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Albert Williams teaching 8th graders at Smith Middle School about the civil rights movement, February, 2014.
Albert Williams teaching 8th graders at Smith Middle School about the civil rights movement in Chapel Hill, February, 2014.
Albert Williams teaching 8th graders at Smith Middle School about the civil rights movement, February, 2014.
Eloise and Albert Williams - On the Ku Klux Klan (clip)
Eloise Williams (EW): They dealt with the “rebbish” [white people in Carrboro] but we dealt with the Ku Klux.
Rob Stephens (RS): Out where you were?
Albert Williams (AW): Yeah, on 54. They’d have Klan rallies in that field, in that section.
EW: Yes, sir. They would scare you half to death, peeking…
Eloise and Albert Williams - On the Ku Klux Klan (clip)
Albert Williams - On building a "tight neighborhood" (clip)
Albert Williams: Neighbors looked out – this was a tight neighborhood– right down that cross from Hargraves Center.
Rob Stephens: Yeah
Albert Williams: On Roberson's street. And you know, it was tight. We grew up – I grew up – being introduced to white and Black. It wasn’t no big thing even though…
Albert Williams - On building a "tight neighborhood" (clip)
Albert Williams - On No Black People in Cary (clip)
Rob Stephens: --people?
Albert Williams: Yeah, we met them.
RS: Is that the family that said they moved out here because there weren't any Black people in Cary?
AW: Yeah.
Eloise Williams: It’s not a family, it’s just a lady.
AW: A lady. She had a grandson, her grandson came down.
EW: He was…
Albert Williams - On No Black People in Cary (clip)
Albert Williams – Don't Wanna Live By No N***** Either
Albert Williams – Don't Wanna Live By No N***** Either
Albert Williams – He Could Have Called Angels, But He Didn't (clip)
Albert Williams: You know, there's failure in us, but like everybody else, we’ll strive, and even though we should have a higher standard [pause], you know, and really strive to live according to that standard.
Rob Stephens: Yes.
Albert Williams: But many of us fail in so many ways. We are human,…
Albert Williams – He Could Have Called Angels, But He Didn't (clip)
Albert Williams – Rebbish Carrboro (clip)
Albert Williams: Things were segregated. That’s why I’m saying the people in Carrboro don’t know what was going on. When you cross that railroad track at night, that was the white side of town. You didn’t have no business in Carrboro.
Rob Stephens: I’ve heard that.
AW: Unless you lived out there.…
Albert Williams – Rebbish Carrboro (clip)
Albert Williams – We Need the Human Touch (clip)
Rob Stephens: What’d you think would be most needed in, for the neighborhood – we talked about this a lot, especially in the sessions with you and Brother Revels and Pastor Harrison – but, for the community around Saint Joseph, to really, you know in the midst of all the changes that are going on,…
Albert Williams – We Need the Human Touch (clip)
Albert and Eloise Williams - On community, faith, race, and being a firefighter
Rev. Albert Williams is the minister at Staunton Memorial CME Church in Pittsboro. He is a lifetime resident of the area and was the first African American firefighter in Chapel Hill and a native son of St. Joseph CME. Mrs. Williams is also a lifetime resident and active member of Staunton…
Albert and Eloise Williams - On community, faith, race, and being a firefighter
Albert Williams - I had to be interviewed (clip)
In this short clip, Rev. Williams tells the story of his 1968 interview for a position with the Chapel Hill Fire Department.
Albert Williams: I had to be interviewed by a panel of five personnel. They were five chiefs, and five officers from various departments around the state. One of the questions…
Albert Williams - I had to be interviewed (clip)
Rev. Albert Williams - On teachers at Northside Elementary (clip)
Rev. Albert Williams - On teachers at Northside Elementary (clip)
Albert Williams - On faith
Albert Williams - On faith
Albert Simms Williams - On his life, family, community, and faith
Rev. Albert Williams is the minister at Staunton Memorial CME Church in Pittsboro. He is a lifetime resident of the area and was the first African American firefighter in Chapel Hill. This interview was conducted as part of the Jackson Center’s local life history series. Topics include: childhood…
Albert Simms Williams - On his life, family, community, and faith

Albert Simms Williams
"If you can be patient and be kind, even a bull dog will stop barking and listen to you. If you take the time with it, you’ll back it down."
- Albert Simms Williams
Albert Simms Williams
Albert Simms Williams - On recognizing strength in community diversity (clip)
Albert Simms Williams - On recognizing strength in community diversity (clip)

Eloise Williams
Eloise Williams
Gloria Mason Williams - On the African American freedom struggle and Civil Rights Movement in Chapel Hill
Audio recordings of interviews conducted by Yonni Chapman with participants in the African American freedom struggle and the civil rights movement in and around Chapel Hill, N.C.
Gloria Mason Williams - On the African American freedom struggle and Civil Rights Movement in Chapel Hill
Gloria Mason Williams
Gloria Mason Williams
Lavisha Williams - On food, cooking, and eating
Lavisha Williams grew up with her maternal grandparents as part of the household, and learned to cook watching them and her parents. Most of the foods and meals she grew up with had been passed down from her great-grandparents without cookbooks or precise recipes. Most of what she ate with her…
Lavisha Williams - On food, cooking, and eating
Thomas Williams - On the African American freedom struggle and Civil Rights Movement in Chapel Hill
Audio recordings of interviews conducted by Yonni Chapman with participants in the African American freedom struggle and the civil rights movement in and around Chapel Hill, N.C.
Thomas Williams - On the African American freedom struggle and Civil Rights Movement in Chapel Hill
Thomas Williams
Thomas Williams
Doris Wilson - On racial inequality, education, and faith
Doris Wilson was born in 1936 in Robeson County, North Carolina and moved to Chapel Hill in the mid 1950s. She has lived in her same home on Church St. in Chapel Hill ever since. In the interview, she discusses the transition to Chapel Hill when she was college-aged and the first times she…
Doris Wilson - On racial inequality, education, and faith
Doris Wilson
Etta Doris Wilson is an educator at Carrboro Early School on Lloyd St. She was born on August 13, 1936 in rural Robeson County, North Carolina, and moved to Chapel Hill into her aunt’s house when she was about 18 years old and preparing for college. Coming from a life on a farm, in a tight-knit and…
Doris Wilson
Doris Wilson - Intro (clip)
Doris Wilson (DW): I bought her out, and I’m still there.
Will Vaughan (WV): You’re still there now? Yeah. So, yeah, so I guess, what memories do you have from the early parts in this house that you’re in now?
DW: Well I completed my education, you wanna hear that piece? I completed my education, I…
Doris Wilson - Intro (clip)