racism
Civil Rights Story Circle - On their experiences in Chapel Hill in the 1960s
Freedom fighters Euyvonne Cotton, James Foushee, William Carter, Linda Brown, Keith Edwards, and Marion Phillips gathered upstairs at St. Joseph C.M.E. to talk about their experiences as young people in the freedom movement in Chapel Hill 1960-1964. Spurred by the recent publication of Courage in…
Civil Rights Story Circle - On their experiences in Chapel Hill in the 1960s
Clementine Self - on Lincoln High vs. Chapel Hill High (clip)
Clementine Self - on Lincoln High vs. Chapel Hill High (clip)
David Mason, Jr. - on attitudes in Chapel Hill (clip)
David Mason, Jr. - on attitudes in Chapel Hill (clip)
Dennis Farrington - On his family, education, and work experiences
Dennis Farrington spent the first part of his life in the Northside area of Chapel Hill before moving to a home off of NC Hwy 54, and he has deep roots in Chatham County, North Carolina. He attended Chapel Hill High School after it was newly integrated. He spent most of his working career at UNC…
Dennis Farrington - On his family, education, and work experiences
Donny "Hollywood" Riggsbee - On growing up in Chapel Hill, segregation, and his work experiences
Donny ‘Hollywood’ Riggsbee, resident of Chapel Hill, gives his biography during his time in in the town. He describes his youth, growing with 10 siblings, how his mother worked in a kitchen and how the kids worked while growing up. He talks about racial experiences in the form of his employer (Big…
Donny "Hollywood" Riggsbee - On growing up in Chapel Hill, segregation, and his work experiences
Dr. Whitney Robinson Rivers - On healthcare and Northside
"If people from the Jackson Center ever had a question or even other neighbors would text me with questions, I was always really glad to help."
- Dr. Whitney Robinson Rivers
Dr. Whitney Robinson Rivers speaks about her experiences living in Northside, primarily relating to the topics of healthcare…
Dr. Whitney Robinson Rivers - On healthcare and Northside
Emily Banks - On her family, immigration, and faith
This interview is part of the Marian Cheek Jackson Center’s Life History Series. Emily Banks, a current member and leader of St. Joseph CME Church, was born in 1946 in New York and migrated south to North Carolina in 1970. She has spent the last few decades in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. She…
Emily Banks - On her family, immigration, and faith
Emma Fowler - On growing up in Chapel Hill and Northside
This interview provides into Fowler's life growing up in Chapel Hill, her church attendance, and her education at Northside Elementary School. She goes into the neighborhood and family dynamics as well. She shares that her father worked for UNC. She spends her leisure time playing music and learning…
Emma Fowler - On growing up in Chapel Hill and Northside
Keith Edwards - On housing and gentrification in Northside
Keith Edwards has lived at the same address on McDade St. in Northside since she was born but now resides in a different house, built with support from a development grant that Chapel Hill received in the early 1970s. She became the first black female police officer at UNC in 1974 and later won a…
Keith Edwards - On housing and gentrification in Northside
Mae McLendon - On motherhood and attending UNC
“I was a member of the Black Student Movement. It was like a year old when I got there so I was very active in that. I was the off-campus minister. We would go to the football games and not stand for the national anthem…as a form of protest.”
- Mae McLendonr
In this interview, Mae McLendon sits down…
Mae McLendon - On motherhood and attending UNC
Nate Davis - On his childhood, education, and 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…
Nate Davis - On his childhood, education, and school integration
Regina Merritt and Mary Cole - On land ownership, integration, and racism
“My parents always taught us you know who you are, no matter what you say to me or what you call me, I know who I am. And that stayed with me for years. Because people are going to talk about you, you cannot stop people from talking. They can say what they want to say to you, but you know who you…
Regina Merritt and Mary Cole - On land ownership, integration, and racism
Reginald Hildebrand - Racism and Quaker School (clip)
Reginald Hildebrand (RH): In the 4th grade, go to my parents, there was a Quaker school in Atlantic City. They had a good experience, thought it was worth the investment sending me to a Quaker School in Philadelphia, they wanted to do the same there.
I went there, took exams, and the head mistress…
Reginald Hildebrand - Racism and Quaker School (clip)
Saundra Dockery - on her school experiences and mother's spirit (clip)
Saundra Dockery - on her school experiences and mother's spirit (clip)
Valerie P. Foushee - on her learning experiences during integration (clip)
Valerie P. Foushee - on her learning experiences during integration (clip)
Virginia Medean - On Racism and a Progressive Town (clip)
Virginia Medean: That place where I went to live for a few years in Halifax County was still as segregated as ever and was a very uncomfortable place to live. As a white person, it was very uncomfortable to be around other White people there because of their racism.
They have learned not to say the…
Virginia Medean - On Racism and a Progressive Town (clip)
Walter Durham - On school integration, his childhood, and race
“[Lincoln] was a school that you could go in and… no paper on the school campus. Hallway shines like new money all the time. You could drink out of the commode in the bathroom. And it was kept just that clean.”
- Walter Durham
Walter Durham discusses growing up as part of a large family on his…
Walter Durham - On school integration, his childhood, and race
William Carter - On school integration and the Civil Rights Movement
William Carter discusses the movement and his background. He was born in the Bronx, New York in 1949 and discusses his heritage with a grandma being a Lumbee Native American and father being an African American. Carter moved back to North Carolina because his aunt was in poor health and he discusses…
William Carter - On school integration and the Civil Rights Movement