Dr. Charles Whitten (right) receiving an award as an outstanding faculty member at Wayne State University School of Medicine's commencement ceremony in Detroit, Michigan.
Dr. Charles Whitten (left) receiving an Association of American Medical Colleges award for his Post Baccalaureate Enrichment Program at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan.
President of the National Association for Sickle Cell Diseases Dr. Charles Whitten (right) with U.S. President Gerald Rudolph Ford, Jr. (second left) to increase awareness of the sickle cell anemia.
Dr. Charles Whitten featured in Detroit Free Press for receiving the National Institutes of Health award for his work as director of the Sickle Cell Detection and Information Center at the Children's Hospital at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan (1963).
Dr. Charles Whitten featured in the Detroit News for receiving the National Institutes of Health award for his work as director of the Sickle Cell Detection and Information Center at the Children's Hospital at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan (1963).
Promotional poster for the 100th anniversary The Jubilee Singers of Fisk University concert at the War Memorial Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee (1971).
Promotional poster for Matthew Kennedy and his wife, Anne Gamble Kennedy's duo piano recital for a concert series at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee (1975).
Matthew Kennedy (right) with his daughter, Nina Kennedy (second right) at the Richardson Alumni House at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee (2005).
(L to R) Placard honoring Matthew Kennedy's wife, Anne Gamble Kennedy; his daughter, Nina Kennedy and Matthew Kennedy for their recital at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee (1981).
Janet L. Sims-Wood and her sister, Glenell S. Young's book, "The Psychology and Mental Health of Afro-American Women: A Selected Bibliography" published by Afro Resources, Inc.
Vice President of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) Janet L. Sims-Wood (center) with ASALH President Edgar Toppin (left) and ASALH Treasurer Ronald C. McConnell (right).