U0837_Audio |
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Object Description
Interview no. | U-0837 |
Restrictions | No restrictions. Open to research. |
Project | U.19. Long Civil Rights Movement: Breaking New Ground |
Project description | Interviews, 2011-2012, conducted for the Breaking New Ground: A History of American Farm Owners Since the Civil War project. This project was funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and was coordinated by Adrienne Petty (of the City College of New York) and Mark Schultz (of Lewis University in Illinois) with assistance from Jacquelyn Hall. Interviews were conducted by two cohorts of research fellows and centered on African American farmers', landowners', and descendants' political, social, and economic experiences in the American South from the Civil War onward. |
Date | 11 June 2012 |
Interviewee | Teague, Daniel, 1966- |
Interviewee occupation |
Farmers Military Mechanics |
Interviewee DOB | 1966 |
Interviewee ethnicity | African Americans |
Interviewer | Davila, Kelly. |
Abstract | The interview is centered around what Daniel Teague remembers of his father's life and what he has heard about his grandfather's life on the farm on which he still resides. His grandfather, born in 1884, and his father (born in the 1910s), are both long since dead. He continues farming on his family's land after leaving to work in Milwaukee, WI. |
Citation | Interview with Daniel Teague by Kelly Davila, 11 June 2012 U-0837, in the Southern Oral History Program Collection #4007, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. |
Description
Interview no. | U0837_Audio |