The Douglass-Truth Branch houses one of the largest collections of African American literature and history on the West Coast. The collection features more than 10,000 items, including biographies, magazines, literature, music and films.
The collection features more than 10,000 items, including biographies, magazines, literature, music and films. The collection has a strong emphasis on Northwest materials and Seattle-area history with pamphlets, fliers and posters on local leaders and issues. Contemporary titles are regularly added.
The collection is available to access during open hours at the Douglass-Truth Branch.
Using the catalog’s advanced search, you can see what’s in this collection by using the Collections drop-down menu and selecting the “African American …” options. Circulating materials may also be requested via library holds.
Local author Jacqueline E. A. Lawson’s books on Black history and genealogy in Seattle are the latest addition to our Black Culture & History digital collection. Included are a walking tour of the Central District, a history of Camp George Jordan during WWII, and the genealogies of Seattle’s Black pioneer families, the Grose, Dixon-Lee, and Ball families. Learn more about Lawson and her legacy here.
The African American Collection was established in 1965 at the Douglass-Truth Library (formerly the Yesler Branch Library) through the advocacy and grit of the sorority members of Alpha Kappa Alpha Inc., the Delta Upsilon Omega Chapter, who built the African American Collection and saved the branch from closure in the 1960s. Roberta Byrd Barr, Dr. Millie Russell, Shirley Wilcox, Ruth Marie Brown, and the other tenacious women of Delta Upsilon Omega worked alongside librarian James Welsh to build a collection that reflected the Black community in the Central District to stimulate circulation and engagement in the library. The African American Collection became a point of pride and dignity for the Central District and the Black community.
Through the 1960s, 70s, and 80s, the collection was entirely funded and supported by the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority members and the Black community, who would hold annual library teas and arts-related programs to raise donations to grow the collection. The collection remains at the Douglass-Truth Branch and contains some of the original donations from the collection’s origins.
We are interested in donations of magazines (Suede, Ebony, Essence, Jet, Hype Hair, and Vibe) and Black diasporic literature in good condition.
For more information contact the African American Collection Librarian at the Douglass-Truth Branch.
Seattle Black Spatial Histories Institute (SBSHI) is Wa Na Wari’s two-year oral history and community story training institute. SBSHI is held in partnership with the Black Heritage Society of Washington State and the Library, with support from 4Culture.