THOMAS J. HIBBS:

An Inventory of His Family Papers at the Minnesota Historical Society

Manuscripts Collection

Expand/CollapseOVERVIEW

Creator: Hibbs, Thomas J., 1919-1996, creator.
Title:Thomas J. Hibbs and family papers.
Dates:1921-1996.
Abstract:Personal papers related to the life and volunteer work of Thomas J. Hibbs, Jr., a prominent figure in the Minneapolis African American community, and his mother, Florence Davis Hibbs Daniels, a singer and minister in Chicago and Minneapolis.
Quantity:2.7 cubic feet (3 boxes).
Location:See Detailed Description section for shelf locations.

Expand/CollapseBIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

Collapse/ExpandThomas J. Hibbs, Jr.

Thomas J. Hibbs, Jr. was born October 7th, 1919 in Alexandria, Minnesota. Hibbs and his father, Thomas Hibbs, Sr. and his mother, Florence Davis Hibbs, were one of only two black families in Alexandria at that time. Thomas Sr. made his living as a caretaker for a Catholic church building and ran a shoe shine parlor. The family moved to St. Cloud in the 1920s, when Thomas Sr. was asked to take over the care of some church buildings there. Thomas Jr. attended grade school in Alexandria and at St. Mary's School in St. Cloud. After his father passed away in 1935, Hibbs's mother enrolled him in St. John's preparatory school. After an unsuccessful year at another preparatory school in Alabama, Hibbs spent his senior year at the new high school at Father Flanagan's Boys' Home in Boys Town, Nebraska.

After completing military service in Virginia, he attended Globe College of Business and the University of Minnesota's General College. He went on to a career in the dry cleaning business.

Hibbs worked with many different service, religious, and social organizations, but greatest passion was work with youth. Beginning as a youth, he was particularly involved with scouting and eventually become an Eagle Scout. During his military service in Virginia during the 1940s he volunteered as a Boy Scout organizer, serving as a district commissioner for the Robert E. Lee Council. Also worked with the Boys' Club of Minneapolis and as an advisor for Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity he initially joined as a student at the University of Minnesota.

Collapse/ExpandBiography of Florence Hibbs Daniels

Florence Hibbs Daniels (n�e Davis) was born November 19th,1896 in Montreal, Canada, the daughter of Jennie Turner Davis of Montreal and Robert Washington Davis of Virginia. Her family was one of the first black families to settle in Minneapolis, where they moved in the late 1890s. She married Thomas Hibbs in 1916 and the couple soon moved from Minneapolis to Alexandria, Minnesota. Their son, Thomas J. Hibbs, Jr., was born in Alexandria in October, 1917.

The family moved to St. Cloud, Minnesota in the mid-1920s. In 1935, Thomas Sr. died. Florence put her son in a boarding school and moved to Chicago, where she pursued work with the African Methodist Episcopal church, eventually becoming a minister. During the 1930s and 1940s, she toured with the Mason Jubilee Singers and was famed for her skill as a whistler. Most of her work in Chicago was with the Coppin A.M.E. Church, located on Michigan Avenue, where she served for nine years as Director of the Coppin Community Center. Other leadership positions included president of the A.M.E. Conference Workers and service on the executive board of the United Council of Churches (Women's divison) and the executive board of the A.M.E. Missionary Conference.

In 1952 Florence married longtime family friend Benjamin Daniels and the couple moved back to Minneapolis. Florence continued her work for the church, becoming the director of girls' work at Welcome Hall, a branch of the Union Gospel Mission located in St. Paul.


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Expand/CollapseARRANGEMENT

These records are divided into the following two sections:

Florence Hibbs Daniels papers
Thomas J. Hibbs papers


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Expand/CollapseADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION

Availability:

The collection is open for research use.

Preferred Citation:

[Indicate the cited item and/or series here]. Thomas Hibbs and Family Papers. Minnesota Historical Society.

See the Chicago Manual of Style for additional examples.

Accession Information:

Accession number: 15,311

Processing Information:

Processed by: Lara D. Friedman-Shedlov, July 1998

Catalog ID number: 990017348800104294


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DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Expand/CollapseFLORENCE HIBBS DANIELS PAPERS:

Florence Hibbs Daniels's papers consist primarily of material related to her work in the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Chicago and Minneapolis, including church programs, certificates, notes for her sermons, her monogrammed Bible, and a small amount of correspondence. Photographs in her papers include many formal portraits, as well as informal snapshots and photos of church-related activities. Scrapbooks and a small collection of miscellaneous personal papers including real estate records, genealogical information, letters of reference, and correspondence from her son, Thomas J. Hibbs, Jr., are also available.


LocationBox
144.E.19.1B1Miscellaneous personal papers, undated and 1921-1976.
Includes genealogical information on the Daniels and McFarland families, letters of reference, real estate records, day care licenses, and records related to the funerals of Jennie Davis, Benjamin Daniels, and Florence Hibbs Daniels.
Photographs:
Portraits and snapshots, undated.
Includes 29 prints, 3 negatives and 1 volume. Includes portraits of Daniels's parents, Jennie and Robert Davis. Photographs in volume are unidentified but may be Thomas Hibbs, Sr.'s family in Omaha, Nebraska.
Church-related activities and miscellaneous, mostly undated and 1957, 1975.
Includes 32 prints and 1 negative. Includes portraits of the Mason Jubilee Singers and people and activities at Coppin A.M.E. Church in Chicago and St. Peter's A.M.E. Church in Minneapolis.
Letters from Thomas J. Hibbs, Jr., undated and 1928-1945.
Autograph book, undated and 1935-1939. 1 volume.
Includes photographs, some loose in the book.
Press clippings, undated and 1933-1974.
LocationBox
144.E.19.3B3Scrapbook pages, 1930s-1960s.
Scrapbooks, 1930s-1970s. 3 folders
Folders include loose and disassembled scrapbook pages and 1 intact volume containing programs, photos, and press clippings concerning Daniels's work for the church and church-related enterprises, her singing and whistling performances, alone and with the Jubilee Singers, and other miscellaneous items.
LocationBox
144.E.19.1B1Thoughts of Wisdom by Mary G. Evans, Compiled by Florence Hibbs Daniels, 1963. 1 volume.
Church-Related Papers:
Correspondence and certificates, undated and 1944-1976.
Church programs, undated and 1938-1974.
Sermons and related notes, undated. 5 volumes.
Volumes 2-5 are loose pages removed from their original binders.
Bible.

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Expand/CollapseTHOMAS J. HIBBS, JR. PAPERS:

Hibbs's papers include photographs, diaries, biographical information, scrapbooks, and materials related to numerous service, Catholic, and other organizations with which he worked. Of particular interest are materials relating to Hibbs's stay at Father Flanagan's Boy's Home in Boys Town, Nebraska, where he attended the high school in 1936-1937.


LocationBox
144.E.19.1B1Biographical and employment information.
Hibbs funeral, 1996.
Miscellaneous personal papers, undated and 1924-1974.
Includes military records, report cards, and certificates.
Photographs:
Portraits and snapshots, undated.
Includes 15 prints and 1 negative.
Boys Town, Boy Scout activities, and miscellaneous unidentified subjects, mostly undated and 1959, 1966.
Includes 82 prints.
LocationBox
144.E.19.3B3Stereoscopic slides, undated.
Metal case with 103 color slides of home, family, and various churches. Includes an inventory, but it is difficult to match with the slides.
LocationBox
144.E.19.1B1Diaries, 1931, 1934-1935. 2 volumes.
Notations are very brief but give a picture of Hibbs's school life and activities with friends.
LocationBox
144.E.19.2F2Diaries, 1939, 1943, 1946, 1949, 1954. 5 volumes.
Notations are very brief but give a picture of Hibbs's daily activities at work and with friends.
Correspondence, 1951-1986.
Includes letters from Florence Hibbs Daniels and Venita Ector, a friend in Los Angeles.
Friendship book, 1936[?]; Address book, undated. 2 volumes.
Friends, teachers, and acquaintances, mostly at Boys Town, filled out the pages in the friendship book. Each page asks the signer's name, birth date, ambition, and other questions about him or herself.
Scrapbook, 1934-1937.
Includes letters and cards written to Hibbs, mostly during his year at the high school at Father Flanagan's Boys' Home in Boys Town, Nebraska.
LocationBox
144.E.19.3B3Scrapbooks, 1930s-1940s[?]. 2 volumes.
Scrapbooks include mainly photographs as well as clippings and other materials. Photos are mostly unidentified but most appear to be taken at Boys Town.
LocationBox
144.E.19.2F2Boys Town, undated and 1936.
Materials related to Hibbs's stay at Father Flanagan's Boys' Home in Boys Town, Nebraska. Includes alumni ID card, press clippings, and an essay written by Hibbs on his experience there.Also included are several graded school writing assignments.
University of Minnesota, undated and 1948-1949.
Class notes, academic records, and other materials.
Organizations:
Materials concerning service, social, and religious organizations with which Hibbs worked are organized in alphabetical order by organization name.
Alpha Phi Omega:
A national service fraternity which Hibbs joined as a student at the University of Minnesota. In later years he was active in the Twin Cities alumni chapter and served as an advisor for the University of Minnesota's chapter, Gamma Psi.
National materials, undated and 1968-1970.
Gamma Psi Chapter, 1961-1970.
Twin Cities Area Alumni Chapter, 1957-1968. 2 folders
LocationBox
144.E.19.2F2Boys' Club Camp Voyageur and Parents Service Club, 1968-1970s.
Camp Voyageur manual, directories of members of the Parents' Service Club, and other papers related to Hibbs's work with the Boys' Club of Minneapolis.
Boy Scouts of America, 1940, 1947-1948, 1950, 1982-1985.
A small amount of material related to Hibbs's lifetime of involvement with the Boy Scouts of America, including Boy Scout diaries, certificates, and Hibbs's report as District Commissioner in Petersburg, Virginia (1945).
Catholic Players, 1940s; Laundry Workers and Cleaners International Union, 1950s.
Knights of Columbus, undated and 1947.
Toastmasters, 1973-1980.

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Expand/CollapseRELATED MATERIALS

A tape and transcript of a 1974 interview with Florence Hibbs Daniels is separately cataloged in the Minnesota Historical Society oral history collection.

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Expand/CollapseCATALOG HEADINGS

This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the Minnesota Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons or places should search the catalog using these headings.

Topics:
African Americans -- Religion -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis.
African Americans -- Religion --Illinois -- Chicago.
African American women clergy -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis.
Boy Scouts -- Minnesota.
Boy Scouts -- Virginia.
Persons:
Daniels family.
Daniels, Florence Hibbs, 1896-1976.
McFarland family.
Organizations:
African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Alpha Phi Omega. Gamma Psi Chapter (University of Minnesota).
Boy Scouts of America. Robert E. Lee Council.
Coppin A.M.E. Church (Chicago, Ill.).
Father Flanagan's Boys' Home.
St. Peter's A.M.E. Church (Minneapolis, Minn.).
Types of Documentation:
Diaries.
Photographs.
Occupation:
Clergy -- Minnesota -- Minneapolis.

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