K-0552 |
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Object Description
Interview no. | K-0552 |
Restrictions | No copying. Researcher must obtain written permission of interviewee, interviewer, director of the Southern Oral History Program, or director of the Chapel Hill Museum for publication. |
Project | K.2.20. Southern Communities: Listening for a Change: Mighty Tigers--Oral Histories of Chapel Hill's Lincoln High School |
Project description | Interviews, 2000-2001, conducted by Bob Gilgor, with former teachers, staff, and students from Chapel Hill, N.C.'s Lincoln High School, the historically black secondary school that closed in 1962 when a school desegregation plan was implemented. Interviewees discuss African American life and race relations in Chapel Hill, as well as education, discipline, extracurricular activities, and high school social life before and after integration. |
Date | 27 January 2001 |
Interviewee | Manning, Mary. |
Interviewee occupation | Unknown |
Interviewee DOB | Unknown |
Interviewee ethnicity | African Americans |
Interviewer | Gilgor, Bob. |
Abstract | Growing up in the black community in Carrboro, NC; family relations; Lincoln High School; black social life in Chapel Hill. |
Subject Topical | African Americans--North Carolina--Chapel Hill. |
Subject Name |
Lincoln High School (Chapel Hill, N.C.) Manning, Mary. |
Citation | Interview with Mary Manning by Bob Gilgor, 27 January 2001 K-0552, in the Southern Oral History Program Collection #4007, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Description
Interview no. | K-0552 |