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Series 2: Interviews
(continued) |
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Cynthia Baker Anderson and
Fletcher Anderson oral history interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in
Bogalusa, Louisiana, May 27,
2011
(continued) |
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Moving Images (continued) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0016_mv01-04 |
BOX-FOLDER 1/11 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (39 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0016_andersons_transcript |
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Hicks family oral history
interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Bogalusa, Louisiana, May 27, 2011
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This interview is currently restricted. |
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Biographical History: Barbara Maria Collins was born
March 3, 1947 to Valeria and Robert Hicks with siblings Valeria Smith and
Arlene Hicks. She attended Dillard University, BA and Tulane University,
MPH. |
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Biographical History: Carol Cummings Burras was born
March 1, 1945 in Bogalusa, Louisiana, to Robert and Valeria Hicks. Her siblings
were Gregory, Robert Jr., Charles and Barbara. She attended Our Lady of the
Holy Cross, New Orleans, BA; and Southeastern University, MA. |
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Biographical History: Charles Hicks was born
February 25, 1945 in Bogalusa, Louisiana to Robert and Valeria Hicks with
siblings Charles, Barbara Collins, Robert and Gregory. He attended Syracuse
University, BA, MA and University of Maryland, MLS. |
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Biographical History: Darryl Hicks was born in
Bogalusa, Louisiana to Robert L. Hicks, Jr. He was the grandson of civil rights
activists Robert and Valeria Hicks. He attended Southern University. |
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Biographical History: Gregory Hicks was born June 1,
1950 in Bogalusa, Louisiana to Robert and Valeria Hicks with siblings Charles,
Robert Jr., and Barbara Collins. He attended Southeast University,
Lafayette. |
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Biographical History: Robert Hicks was born November
15, 1948 in Bogalusa, Louisiana to Valeria and Robert Hicks. He attended
Grambling State University. |
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Biographical History: Valeria Payton Hicks was born
in Bogalusa, Louisiana. She married Robert Hicks and had four children,
Charles, Robert Lawrence, Gregory and Barbara Hicks Collins. She attended
Picayune Community College for a Nursing degree and worked as a restaurant
cook, domestic worker, and nurse. |
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Summary: The Hicks family remembers their childhood
in segregated Bogalusa, Louisiana, and their father, Robert Hicks, a local
civil rights leader. They recall leading a children's civil rights march in
Bogalusa to protest discrimination at Woolworth's, hosting two white civil
rights workers, Bill Yates and Steve Miller, and being protected by the Deacons
of Defense and Justice. |
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Moving Images |
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9 video files of 9 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (154 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0017_mv01-09 |
BOX-FOLDER 1/12 |
Manuscripts |
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2 transcripts (71 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0017_hicks1_transcript |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0017_hicks2_transcript |
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Geraldine Crawford Bennett,
Toni Breaux, and Willie Elliot Jenkins oral history interview conducted by
Joseph Mosnier in Bogalusa, Louisiana, May 28, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Geraldine Bennett Crawford
lived in Bogalusa, Louisiana, and worked as a maid and a nurse. She was the
sister of civil rights activist Gayle Jenkins. |
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Biographical History: Toni Breaux was born April 10
1947 in Bogalusa, Louisiana, to Gayle E. Expose, who later married Monroe
Jenkins. Her siblings were Don Duan Expose and Willie "Chuck" Jenkins and she
is the niece of Geraldine Bennett. She married Michael Harry Melton, Sr. in
1971 and Roger Breaux II in 1990 and had 3 sons. She attended Dillard
University, BA; Southeastern Louisiana University, M.Ed. and worked as a
teacher. |
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Biographical History: Willie Elliot Jenkins was born
December 7, 1952 to Gayle E. and Monroe Jenkins with siblings Willie "Toni"
Expose and Don Duan Expose. He was the nephew of Geraldine Bennett. He
participated in the Civil Rights Movement in Bogalusa, Louisiana, and
integrated the public schools. |
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Summary: Geraldine Crawford Bennett, Toni Breaux,
and Willie Elliot Jenkins remember their mother and sister Gayle Jenkins, a
leader of the civil rights movement in Bogalusa, Louisiana. They discuss their
family history, how the family became involved in the movement, and Willie
Jenkins' court case to integrate the public schools. They recall being
protected by the Deacons of Defense and Justice, marching in local rallies, and
memories of their late brother Don, who was also involved in the movement. |
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Moving Images |
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8 video files of 8 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (82 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0018_mv01-08 |
BOX-FOLDER 1/13 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (57 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0018_jenkins_transcript |
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Annie Pearl Avery oral history
interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Selma, Alabama, May 31, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Annie Pearl Avery was born in
1943 in Birmingham, Alabama and grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She
married Harrison Avery, had two children, and worked as a dishwasher in the
1960s. Avery was a civil rights activist and member of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC). |
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Summary: Annie Pearl Avery remembers her childhood
in Birmingham, Alabama, and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and joining the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) at age sixteen. She recalls attending
a SNCC meeting in Atlanta and being stranded and threatened in Marietta,
Georgia, on the way home. She discusses her involvement in the Albany Movement,
her many arrests for protesting, marching with William Moore, and participating
in voter registration drives in many locations across the South. |
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Moving Images |
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7 video files of 7 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (91 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0019_mv01-07 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/1 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (45 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0019_avery_transcript |
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Gwendolyn M. Patton oral
history interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Montgomery, Alabama, June 1, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Gwendolyn Patton was born 1943
in Detroit, Michigan. She attended Tuskegee University, Antioch College, Union
Graduate School, and Interdenominational Institute of Theology. Patton was a
civil rights activist and archivist. |
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Summary: Gwendolyn Patton discusses attending the
Tuskegee Institute, where she became involved in many civil rights
organizations and was elected student body president. She recalls hosting the
Freedom Riders in 1961, and spending a year in a segregated sanitarium when she
had tuberculosis. She recounts organizing Tuskegee students for the Selma to
Montgomery March, occupying the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, and registering
voters in Lowndes County. |
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Moving Images |
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8 video files of 8 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (111 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0020_mv01-08 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/2 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (50 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0020_patton_transcript |
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Charles F. McDew oral history
interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Albany, Georgia, June 4, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Charles McDew was born in 1938
in Massillon, Ohio. He attended Roosevelt University and South Carolina State
University, and worked as a community organizer and educator at Metropolitan
State University in Minnesota. |
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Summary: Charles McDew recalls growing up in
Massillon, Ohio, his family's involvement in the steel mill unions and
attending South Carolina State University. He remembers being arrested three
times in two days for not obeying segregation laws in South Carolina, founding
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and registering voters in
Mississippi. |
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Moving Images |
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5 video files of 5 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (82 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0021_mv01-05 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/3 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (27 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0021_mcdew_transcript |
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Charles Melvin Sherrod oral
history interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Albany, Georgia, June 4, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Charles Sherrod was born in
1937 in Surry, Virginia, married Shirley Miller Sherrod in 1966 and had two
children. He attended Virginia Union University and Union Theological Seminary,
and worked as a community organizer and chaplain. |
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Summary: Charles Sherrod recalls how he became
involved in the Albany Movement in Georgia, recruited local residents, and led
marches and protests against segregation. |
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Moving Images |
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2 video files of 2 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (20 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0022_mv01-02 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/4 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (8 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0022_sherrodcharles_transcript |
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Joseph Echols Lowery oral
history interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Atlanta, Georgia, June 6, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Joseph Lowery was born in 1921
in Huntsville, Alabama, married Evelyn Gibson in 1950, and had three children.
He attended Paine College, Paine Theological Seminary, and Chicago Ecumenical
Seminary. He worked as pastor and civil rights activist in Mobile, Alabama, and
was a co-founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). |
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Summary: Joseph Lowery recalls his position as
pastor at the Warren Street Church in Mobile, Alabama, in the 1950s. He
remembers joining the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP), the differences in race relations between Mobile and other
southern cities, and helping to found the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference (SCLC). He reflects on the effectiveness of nonviolence, the libel
suit against him, sit-ins across the country, and the Selma to Montgomery
March. |
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Moving Images |
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4 video files of 4 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (63 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0023_mv01-04 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/5 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (26 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0023_lowery_transcript |
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Matthew J. Perry oral history
interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Columbia, South Carolina, June 7, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Matthew J. Perry was born in
1921 in Columbia, South Carolina, married Hallie Bacote, and had one son. He
attended South Carolina State College and South Carolina State College of Law,
and worked as a civil rights attorney and judge in South Carolina. Perry died
in 2011. |
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Summary: Judge Matthew J. Perry recalls serving in
the military during World War II, and experiencing discrimination during the
war. He remembers watching a trial that inspired him to go to the newly formed
law school at South Carolina State College. He discusses his start as a trial
lawyer in Spartanburg, South Carolina, the famous civil rights cases he argued,
joining the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, and his admiration for the African
American lawyers who mentored him. |
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Moving Images |
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3 video files of 3 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (55 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0024_mv01-03 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/6 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (23 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0024_perry_transcript |
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Ernest Adolphus Finney oral
history interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Columbia, South Carolina,
June 8, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Ernest Finney was born in 1931
in Smithfield, Virginia, married Frances Davenport, and had three children. He
attended Claflin College and South Carolina State University School of Law. He
worked as a civil rights lawyer, judge and interim president of South Carolina
State University. |
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Summary: Ernest Finney recalls his father's teaching
career and attending law school at South Carolina State College. He remembers
defending the "Friendship Nine," a group of college students who protested
segregation in Rock Hill, South Carolina. He discusses joining the South
Carolina Human Rights Commission, serving as a state representative, and his
election to the State Supreme Court. |
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Moving Images |
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6 video files of 6 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (55 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0025_mv01-06 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/7 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (27 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0025_finney_transcript |
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Cecil J. Williams oral history
interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Orangeburg, South Carolina, June 9, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: Cecil J. Williams was born in
1937 in Orangeburg, South Carolina, and married Constance Goode in 1959. He
attended South Carolina State College and Claflin College, and worked as a
photographer. |
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Summary: Cecil J. Williams remembers his childhood
in Orangeburg, South Carolina, and starting his career as a photographer for
several African American publications in his teens. He remembers photographing
President Kennedy, Thurgood Marshall, and other civil rights leaders. He also
discusses the Briggs v. Elliot school desegregation case, and his photographs
of the Orangeburg Massacre. |
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Moving Images |
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5 video files of 5 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (117 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0026_mv01-05 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/8 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (58 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0026_williamsc_transcript |
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William Saunders oral history
interview conducted by Kieran Walsh Taylor in Charleston, South Carolina, June 9, 2011
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Digital content available
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Biographical History: William Saunders was born 1935
in New York, New York, married Henrietta Jenkins, and had 10 children. He
attended Southern Business College, Southern Illinois University Vocational
Education, and the University of Nevada. He worked as a politician and CEO of
Committee on Better Racial Assurance Human Services Agency. |
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Summary: William Saunders remembers his childhood on
Johns Island, South Carolina, and working with Esau Jenkins, a local civil
rights leader. He recalls serving in the army during the Korean War, attending
the Highlander Folk School, and working at a mattress factory. He also
discusses founding the Lowcountry Newsletter, helping the workers in the Charleston Hospital Strike of 1969, and
running unsuccessfully for the state senate. |
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Moving Images |
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4 video files of 4 (Apple ProRes 422 HQ,
QuickTime wrapper) (84 min.) : digital, sound, color |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0027_mv01-04 |
BOX-FOLDER 2/9 |
Manuscripts |
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1 transcript (49 pages) |
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Digital ID: afc2010039_crhp0027_saunders_transcript |
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Esther M. A. Terry oral history
interview conducted by Joseph Mosnier in Greensboro, North Carolina, July 6, 2011
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Digital content available
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