Search Help

How does this work?
There are many ways to search the collections of the Freedom Archives. Below is a brief guide that will help you conduct effective searches. Note, anytime you search for anything in the Freedom Archives, the first results that appear will be our digitized items. Information for items that have yet to be scanned or yet to be digitized can still be viewed, but only by clicking on the show link that will display the hidden (non-digitized) items. If you are interested in accessing these non-digitized materials, please email info@freedomarchives.org.
Exploring the Collections without the Search Bar
Under the heading Browse By Collection, you’ll notice most of the Freedom Archives’ major collections. These collections have an image as well as a short description of what you’ll find in that collection. Click on that image to instantly explore that specific collection.
Basic Searching
You can always type what you’re looking for into the search bar. Certain searches may generate hundreds of results, so sometimes it will help to use quotation marks to help narrow down your results. For instance, searching for the phrase Black Liberation will generate all of our holdings that contain the words Black and Liberation, while searching for “Black Liberation” (in quotation marks) will only generate our records that have those two words next to each other.
Advanced Searching
The Freedom Archives search site also understands Boolean search logic. Click on this link for a brief tutorial on how to use Boolean search logic. Our search function also understands “fuzzy searches.” Fuzzy searches utilize the (*) and will find matches even when users misspell words or enter in only partial words for the search. For example, searching for liber* will produce results for liberation/liberate/liberates/etc.
Keyword Searches
You’ll notice that under the heading KEYWORDS, there are a number of words, phrases or names that describe content. Sometimes these are also called “tags.” Clicking on these words is essentially the same as conducting a basic search.

Committee to End the Marion Lockdown

The Committee to End the Marion Lockdown (CEML) was a movement organization that opposed control unit prisons in particular, and racism and oppression in general. It was founded in 1985 and came to a close in 2000. Over the course of those 15 years, CEML led and organized hundreds of educational programs and demonstrations in many parts of the country and tried to build a national movement against “end-of-the-line” prisons. Along the way the Committee wrote thousands of pages of educational and agitational literature and pioneered new ways of analyzing and fighting against this national quagmire that morphed into the proliferation of the “prison industrial complex.”

Collection includes: Publications on their efforts to shut down the Marion Prison control unit, prevent the opening of USP Florence, CO; protests against toxic water at Crab Orchard Lake; efforts to improve conditions for inmates; efforts to stop the proliferation of Control Units in general; and further human rights and social justice in the US prison system.

Kurshan, N. (2012). OUT OF CONTROL: A Chronological Narrative of the Committee to End the Marion Lockdown's 15 Year Struggle (manuscript ed., p. 1).

Documents

For Release AM Newspapers November 14, 1991 For Release AM Newspapers November 14, 1991
Publisher: Human Rights Watch.Year: 1991Format: Press ReleaseCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Outlines history of Marion and intentions for Florence, CO. Part of packet (enclosure 3)
Media Release Media Release
Publisher: Committee to End the Marion LockdownYear: 1990Format: Press ReleaseCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Media release regarding press conference and toxic water protest on 8/9/1990 at Chicago Post Office.
For Immediate Release For Immediate Release
Author: Steve WhitmanPublisher: Committee to End the Marion LockdownYear: 1988Format: Press ReleaseCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
7/27/1988 Press release regarding a coalition of organizations and concerned individuals to hold a press conference to denounce the April 1 decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the continuation of the Marion Lockdown.
Prison Group Report on Marion: Calls for Continued Monitoring, Report Cites "Uneasy calm" Prison Group Report on Marion: Calls for Continued Monitoring, Report Cites "Uneasy calm"
Author: Ellen S. AlberdingPublisher: John Howard Association; the prison reform groupYear: 1986Format: Press ReleaseCollection: Committee to End the Marion Lockdown
Reproduction of press release 1/9/1986. "A 20-page document released today… reports on the prison watchdog's recent inspection of the super-maximum security United States Penitentiary in Marion Illinois."