in Lansing Michigan for the Omega Psi Phi meeting about Democracy now or never 420 He also spoke at the Baha i Michigan state convention 421 He was one of the Massachusetts delegates to the national convention 422 Pilgrimage Knight of Baha u llah Jubilee Year service edit In 1953 he went on Bahaʼi pilgrimage before attending the Intercontinental Baha i Conference in Uganda 9 He said of it The Guardian has cleared up many things for me My visit to him and to the Holy Shrines are experiences beyond words I don t think I will ever be able to express what it meant to me nor do I think that any Baha i is the same after being with the Guardian I wish every Baha i could have the bounty which has been mine 9 Then he was at the Ugandan Conference with mention in the Pittsburgh Courier 423 Helen Elsie Austin and he were representatives of the American National Spiritual Assembly to the conference African Committee member Van Sombeek was also present 424 Bullock and Dorothy Beecher Baker led the second public meeting News coverage of the event was slanted leading to lively comment and a chance to correct the statement They spoke at the second public event of February 425 Bullock presided over the meeting while Baker gave a talk 426 For the next few months Bullock traveled around Africa including the Belgian Congo 9 and then he visited Liberia where he helped with contact with President Tubman so that Baha i pioneers were reinstated at their jobs at a hospital they lost December 1952 over circumstances and confusions of their intents and choices 427 Bullock was also invited to a special diplomatic dinner and addressed the audience on the religion 9 By March it was announced Bullock would give a weekend session at Louhelen Baha i School in Michigan in mid July on The New Africa 428 Come April he and Austin were again elected to the US Baha i National Assembly This part of the holy year and dedication of the Baha i House of Worship in Wilmette Illinois 429 253 Bullock chaired the public evening program held at Medina Temple N Wahabsh Ave April 29 followed by being the fifth reader of the session after the keynote by Ruhiyyih Khanum May 2 and read from the Qur an recalling Louis Gregory s reading in 1944 O our Lord punish us not if we forget or fall into sin O our Lord lay not on us that for which we have not strength but blot out our sins and forgive us and have pity on us Al Baqarah The Cow 2 286 430 431 A major announcement at the time was of the Ten Year Crusade 9 The Ten Year Crusade had the goal of expanding the service of pioneers whose goal was to promulgate the religion by aiding the establishment of Baha i communities based in the local population by expanding the horizon of goals to embrace the world wide society of humanity and raise regional and national institutions of the religion based on those local developments 253 In July Bullock spoke at Louhelen Baha i School on The New Africa 432 By August 31 three members of the US National Spiritual Assembly announced their retirement from the assembly in order to pioneer in honor of the Ten Year Crusade Bullock Baker and Austin via a telegraph to which Shoghi Effendi responded to by telegraph Overjoyed remarkable achievements American Baha i Community safeguarding primacy enhancing prestige setting magnificent example sister communities East West Assure three Assembly members also Lofoten valiant pioneer abiding appreciation fervent loving prayers 433 In October Bullock gave a talk back in Boston at the Baha i Center entitled Mount your steeds 434 Bullock was noted arrived in the Dutch West Indies November 20 1953 435 It was a virgin location 436 9 so he was named a Knight of Baha u llah 437 This was on a tourist visa so he regularly had to leave the island and seek to return 409 By January 1954 the resignations from the national assembly had reached 5 adding William Kenneth Christian and Mamie Setto 438 9 439 440 Inbetween being in Curacao he gave a talk in Boston on the book Portals to Freedom by Howard Colby Ives 441 Bullock returned to Curacao December 6 1954 442 He gave a World Religion Day talk in early January 409 He left again in mid April and was able to return in the fall A stable active Baha i community soon formed while he was there with the assistance of other pioneers 409 9 Around 1955 while pioneering in the Dutch West Indies Bullock also assisted the Iberian National Assembly incorporate with registration with the Spanish government so that it could perform weddings 409 and traveled among other West Indies communities 9 Tours and schools edit Bullock was appointed to lifetime position of directors of the Greater Boston Urban League in March 1955 443 Across July August Bullock was mentioned attended Baha i meetings in Falmouth and Plymouth 444 In January 1956 Bullock visited his son in Philadelphia 445 In August noting his history in and outside of America Bullock spoke to the Baha is of Marshfield 446 and a couple weeks later taught a class at Green Acre mentioning he had traveled to Spain and Curacao in the West Indies 447 In October he officiated funeral of Anna Tucker in Amesbury 448 In December mention came of Bullock at the Van Sombeek home in Durham North Carolina and though a short article it was on the front page 449 In June 1957 Bullock was among Red Feather Organization directors in the Boston area 450 This was the year of the death of Shoghi Effendi in November The next news on Bullock came in June 1958 when he gave the keynote talk at the Baha i Race Amity Day observance in Hackensack New Jersey 451 There was a quote and summary published in the newspaper Only through spiritual civilization will we create world harmony World harmony will eventually lead to world peace as promised by the prophets of God We should learn to love one another beginning with our family If everyone in the world did this there would be no wars or worldwide disputes 452 About 100 people attended the event In October Bullock gave a talk at the Boston Education Center on the theme Visits with interesting people 453 Bullock was known to visit St Thomas Island in December 454 In August 1959 Bullock taught class at the Laurentian Baha i School in Canada 455 In October Bullock spoke for the community observance of the Birth of the Bab in Portsmouth New Hampshire 456 In later 1959 Bullock toured four cities of North Carolina speaking to an estimated 1460 people all together 457 in Durham Raleigh Greensboro and Charlotte he spoke at colleges and homes 458 In March 1960 he aided the Easter Seals fundraising campaign in Boston 459 The Baha is held a UN Day in October with a symposium with Bullock saying adding spirituality to the UN activities was important 460 In 1960 he moved to Jamaica briefly and then visited Curacao several times until 1964 while living in Boston 461 His health was troubled and he was aided by members of the Boston Baha i community in his care through the dark days of pain and incapacity as Austin puts it 9 There was no word from Bullock for a few years He next appears in 1963 back in Raleigh North Carolina 462 and then in Greenville South Carolina saying In order to find truth and know God we must give up all kinds of prejudices 463 A memoir of a Baha i recalls meeting Bullock in these later years of Bullock in this visit to Greenville Matthew was without doubt the most dignified and proper gentleman I ve ever met He wore a suite and tie every single day He s the only man I ve ever seen eat a hamburger with a knife and fork 464 In October Bullock attended at luncheon for Dartmouth 465 and in November officiated at funeral of a Baha i in Nashua 466 In December he gave a talk at Human Rights Day cosponsored by the Baha is and the NAACP chapter in Connecticut again giving a profile of his life and work inside and outside America 467 A few days later he gave a talk entitled The Negro Awakening in Hartford 468 In August 1964 Bullock was a co presenter of Baha is at the Gravity Research Foundation Institute in New Boston New Hampshire August 29 1964 469 In September Bullock spoke at the dedication of a cabin at Camp Atwater in New York state out of his old friendship with Rev Dr William DeBerry 470 Then he returned to North Carolina in 1965 as the main speaker at the World Religion Day observance held at what is today the University of North Carolina at Durham 471 Inbetween his visits to Durham the first Local Spiritual Assembly of Durham had been elected which included Van Sombeek 472 Later in February Bullock was hosted by Van Sombeek and gave talks in the area some two weeks 473 In April Bullock gave a talk entitled What it means to be a Baha i at the Community Church in Boston 474 nbsp Bullock left shaking hands with Boston mayor John F Collins after being appointed to the Boston Zoning BoardIn June Bullock was named to a Zoning Commission following the meeting of Rev Dr Martin Luther King at Boston with Mayor Collins 475 476 In May 1966 Bullock s history was profiled and with personal quotes in The Boston Globe in a series entitled Whatever became of of more detail than previous published Bullock spoke of how he had been captain of the football baseball and ice polo teams and played left tackle in football at Everett High School how at Dartmouth he had been in football track and sang in the Glee Club and had been mentioned with All American football lists He recalled he had coached in University of Massachusetts at Amherst Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical School and then to Malden And Bullock mentioned his parents had been born into slavery and that his grandfather Washington Sneed had been killed by the KKK by being thrown into an abandoned well and Bullock s mother s mother had found it all during the first rise of the KKK in North Carolina 477 He spoke of being turned down for WWI service for age or what he called an athlete s heart and served via the YMCA and attended the dedication of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington Cemetery He spoke of how he chose the Baha i Faith which had no clergy and how he had embarked on a personal crusade for 10 years traveling for the promotion of the religion and a long service amidst which he helped dedicate the Baha i Temple in Wilmette and hoped yet to go to Scandinavia and Brazil 8 Bullock s brother William Henry died in January 1967 478 In June Bullock made an appearance in among the Baha is in Durham North Carolina 479 That year he moved to be cared for by his daughter in Detroit and then a nursing home 9 Last years edit Bullock co writer of 5 page biographical article of Baha i Harlan Ober a founder of the Boston Baha i community that was published in 1970 480 The Boston Assembly obtained an incorporation and granted the authority to hold legal marriages in 1946 Ober married his second wife Elizabeth Kidder Ober in June 1941 and went on his third pilgrimage in 1956 after which they pioneered to Pretoria South Africa and helped raise its first all African spiritual assembly Harlan died July 20 1962 buried in Pretoria In 1970 came his first honorary degree for Bullock from Harvard University 9 This was followed by Dartmouth in 1971 9 with an honorary law degree 481 482 where he received a standing ovation among the 5000 present 9 The citation read in part Concern for your fellow man continued to occupy your energies after retirement You are a recognized leader of the Baha i Faith and you have traveled all over the world at your own expense in the interest of that religion You believe very deeply that the establishment of universal justice and freedom requires the spiritual and moral awakening of all people 9 Bullock had met Dartmouth President John Kemeny who noted his achievements 483 Bullock died December 17 1972 at the home of his daughter in Detroit 3 9 31 He provided the program for his own funeral 9 and a testimonial telegram came from the Universal House of Justice GRIEVED PASSING KNIGHT BAHAULLAH MATTHEW BULLOCK DISTINGUISHED PROMOTER FAITH CONVEY FAMILY ASSURANCE PRAYERS HOLY THRESHOLD PROGRESS HIS SOUL ADVISE HOLD MEMORIAL GATHERING MASHRIQULADHKAR 9 The memorial requested was held February 17 1973 9 Son Bullock Jr was a judge in Philadelphia and his daughter lived on in Detroit 3 He died in 2013 484 Bullock Sr was buried in Mt Hope Cemetery Mattapan Massachusetts 3 31 Remembrance editIt was remembered that Bullock had criticized the prison system for its mixing of hardened criminals with misguided youngsters 3 as well as that in 1946 he was attacked by a parole seeker and subdued the prisoner himself at the age of 65 3 In 1974 the Baha is remembered him being part of national assembly that left that service to pioneer 485 486 as well as being part of the dedication of the Baha i Temple with media coverage noting Bullock and Baker in 1975 487 A three page biography with pictures was published next in Baha i News largely similar to the Baha i World article by Austin 488 This was extended in 1983 a few black community newspapers including in The National Leader had a historical review of Baha is who were black with mention of Bullock alongside Robert Sengstacke Abbott Alain LeRoy Locke Glenford Mitchell Louis Gregory Helen Elsie Austin Dizzy Gillespie Robert Hayden and others 489 490 In 2006 Bullock s achievement as black coach at Massachusetts Agricultural and Mechanical College now the University of Massachusetts at Amherst was remembered distantly It would be 71 years before the next such coach who then was called a conqueror of racial hostility 491 A decade later Bullock s time at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst was remembered briefly as part of a general review of diversity among students at the college 492 In 2017 a biographical article on Bullock was published in The Bay State Banner was published 476 and Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association also sponsored an article 493 Bullock s time at Dartmouth was featured in an audio podcast with scholar Derrick White 494 In 2020 the Everett community sponsored an article on Bullock 495 Most recently in February 2021 the University of Massachusetts Athletics Department noted Bullock 496 Head coaching record editCollege edit citation needed Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl playoffs Massachusetts Aggies Independent 1904 1904 Massachusetts 5 2 1 Massachusetts Aggies Independent 1907 1908 1907 Massachusetts 5 3 1 1908 Massachusetts 3 3 3 Massachusetts 13 8 5 Morehouse Maroon Tigers Independent 1909 1911 1909 Morehouse 5 0 1 1910 Morehouse 4 1 1911 Morehouse 4 1 Morehouse 12 2 1 Alabama A amp M Bulldogs Independent 1924 1926 1924 Alabama A amp M 0 2 1925 Alabama A amp M 0 1 1926 Alabama A amp M 0 1 Alabama A amp M 0 4 Total 26 14 6See also editList of college football head coaches with non consecutive tenureNotes edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Yenser 1944 a b c d e f g h Matthew Bullock 91 rites former Parole Chairman Boston Herald Boston MA December 20 1972 p 29 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s William Buchanan December 19 1972 Matthew Bullock 91 athlete parole official The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts p 29 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew Bullock dies ex Parole Board Chief Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut December 20 1972 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b c Matthew W Bullock Massachusetts Marriages 1841 1915 Familysearch org September 21 1910 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required a b c d e f Matthew W Bullock United States Passport Applications 1795 1925 Familysearch org February 6 1918 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Bullock Ralph W 1927 Matthew W Bullock In spite of handicaps brief biographical sketches with discussion outlines of outstanding Negroes now living who are achieving distinction in various lines of endeavor New York Association Press pp 85 9 OCLC 1154539859 a b c d e f g Matthew Washington Bullock United States YMCA World War I Service Cards 1917 1919 Familysearch org June 4 1919 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required a b c d e f g h Ted Ashby May 29 1966 Whatever became of Bullock introduced passing at Malden The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts p 39 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Elsie Austin December 1975 In love with justice the story of Matthew Bullock Baha i pioneer coach and lawyer Baha i News No 537 pp 6 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Helen Elsie Austin 1975 Matthew W Bullock 1881 1972 Knight of Baha u llah Baha i World An International Record Vol 15 Haifa Israel Baha i World Centre pp 535 9 ISBN 0853980594 Elsie Austin 1993 Annemarie Honnold ed Why They became Baha is The First Generation Baha is by 1963 National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of India pp 301 2 ISBN 8185091722 Ex Mayor gave diplomas The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 26 1896 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Everett The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 25 1899 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mathew Bullock United States Census Familysearch org June 1 1900 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required Johnson Wardell Jackson Vanessa Prier December 30 2016 Race and Racism The Black Male Experience in Sports Critical Race Theory Black Athletic Sporting Experiences in the United States New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 153 170 doi 10 1057 978 1 137 60038 7 6 ISBN 978 1 137 60037 0 retrieved April 24 2023 Johnson Wardell Jackson Vanessa Prier December 30 2016 Race and Racism The Black Male Experience in Sports Critical Race Theory Black Athletic Sporting Experiences in the United States New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 153 170 doi 10 1057 978 1 137 60038 7 6 ISBN 978 1 137 60037 0 retrieved April 24 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l Matthew Bullock 04 Black Sporting Experience at Dartmouth Dartmouth edu Retrieved March 24 2021 a b c d Arthur Ashe Kip Branch Ocania Chalk Francis Harris 1993 1988 A hard road to glory a history of the African American athlete Vol 1 1619 1918 Revised ed New York Amistad Press pp 61 93 97 ISBN 9781567430066 OCLC 549632765 Matthew Bullock Vermont Journal Windsor Vermont April 11 1903 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Ralph Sanborn December 31 1972 An Era Ends Boston Herald Boston MA p 28 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mathew sic Bullock of Boston Post Boston Massachusetts November 4 1903 p 3 Retrieved March 16 2021 Trouble over colored player The Sun New York New York November 8 1903 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Tigers draw color line The Inter Ocean Chicago Illinois November 8 1903 p 28 Retrieved March 14 2021 Color line on the gridiron The Morning Post Raleigh North Carolina November 8 1903 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Trouble over colored player Sun and New York Press New York NY November 8 1903 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Color line at Princeton The Lincoln Star Lincoln Nebraska November 10 1903 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Tigers draw the color line The Birmingham News Birmingham Alabama November 14 1903 p 26 Retrieved March 14 2021 Dartmouth players sore at Princeton The Oregon Daily Journal Portland Oregon November 17 1903 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Drawing the color line Wilkes Barre Record amp Times Leader the Evening News Wilkes Barre Pennsylvania January 9 1909 p 19 Retrieved March 14 2021 Why colored men hate Wilson The Monmouth Inquirer Freehold New Jersey August 15 1912 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Track Teams 1900 1940s Adventuresome Spirit Dartmouth College Library 2019 Retrieved March 24 2021 a b Edwin Bancroft Henderson 1939 The Negro in Sports Revised ed Washington Associated Publishers pp 95 6 112 3 OCLC 559462486 M A C vs Dartmouth The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 1 1904 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Athletic notes The College Signal Vol 15 no 1 Amherst MA October 12 1904 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Athletic notes Review of the Season The College Signal Vol 15 no 5 Ambherst MA December 14 1904 pp 51 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Football African Americans in the Sports Arena PDF CW Post Campus B Davis Schwartz Memorial Library Long Island University p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boys have celebration The Boston Daily Globe Boston Massachusetts December 10 1905 p 22 Retrieved March 14 2021 Big Banquet for the Malden teams Boston Herald Boston MA December 10 1905 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Not yet defeated The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 26 1906 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Nine Harvard Graduates The New York Age New York New York July 4 1907 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b c d e f g M W Bullock was head of Parole Board Boston Herald Boston MA December 19 1972 p 19 Retrieved March 14 2021 Sporting notes Matthew Bullock Fall River Globe Fall River Massachusetts July 10 1907 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mr Mathew sic Bullock The New York Age New York New York November 28 1907 p 2 Retrieved March 16 2021 Everett The funeral of The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 18 1909 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Brawley Benjamin Griffith 1910 Preface The Negro in Literature and Art Atlanta p i OCLC 1013259113 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Colored meet to be grand success The Washington Herald Washington District of Columbia May 21 1911 p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Scholastic meet will be good one Evening Star Sunday Washington DC May 21 1911 p 58 Retrieved March 14 2021 Liberal policy in education Franklin s Paper the Statesman Denver Colorado August 5 1911 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Atlanta Baptist College The New York Age New York New York July 20 1911 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Liberal policy in Education The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania August 5 1911 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro Colleges Atlanta Baptist College The Georgia annual a compendium of useful information about Georgia Atlanta GA A B Caldwell 1912 p 109 OCLC 9159784 Brawley Benjamin Griffith 1970 1917 History of Morehouse College College Park MD McGrath Pub Co pp 110 175 6 ISBN 9780259651796 OCLC 1152258600 Brawley Benjamin Griffith 1913 Preface A short history of the American Negro New York NY MacMillan Co p ix OCLC 1955582 8 Bay State UMCA men sail for France The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 17 1918 p 16 Retrieved March 14 2021 M W Bullock 1915 University of Minnesota Libraries Kautz Family YMCA Archives 1915 Retrieved March 27 2021 State Bar to have 153 new members The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts August 4 1917 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Attorney Matthew W Bullock The New York Age New York New York February 2 1918 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Everett The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 18 1918 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Meade insurance reaches 200 million The Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia Pennsylvania February 3 1918 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b c d e Addie W Hunton Kathryn Magnolia Johnson 1920 Two Colored Women with the American Expeditionary Forces AMS Press pp 23 7 169 179 ISBN 978 0 404 00174 2 a b c Williams Charles H 1923 Sidelights on Negro Soldiers Boston MA B J Brimmer Company p 98 OCLC 18865607 a b c Benjamin Robeson March 29 1919 Matt Bullock proclaimed uncrowned hero of old Fifteenth The New York Age New York New York p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b Kaan and Bullock appointed by Benton The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 1 1924 p 17 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock New York Passenger Arrival Lists Ellis Island 1892 1924 Familysearch org May 30 1919 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required a b c d e f g US Inflation Calculator Coin News 2021 Retrieved March 24 2021 a b c Morrison Gayle 1982 To move the world Louis G Gregory and the advancement of racial unity in America Wilmette Ill Baha i Publishing Trust pp 278 291 ISBN 0 87743 188 4 OCLC 1106817129 Colored women holding annual convention The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 31 1919 p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 Wooten Earl Thomas June 1951 An analysis of the community organization process employed by the Urban League of Greater Boston incorporated in the initial stages of a community survey PhD Atlanta University School of Social Work p 16 OCLC 875479057 Retrieved March 21 2021 WEB DuBois ed January 1920 National Urban League The Crisis Vol 19 no 3 p 151 Retrieved March 14 2021 Training workers Bulletin of the National Urban League Vol 8 no 1 New York NY January 1920 p 11 Retrieved March 24 2021 Organizations affiliated with the National Urban League Bulletin of the National Urban League Vol 8 no 1 New York NY January 1920 p 24 Retrieved March 24 2021 Executive Secretaries of the National Urban League Bulletin of the National Urban League Vol 10 no 1 New York January 1921 p 25 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mathew sic Bullock United States Census Familysearch org January 5 1920 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required The Boston YMCA and community need a century s evolution 1851 1951 Association Press New York 1951 p 192 Retrieved March 14 2021 Alumni Notes Harvard Alumni Bulletin 22 26 Harvard Bulletin Incorporated 598 March 25 1920 Problems of East Indians and negroes discussed The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 25 1920 p 13 Retrieved March 16 2021 St Bartholomew s Episcopal Cambridge Chronicle Cambridge MA May 22 1920 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Sheriff Keliher files his papers The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 31 1920 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Republican representative contests The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 8 1920 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Candidates file campaign expenses The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 1 1920 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Roxbury District The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 27 1920 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Roxbury District The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 18 1920 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Representatives in General Courty vote for two The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 21 1920 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Roxbury District The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 27 1920 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 The patrons and patronesses The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 31 1920 p 59 Retrieved March 14 2021 Vote for representatives The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 3 1920 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Charge negro candidates raised color question in campaign The Dallas Express Dallas Texas November 13 1920 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Commonwealth of Massachusetts The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 28 1921 p 16 Retrieved March 14 2021 Everett The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 4 1921 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bullock and Lattimore begin contest for seats in the House The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 9 1921 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Near row in Ward 13 case The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 25 1921 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negroes lose in Committee The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 5 1921 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bullock and Lattimore want to address House The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 7 1921 p 18 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bullock and Lattimore paid 225 to attorneys The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 11 1921 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Everett The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 3 1921 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Everett The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 27 1921 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 WEB DuBois ed July 1921 National Urban League The Crisis Vol 22 no 3 p 132 Retrieved March 14 2021 With reception to Grand Lodge The Evening Herald Fall River Massachusetts July 5 1921 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Pledges colored vote to Murphy The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 8 1921 p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 Compare pictures of the Bullocks at The Story Warren County NC Racial Justice Retrieved March 20 2021 and Fuller names Bullock to State Parole Board The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 24 1927 p 19 Retrieved March 21 2021 and read further on the other at Weaver John C 1996 Black Man White Justice The Extradition of Matthew Bullock an African American Residing in Ontario 1922 Osgoode Hall Law Journal 34 4 4 ed 627 660 doi 10 60082 2817 5069 1616 S2CID 148392006 Candidate for old position The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 27 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 A W Safford files for nomination The North Adams Transcript North Adams Massachusetts July 13 1922 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Seek incorporation of Douglass SQ Savings Bank The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts August 31 1922 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Representative nominated The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 13 1922 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro has framed bill again Klan The Evening Kansan Republican Newton Kansas October 24 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro would prohibit organization of Klan The Tampa Times Tampa Florida October 24 1922 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The Selma Times Journal Selma Alabama October 24 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro fights Klan The Birmingham News Birmingham Alabama October 24 1922 p 21 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The Johnson City Staff Johnson City Tennessee October 24 1922 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Would legislate against organization of Ku Klu The Morning Call Paterson New Jersey October 24 1922 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro ould sic bar Ku Klux from Massachusetts The Gastonia Gazette Gastonia North Carolina October 24 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Massachusetts has bill against Ku Klux Rutland Daily Herald Rutland Vermont October 24 1922 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bull to prohibit the organization of Ku Klux Klan The Bangor Daily News Bangor Maine October 24 1922 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Would jail those who join Ku Klux The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 24 1922 p 20 Retrieved March 14 2021 A Boston negro would suppress the KKK Salisbury Evening Post Salisbury North Carolina October 24 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The Huntsville Times Huntsville Alabama October 24 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boston negro wants Ku Klux barred by law Arkansas Democrat Little Rock Arkansas October 24 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 16 2021 Mathew sic W Bullock Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois October 24 1922 p 6 Retrieved March 16 2021 Negro hits at Klan Evening Star Washington DC October 24 1922 p 5 Retrieved March 16 2021 Moves to bar Klan from the Bay State New York Herald New York New York October 24 1922 p 6 Retrieved March 16 2021 Would bar Ku Klux The Coffeyville Daily Journal Coffeyville Kansas October 24 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 16 2021 Negro candidate for legislature would outlaw Klan Blackwell Daily Tribune Blackwell Oklahoma October 25 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 16 2021 Move to ban Klan from Mass The Montgomery Advertiser Montgomery Alabama October 25 1922 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro seeks to halt Ku Klux Klan The Austin American Austin Texas October 25 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boston solon don t like the Ku Klux Klan Oklahoma Herald Muskogee Oklahoma October 31 1922 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The Berkshire Eagle Pittsfield Massachusetts November 3 1922 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bills are aimed at Ku Klux Klan Fall River Daily Evening News Fall River Massachusetts November 29 1922 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Cox names supervisors of election in Ward 13 The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 26 1922 p 23 Retrieved March 14 2021 Vote for Representatives The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 8 1922 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Hearing on anti klan bills continued The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 7 1923 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Coloured Knights of Pythias parade The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 21 1923 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Gov Cox calls relief meeting The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 6 1923 pp 1 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boston attorney gets appointment The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania July 5 1924 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Department of the Attorney General Report of the attorney general for the year ending November 30 1924 18 1990 Public documents of Massachusetts Boston MA Attorney General s Office 1924 p 15 GOP platform makes must meet Klan issue The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 16 1924 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Woman raises Klan issue The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 20 1924 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Newton The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 28 1924 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 St Mark s Union hears speakers of three parties The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 3 1924 p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Everett The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 18 1925 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Dyeing plant protested by residents of Everett The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 23 1925 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Chapter notes Eta Phi The Oracle Vol 4 no 3 Boston Mass November 1925 p 102 Retrieved March 14 2021 Montomerians at Tuskegee Sunday The Montgomery Advertiser Montgomery Alabama December 29 1925 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The New York Age New York New York January 30 1926 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Permit for garage near Glendale SQ The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 9 1926 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b North Carolina negro is given a high position The News and Observer Raleigh North Carolina March 27 1927 p 36 Retrieved March 14 2021 M W Bullock to State Parole Board The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 23 1927 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Oath administered by Gov Fuller to three The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 30 1927 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew Bullock named member of Massachusetts State Board of Parole The New York Age New York New York April 2 1927 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boston man appointed on Board of Parole The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania April 2 1927 p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 Appointed to parole board Vermont Journal Windsor Vermont April 8 1927 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Work for abolishment of segregation discussed The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 19 1926 p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Banquet held by St James Lodge The North Adams Transcript North Adams Massachusetts February 9 1927 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Fuller names Bullock to state Parole Board The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 24 1927 p 19 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 28 1927 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Says negroes face economic problem Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut July 6 1927 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Nine appointments made by governor The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 5 1928 p 19 Retrieved March 14 2021 Herbert P Wasgatt The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 5 1928 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 To install officers of Patrick E Toy post The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 25 1928 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock February 1 1928 The next letter Hearings before the Committeed on Public Buildings and Grounds on HJ Res 60 House of Representatives p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 St James lodge has banquet and dance The North Adams Transcript North Adams Massachusetts February 15 1928 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bob Cameron Elliot September 29 1928 The Whirling Hub The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania p 19 Retrieved March 14 2021 At Second Congregational Church The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 24 1928 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Hits direct primary at republican fete The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 4 1929 p 16 Retrieved March 14 2021 Conference on negro conditions will be held in New London Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut June 12 1929 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Social and economic confab being planned The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania June 15 1929 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Board against pardon for William Rolfe The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 8 1929 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 In move to get Vandercar out The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 30 1929 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 New community centre opened Tuesday night Cambridge Tribune August 10 1929 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Parole Board members given pay increase The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts August 21 1929 p 23 Retrieved March 14 2021 Council agrees to salary increase of officials The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts August 22 1929 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 Civic leaders praise cleanup in Roxbury The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 26 1929 p 28 Retrieved March 14 2021 Nat l Memorial Commissioners appointed by Pres Hoover The California Eagle Los Angeles CA October 25 1929 p 6 Retrieved March 16 2021 Ability Honesty and Experience The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 4 1929 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Cliff Williams January 11 1930 Boston Mass The New York Age New York New York p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 Women republicans to hold negro guest night The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 11 1930 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Political leader criticizes Hoover The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania March 22 1930 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bullock condemns Hoover s Jim Crow The Press Forum Weekly Mobile Alabama March 22 1930 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Rebecca Jo Plant Frances M Clarke August 1 2015 The Crowning Insult Federal Segregation and the Gold Star Mother and Widow Pilgrimages of the Early 1930s PDF The Journal of American History 102 2 406 32 doi 10 1093 jahist jav351 ISSN 0021 8723 JSTOR 44286818 OCLC 8870694118 People s Baptist Church The Portsmouth Herald Portsmouth New Hampshire March 22 1930 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Stark Lodge has annual service The Portsmouth Herald Portsmouth New Hampshire March 24 1930 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew Bullock United States Census Familysearch org April 14 1930 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required C Elliott Freeman Jr July 12 1930 Two votes majority in hot fight The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Wife and Sheriff plead for convict The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 30 1930 p 16 Retrieved March 14 2021 Parole asked for William B Lewis The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts August 7 1930 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Tableaux reflect negro war roles The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 6 1930 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Woman charges wet views barred her from GOP post The Tampa Tribune Tampa Florida September 25 1930 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mrs Putname hurt bolts dry group Reading Times Reading Pennsylvania September 25 1930 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 GOP refuses place to Mrs W L Putnam The Standard Union Brooklyn New York September 25 1930 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Wants to know their stand The Berkshire Eagle Pittsfield Massachusetts September 25 1930 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Lowell s sister replaced by dry The Morning Post Camden New Jersey September 26 1930 p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Rallies tonight The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 24 1930 p 20 Retrieved March 14 2021 Butler says tariff aids show business The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 31 1930 p 32 Retrieved March 14 2021 Other nominations The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 19 1930 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Manster urgest Board free him The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 2 1930 p 32 Retrieved March 14 2021 Omega Psi Phi frat to hold memorial for Co Charles Young The New York Age New York New York March 7 1931 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Objects to prison cases at Concord The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 14 1931 p 23 Retrieved March 14 2021 Hearing for McCue and O Donnell The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 24 1931 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 New Robert Gould Shaw house ready The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 9 1931 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Opening of new Shaw Settlement House The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 16 1931 p 25 Retrieved March 14 2021 Named after Robert Gould Shaw Robert Gould Shaw House BlackFacts Details Retrieved March 14 2021 Marlboro man s pardon plea heard The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 23 1931 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 The Cambridge Civic Club Cambridge Sentinel January 16 1932 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Girl victim urges pardon for convict The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 11 1932 p 29 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b c Sara Deutsch 2004 The Politics of sex and race in Boston s NAACP 1920 1940 In James M O Toole David Quigley eds Boston s Histories essays in honor of Thomas H O Connor Boston Northeastern University Press pp 195 6 207 209 ISBN 9781555538811 OCLC 1102420308 a b Sarah Deutsch 2000 Women and the city gender space and power in Boston 1870 1940 New York Oxford University Press pp 266 7 275 366 369 ISBN 9780199728107 OCLC 191942211 Matthew W Bullock reelected head of Pan Hellenic Council The New York Age New York New York May 14 1932 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Ponzi asks court to set him free Rutland Daily Herald Rutland Vermont May 24 1932 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Ponzi urges his release The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 24 1932 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Ponzi is making efforts to secure release from Prison The Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont May 24 1932 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Great pressure put on State Parole Board The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 28 1932 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 200 places to be filled by Gov Ely The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 28 1932 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Charge discrimination in automobile insurance The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 1 1933 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The Berkshire Eagle Pittsfield Massachusetts February 2 1933 p 16 Retrieved March 14 2021 Pardon hearings are held at Norfolk Prison Colony The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 17 1933 p 32 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew W Bullock The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 25 1933 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bullock speaks on negro at Community Church here The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 27 1933 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Churches of Lexington Church of Our Redeemer Sunday Lexington Minute Men Lexington MA May 11 1933 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 permanent dead link Coffey presents plea for pardon at Norfolk The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 9 1933 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 Ladies and the community spirit Cambridge Sentinel September 9 1933 pp 1 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Charles Paddock September 11 1933 Birthdays of Champions Matthew Bullock The Pasadena Post Pasadena California p 7 Retrieved March 16 2021 Pardon hearing for Mrs Dorothy Murphy The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 15 1933 p 26 Retrieved March 14 2021 Victors in first game ever played in Harvard stadium The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 26 1933 p 18 Retrieved March 14 2021 Christmas party held in Mount Vernon church The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 11 1933 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Christmas Supper The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 9 1933 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Good will to all men The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 23 1933 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Community Church hears three speak The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 25 1933 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Church group told of Labor and New Deal The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 9 1934 p 19 Retrieved March 14 2021 Pardon hearing given lifer The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 15 1934 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Rescue at sea for campaign carnival The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 7 1934 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Roxbury District The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 13 1934 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Hearing granted deMoura lifer The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 20 1934 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mr Bullock speaks at registration rally Newport Mercury Newport Rhode Island May 25 1934 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 a b GOP committee endorses platform The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 29 1934 p 33 Retrieved March 14 2021 Milk Control Board nominations by Ely The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 11 1934 p 19 Retrieved March 14 2021 Appointments continued from the first page The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts July 18 1934 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Dillon names New Suffolk probate judge Revere Journal Revere MA July 20 1934 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Pardon Board hears 2 lifers The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 30 1934 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Two men face Parole Board The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 22 1934 p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 Medford The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 17 1934 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bay State negro was excluded The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 11 1934 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Member of Parole Board of that state The Caledonian Record St Johnsbury Vermont December 11 1934 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Flare over a racial ban The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri December 11 1934 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 FDR leads fresh attack on criminals The Chattanooga News Chattanooga Tennessee December 11 1934 p 1 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro barred protest follows Biddeford Daily Journal Biddeford Maine December 11 1934 p 7 Retrieved March 21 2021 Hotel allows negro to enter guest s suite The Town Talk Alexandria Louisiana December 12 1934 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bullock resents hotel incident The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 12 1934 p 22 Retrieved March 14 2021 Negro barred from hotel whites balk The Paducah Sun Democrat Paducah Kentucky December 12 1934 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Threatened to walk out Montpelier Evening Argus Montpelier Vermont December 12 1934 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Girl asks Board parole Gilbert The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 19 1934 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Willis asks new recount Bullock would change law regarding parole The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 3 1935 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 Francis J Burke confirmed as judge The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 16 1935 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Community Church to celebrate anniversary The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 1 1935 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 A J Philpott February 9 1935 Telephone workers donate 81 624 89 The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts pp 1 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Arlington In the Park Avenue The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 25 1935 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Diplomas given to 695 by evening schools The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 12 1935 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Community Church elects new officers The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 8 1935 p 25 Retrieved March 14 2021 Jean Norris Scales February 1980 Ludmila Van Sombeek tireless worker for Cause The American Baha i p 17 Retrieved March 14 2021 Gwendolyn Etter Lewis Richard Thomas 2006 Lights of the Spirit Historical Portraits of Black Bahaʼis in North America 1898 2004 Bahaʼi Publishing Trust pp 35 6 108 9 ISBN 978 1 931847 26 1 Doris McKay Paul Vreeland 1993 Fires in Many Hearts Nine Pines Pub pp 79 95 ISBN 9781895456035 OCLC 36501030 Conference of community church workers The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 13 1935 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Another lifer given hearing The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts September 20 1935 p 22 Retrieved March 14 2021 Rev Teinhold Neibuhr The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 19 1935 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Organized negro workers nold sic services at Church The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 21 1935 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Prof Murray speaks on utilities act The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 3 1935 p 5 Retrieved March 14 2021 Community Church has unique even planned The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 3 1936 p 17 Retrieved March 14 2021 Out of the West The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 15 1936 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Communists seize peace conference The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 23 1935 pp 1 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Peace meeting in an uproad The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri October 23 1935 p 27 Retrieved March 14 2021 Peace meeting is turned into protest against Italians Standard Speaker Hazleton Pennsylvania October 23 1935 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Force action by anti war meeting St Albans Daily Messenger St Albans Vermont October 23 1935 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boston peace group to picket consulate The Tribune Scranton Pennsylvania October 23 1935 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Peace gathering in Boston church thrown in uproad Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut October 23 1935 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bostonians vote to picket Italian consulate at peace conference The Courier Journal Louisville Kentucky October 23 1935 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Peace meeting is turned in protest against Italians Standard Speaker Hazleton Pennsylvania October 23 1935 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Peace meeting ends in uproar Reading Times Reading Pennsylvania October 23 1935 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Vote to picket Italian offices The Brattleboro Reformer Brattleboro Vermont October 23 1935 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Peace meeting become uproar Fort Worth Star Telegram Fort Worth Texas October 23 1935 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Lifer Caruso pleads for pardon The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 21 1935 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 No clemency for McDonald The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 5 1935 pp 1 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Clergy oppose freeig man The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 19 1935 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 Council postpones ousting Parole Board The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 7 1936 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Asks Councile to postpone action today The North Adams Transcript North Adams Massachusetts January 7 1936 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 No Parole Board action expected The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 22 1936 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Marian Anderson Concert will aid community center Cambridge Tribune February 14 1936 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Out of the West The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 15 1936 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mid week news of Boston Churches The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 11 1936 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Welsley Foundation Cambridge Tribune March 20 1936 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Baha i Faith Boston Herald Boston MA October 17 1936 p 18 Retrieved March 14 2021 Baha i Faith Boston Herald Boston MA November 14 1936 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 Murphy and Howard to retain positions The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 10 1936 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Twenty good paying berths await filling by Gov Curley this month The Berkshire Eagle Pittsfield Massachusetts December 1 1936 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Terms expire for 20 state post holders The North Adams Transcript North Adams Massachusetts December 1 1936 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Council accepts 35 appointments The North Adams Transcript North Adams Massachusetts December 10 1936 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Judge in failing health witnesses tell governor The Berkshire County Eagle Pittsfield Massachusetts December 30 1936 p 20 Retrieved March 14 2021 Judges remain in office appointments confirmed The Berkshire Eagle Pittsfield Massachusetts December 31 1936 p 16 Retrieved March 14 2021 Swelling State Parole Board The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 26 1937 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 Parole Board Bill stands The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 11 1937 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Adult education Center s exhibits The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 4 1937 p 17 Retrieved March 14 2021 Peace campaign to open here tomorrow The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 11 1937 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Church he founded to honor Dr Skinner The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 4 1937 p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 Committee to survey negro reemployment The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 4 1937 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bullock appointed Lyman s assistant The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 18 1937 p 36 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boston lawyer wins post on State Correction Board Statesville Daily Record Statesville North Carolina April 9 1937 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Nathaniel A Brewer to be honored Cambridge Tribune April 9 1937 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Epworth M E Church Cambridge Tribune April 16 1937 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 Beacon Hill scenes The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 6 1937 p 32 Retrieved March 14 2021 Sees communism or fascism ahead The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts June 11 1937 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Tea this afternoon The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 14 1937 p 16 Retrieved March 14 2021 Matthew Bullock to speak Sunday Oct 31 Cambridge Tribune October 22 1937 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Opposes State Bastille plan The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 19 1937 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Today in Society The Boston Urban League The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 19 1937 p 17 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bits and odds The Omega programs The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania November 27 1937 p 14 Retrieved March 14 2021 19 regional heads of National Bar Associ chose by president The New York Age New York New York December 25 1937 p 2 Retrieved March 14 2021 Annual dinner dance Athletic night Cambridge Tribune Cambridge MA January 21 1938 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Old Cambridge Baptist Church Cambridge Tribune February 4 1938 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Malden The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 23 1938 p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Rites at Roxbury for C F Butler The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts April 26 1938 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Un American propaganda here revealed in exhibit The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 2 1938 p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 Boston Area Council of Churches dinner The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 14 1939 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bowdoin boys to scholarships The Bangor Daily News Bangor Maine February 23 1939 p 6 Retrieved March 14 2021 Passage of House Bill 638 is urged The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania March 4 1939 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Committee filled for Benes Lecture The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts March 20 1939 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 Toki May 27 1939 Famous club of Boston entertains The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania p 8 Retrieved March 14 2021 Appointments and nominations at Bowdoin College The Bangor Daily News Bangor Maine June 17 1939 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Maude Roberts George August 19 1939 Musicians open Boston conclave Sunday Prexy Harreld prepares twentieth anniversary program The Detroit Tribune Detroit Michigan p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Musicians meet in Boston California Eagle Los Angeles California August 24 1939 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Sports night at Community Center January 25th Cambridge Tribune Cambridge MA January 5 1940 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 John Haynes Holmes January 7 1940 The Community Church of Boston after Twenty Years PDF Boston MA p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link STOW First Parish Church The Hudson News Enterprise Hudson MA January 12 1940 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Atty Charles Houston speaker at Boston City Club conference The New York Age New York New York February 3 1940 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Bangor man among provisional Bowdoin graduation speakers The Bangor Daily News Bangor Maine March 12 1940 p 7 Retrieved March 14 2021 College Dean The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania July 31 1943 p 3 Retrieved March 14 2021 Mathew W Bullock United States Census Familysearch org April 20 1940 Retrieved March 14 2021 registration required Robert Stockman June 1991 American Baha i community An enduring commitment to equality integration American Baha i p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Roger M Dahl 1992 History of the Kenosha Baha i Community In Richard Hollinger ed Community Histories Studies in the Babi and Baha i religions Vol 6 Los Angeles Kalimat Press pp 33 5 ISBN 9780933770768 OCLC 32305770 Baha i Procedure Baha i Procedure Instructions from Shoghi Effendi and procedures and rulings adopted by the National Spiritual Assembly New York Baha i Publishing Committee 1937 p 14 OCLC 762101548 Baha i Directory Baha i World An International Record Vol 8 Wilmette IL Baha i Publishing Committee 1981 1942 pp 700 702 705 The formation and incorporation of Local Spiritual Assemblies Baha i World An International Record Vol 9 Wilmette IL Baha i Publishing Committee 1945 p 26 Baha i Directory 1943 1944 Baha i World An International Record Vol 9 Wilmette IL Baha i Publishing Committee 1945 pp 661 663 668 a b c d Mike McMullen November 27 2015 The Baha is of America The Growth of a Religious Movement NYU Press pp 33 4 38 40 ISBN 978 1 4798 6905 3 OCLC 1135440145 Peter Smith September 2015 The Baha i Faith Distribution Statistics 1925 1949 Journal of Religious History 39 3 352 369 doi 10 1111 1467 9809 12207 OCLC 5704902465 Dinner Party The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts October 18 1940 p 15 Retrieved March 14 2021 Roland Hall Sharp December 11 2015 Review of South America Uncensored by Joseph F Thorning 1945 The Americas 2 2 New York Longmans Green and Company Cambridge University Press 248 9 doi 10 2307 978232 JSTOR 978232 S2CID 146937337 Retrieved March 14 2021 Treasury sale The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts November 19 1940 p 22 Retrieved March 14 2021 Law society annual banquet Wednesday The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 6 1940 p 10 Retrieved March 14 2021 First Congregational Church The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 15 1941 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Dr Brown guest at school anniversary The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts February 28 1941 p 25 Retrieved March 14 2021 300 pay tribute to Eddie Dugger at Medford dinner The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 16 1941 p 36 Retrieved March 14 2021 Eminent Boston legal advisor in city The New York Age New York New York June 21 1941 p 4 Retrieved March 14 2021 Points out achievements of Sepia College Stars and the Harvard Incident The Pittsburgh Courier Pittsburgh Pennsylvania August 30 1941 p 17 Retrieved March 14 2021 Baha i School ends session The Portsmouth Herald Portsmouth New Hampshire August 30 1941 p 1 Retrieved March 14 2021 Race Unity at Green Acre Baha i News No 147 October 1941 p 11 Retrieved March 14 2021 Advert services in the Copley Church The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 6 1941 p 9 Retrieved March 14 2021 First Methodist Church The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts December 6 1941 p 12 Retrieved March 14 2021 Fletcher lecture to aid adult center The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts January 17 1942 p 13 Retrieved March 14 2021 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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