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Heather Giuffre
Heather is a senior at UNC and is from New York who lived in Northside in 2011.
Heather Giuffre
Annie Jones Goins and Eugene Farrar - On their family history and legacy of builders
Annie Jones Goins and Eugene Farrar - On their family history and legacy of builders
Everett Goldston
Everett Goldston
Everett Goldston - On teaching before and after school integration
This interview is part of an oral history project called Southern Communities: Listening for a Change: Mighty Tigers--Oral HIstories of Chapel Hill's Lincoln High School. The interviewes were conducted from 2000-2001, by Bob Gilgor, with former teachers, staff, and students from Chapel Hill, N.C.'s…
Everett Goldston - On teaching before and after school integration
Alicia Gomez - On her education, being a Jackson Scholar, and musical goals
At the time of the interview, Alicia Gomez was a Jackson Scholar who attended city council and town meetings and worked on a video project. Gomez is originally from New York and moved to Chapel Hill in 2009. Gomez attended Pace charter school after getting off-track academically. She speaks about…
Alicia Gomez - On her education, being a Jackson Scholar, and musical goals
Alicia Gomez
Alicia Gomez
Roberto Gonzalez - On food, immigrating, and his relationships with Northside neighbors and the Chapel Hill Latino community
This interview is part of the Marian Cheek Jackson Center’s A Place at the Table Series. Roberto Gonzalez, a resident of the Northside neighborhood and tenant of St. Josephs CME church, immigrated from Mexico to Chapel Hill when he was about 26 years old. After arriving in 2007, he was introduced to…
Roberto Gonzalez - On food, immigrating, and his relationships with Northside neighbors and the Chapel Hill Latino community
Roberto Gonzalez
Roberto Gonzalez has been a member of the Northside community since arriving in Chapel Hill in 2007. After leaving his family’s farm around the age of fifteen to go work in Mexico City, Roberto obtained a job in the United States and immigrated here when he was about 26 years old. Joined by his…
Roberto Gonzalez
Burnice Hackney
"I grew up with my grandparents. My grandfather was a third generation farmer. We had a 100-acre farm and were pretty much self-sufficent…My grandparents have a lot of love. My grandmother was loved by hundreds if not thousands of people."
- Burnice Hackney
Burnice Hackney
Burnice Hackney - On family, school integration, and inequality in Chapel Hill
This interview is part of an oral history project called Southern Communities: Listening for a Change: Mighty Tigers--Oral HIstories of Chapel Hill's Lincoln High School. The interviewes were conducted from 2000-2001, by Bob Gilgor, with former teachers, staff, and students from Chapel Hill, N.C.'s…
Burnice Hackney - On family, school integration, and inequality in Chapel Hill
Burnice Hackney - on his football coach's influence and impact (clip)
BG: Were there any other things about the football team that you remember that you want to share?
BH: Mainly Coach Peerman the team-. Actually Coach Bradshaw was there and went on to great success. He's also a member of the Hall of Fame. He was there before I got there and before Coach Peerman, but…
Burnice Hackney - on his football coach's influence and impact (clip)
Burnice Hackney - recounts his experience during the integration of Chapel Hill high school (clip)
BG: You had mentioned that you learned either late in the school term or during the summer that you were going to go to Chapel Hill High and you had some feelings about that that were just expressed to me while we were changing the tapes.
BH: Right. My personal preference of course being a senior…
Burnice Hackney - recounts his experience during the integration of Chapel Hill high school (clip)
Burnice Hackney - on his educational experience post-integration (clip)
BG: Did you feel that you were treated the same as a student as the white teachers as the whites were treated when you went Chapel Hill High in '66?
BH: I don't have a recollection of being treated differently, it's just maybe a sense of identifying with their teacher or the teacher identifying with…
Burnice Hackney - on his educational experience post-integration (clip)
Sylvester Hackney
Sylvester Hackney
Sylvester Hackney - On growing up in Chapel Hill and school integration
“For me, high school was a good experience because I had my friends. We were in this big environment, and we had to stick together. We learned to love each other and care about each other. We didn’t know it, but we were nurturing each other.”
- Sylvester Hackney
Sylvester Hackney, a native of rural…
Sylvester Hackney - On growing up in Chapel Hill and school integration
Annie Hargett - On her career, father, and growing up in Chapel Hill
Annie Burnett Hargett is a Northside “legacy seller.” She was born in Chatham County, where the family owned a large piece of land but moved to Chapel Hill to find work at the university. She remembers growing up poor, but lacking nothing. She talks about black businesses, Northside school and…
Annie Hargett - On her career, father, and growing up in Chapel Hill
Annie Hargett
Annie Hargett lived in Northside throughout her youth. She attended Northside Elementary and was part of one of the first classes to attend Lincoln High (class of 1957). Her parents moved from Chatham County to Northside in Chapel Hill, first to Craig Street, then to N. Graham. She left Northside…
Annie Hargett
Molly Hargraves
This interview is part of a group of interviews conducted by Susan Simone exploring the lives and struggle of various members of the Northside community: a historically black and primarily residential neighborhood located immediately northwest of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and…
Molly Hargraves
Frances Hargraves
"In the first place, I never felt that the schools [were integrated]; they were not integrated. They were desegregated."
- Frances Hargraves
Frances Hargraves
Frances Hargraves - On childhood, family, education, and teaching
"I remember my mother always told me, 'Whatever job you must do, be sure you give it your best.' She said if it’s sweeping the floor, washing dishes, anything, do it your best. And as I grew, that was her philosophy - always give it your best. And I still carry that philosophy."
- Frances…
Frances Hargraves - On childhood, family, education, and teaching
Frances Hargraves
This interview is part of a group of interviews conducted by Susan Simone exploring the lives and struggle of various members of the Northside community: a historically black and primarily residential neighborhood located immediately northwest of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and…
Frances Hargraves
Interview with Frances Hargraves - Part 2
This video, created by Judith Van Wyk, was part of a project by Van Wyk documenting the impact and legacy of the desegregation of Chapel Hill Carrboro City Schools.
Courtesy of Judith Van Wyk. Video may not be altered in any way.
Interview with Frances Hargraves - Part 2
Frances Hargraves - on her experience at Hackney School (clip)
FH: I guess I was just like any other youngster. I was more concerned about the neighborhood and being accepted by my peers and also my relatives. Just being a part of what was going on, and playing games, and going to school like any child would at that period. You must remember I was born in 1914.…
Frances Hargraves - on her experience at Hackney School (clip)
Frances Hargraves - on being the first certified special education teacher in Orange County (clip)
FH: at that time it was hard to find qualified teachers. That's why they sent me. I was the first teacher in Orange County to be certified to teach special education. So I ran a lot of workshops. And when I came back, UNC, this university up here sent students to me to train.
BG: In teaching…
Frances Hargraves - on being the first certified special education teacher in Orange County (clip)