Lucy Craft Laney

Learn More – Lucy Craft Laney

Robin Kadison Berson, Marching to a Different Drummer: Unrecognized Heroes of American
History (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1994), 186-94.
Asa C. Griggs, “Notes: Lucy Craft Laney,” Journal of Negro History 19 (January 1934): 97-102.
Mary M. Marshall, “‘Tell Them We Are Rising!’ Black Intellectuals and Lucy Craft Laney in
Post Civil War Augusta, Georgia” (Ph.D. diss., Drew University, 1998).
Lucy Lilian Notestein, Nobody Knows The Troubles I See (Washington, D.C.: Manuscript
Divisions, Library of Congress, n.d.), 1-16.
Jennifer Lund Smith, “Lucy Craft Laney and Martha Berry: Lighting Fires of Knowledge,” in
Georgia Women: Their Lives and Times, vol. 1., ed. Ann Short Chirhart and Betty Wood
(Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2009).
Gloria Taylor Williams-Way, “Lucy Craft Laney, ‘The Mother of the Children of the People’:
Educator, Reformer, Social Activist” (Ph.D. diss., University of South Carolina, 1998).
“Lucy Craft Laney (1854-1933).” New Georgia
Encyclopedia. http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-820&sug=y
Lucy Craft Laney Museum: http://www.lucycraftlaneymuseum.com/
Georgia Women of Achievement: http://www.georgiawomen.org/2010/10/laney-lucy-craft/
Haines Normal and Industrial Institute Marker, Erected by Georgia Historical
Society: http://georgiahistory.com/markers/3212
Lucy Craft Laney Marker, Erected by Georgia Historical
Society: http://georgiahistory.com/markers/108