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Isabel Atwater - On her family's laundry business (clip)
Isabel Atwater - On her family's laundry business (clip)
Arminta Foushee - On Tar Heel Taxi #1 (clip)
Arminta Foushee - On Tar Heel Taxi #1 (clip)
Wanda Weaver - On Bynum Weaver Funeral Home (clip)
Wanda Weaver: My dad was the owner and operator of Chapel Hill Funeral Home, which is only two funeral homes that was in Chapel Hill, a black funeral home and a white funeral home. Walker’s Funeral Home which is on Franklin street still there and right here on Graham Street was Chapel Hill Funeral…
Wanda Weaver - On Bynum Weaver Funeral Home (clip)
Stanley Vickers - On not being prepared to integrate (clip)
Stanley Vickers - On not being prepared to integrate (clip)
Stanley Vickers - Integrating Chapel Hill Junior High School (clip)
Stanley Vickers - Integrating Chapel Hill Junior High School (clip)
Braxton Foushee - Anyone can play a role (clip)
Braxton Foushee: There were a lot of people who couldn’t do certain things in the movement so we had them do other things to be involved in the movement. There were a lot of people who couldn’t [] right back, and we knew it, and we asked them, you know, to be real truthful with us. And they were,…
Braxton Foushee - Anyone can play a role (clip)
Braxton Foushee - On progress after the Civil Rights Movement (clip)
Braxton Foushee - On progress after the Civil Rights Movement (clip)
Braxton Foushee - On his involvement in the Civil Rights Movement (clip)
Braxton Foushee - On his involvement in the Civil Rights Movement (clip)
Minister Robert Campbell - On the Ministerial Alliance (clip)
Minister Robert Campbell: The Ministerial Alliance in Chapel Hill and Carrboro have been very instrumental. Through it, the foundation of the Civil Rights Movement was really established. And under the mentoring of Dr. J. R. Manley and Rev. Foushee that was at St. Joseph Church during this time, and…
Minister Robert Campbell - On the Ministerial Alliance (clip)
Minister Robert Campbell - On needs of the community (clip)
Adwoa Asare: Could you just tell us a little bit about who you are and what you’re involved in with the community?
Minister Robert Campbell: Yes. I’m Minister Robert Campbell. I was ordained at Faith Tabernacle in the ’80s. I am the president of the Roger-Eubanks Neighborhood Association, co-chair…
Minister Robert Campbell - On needs of the community (clip)
Thomas Merritt - On fighting for civil rights (clip)
MCJC Staff: “At the same time, kids in town were fighting for civil rights?”
Thomas Merritt: “Yes. They were fighting for civil rights because they wanted to go places and to be free to go places and do things. Dairy Queen [chuckle]. Down at the bottom of Franklin Street, in the dirt parking lot…
Thomas Merritt - On fighting for civil rights (clip)
Thomas Merritt - On his father (clip)
MCJC Staff: “So, could you tell us what [growing up on Church Street] was like - sisters, brothers?”
Thomas Merritt: “Oh one sister older, one brother younger. We were pretty well off back then. My mother she worked for Danziger’s Old World gift shop. My father worked at different restaurants, and…
Thomas Merritt - On his father (clip)
Thomas Merritt - On the theft of his family land (clip)
MCJC Staff: “So what happened to the land?”
Thomas Merritt: “Well, a lady came by and she had some papers and she tried to get my grandmother to sign them. So she forged her signature on them and she took the land. And I think she felt guilty. And my brother knew the whole story about what had…
Thomas Merritt - On the theft of his family land (clip)
David Mason, Jr. - On what happened after the sit-in (clip)
Matthew Miller: Were you arrested, were you taken away? Or did they just take your name?
David Mason, Jr.: They just took our names, okay. But he said, if you—
MM: If you do—
DM: Well, we weren’t arrested at that time, I should say.
MM: Okay.
DM: What happened—I didn’t tell my father, and, the next…
David Mason, Jr. - On what happened after the sit-in (clip)
David Mason, Jr. - On the sit-in at Colonial Drugstore (clip)
David Mason, Jr.: And I remember when we went in, we sat down and Big John said, “Mason, you, you know y’all are not supposed to be sitting down here.” And I said, “Why? We just want a soda.” And he said, “well y’all can get your sodas, and y’all have to leave.” And Harold said “No, we aren’t going…
David Mason, Jr. - On the sit-in at Colonial Drugstore (clip)
David Mason, Jr. - On why the sit-in happened (clip)
Matthew Miller: So you were allowed to go there, but you weren’t allowed to sit at the counter?
David Mason, Jr.: Absolutely! Absolutely.
MM: Okay.
DM: Yeah, yeah. That’s exactly right. So that was the most logical place.
MM: Yeah.
DM: ‘Cause that’s where we all put our money, and, so that was…
David Mason, Jr. - On why the sit-in happened (clip)
David Mason, Jr. - On planning Chapel Hill's first sit-in (clip)
David Mason: And, ‘til when I guess it must have been February or March of 1960. 1960. Shortly after the demonstrations in the city, as I shall say, in Greensboro. I was the president of my class, and then there was another fellow that was a year older than me. His sister goes to our church now.…
David Mason, Jr. - On planning Chapel Hill's first sit-in (clip)
Janie Alston - On what she likes about her neighborhood (clip)
HV: What do you think, like, stands out most about, like, what do you like most about your home?
JA: Because I grew up here, and I grew up in the area. See, my kids don't have any connection, because they grew up in Connecticut. But, you know, we could walk – I'd come by here every morning and wait…
Janie Alston - On what she likes about her neighborhood (clip)
Janie Alston - On her family history (clip)
Alex Biggers (AB): I'm Alex Biggers, this is Hudson Vaughan. We're here with Janie Alston on Lindsey Street. It's April 20th, about like, 10 o'clock in the morning.
Hudson Vaughan (HV): Awesome. We're just going to put this down, and then, let's just keep going. You just forget about that. At any…
Janie Alston - On her family history (clip)
Chelsea Alston - On the neighborhood and community changing (clip)
Alexander Stephens: How have you seen it [the community] change?
Chelsea Alston: I’ve seen it change from—Well, like I was saying a lot of my friends live in close proximity of each other. It’s changing to where that it’ll be more of my friends living in the neighborhood than it is now. A lot of my…
Chelsea Alston - On the neighborhood and community changing (clip)
Faith
Faith has always been a critical part of the life of Chapel Hill/Carrboro’s Black community. Prior to emancipation, enslaved people people worshiped in segregated sections of Chapel of the Cross, University Baptist Church, and other churches run by white residents. But Black church-goers quickly…
Faith

Jacob James and his taxi company, Tar Heel Taxi No. 1
Photos courtesy of Arminta Foushee
Jacob James and his taxi company, Tar Heel Taxi No. 1

T.P. Duhart Board Christmas Party
The T.P. Duhart Board gathered to celebrate Christmas together at Ms. Grace Franklin's house on Lindsey Street.
From left to right: Ms. Coble, Ms. Drucilla Suggs, Ms. Doris Cotton, Ms. Maude Oldham, Ms. Louise Hargraves, Ms. Pearl Caldwell, Ms. Helen Redd, Ms. Grace Franklin, Ms. Coy Hargraves, and…
T.P. Duhart Board Christmas Party

T.P. Duhart Board Christmas Gala
Minnie James, Helen Redd, and Grace Franklin celebrate together. Ms. Franklin hosted the T.P. Duhart Board Christmas Gala at her home on Lindsey Street.
T.P. Duhart Board Christmas Gala