
<record>
<id>noa_sohpcr_k-0536</id>
<item>k-0536</item>
<coll>sohpcr</coll>
<repo>noa</repo>
<public>yes</public>
<dc_title>Oral history interview with Rebecca Clark, June 21, 2000</dc_title>
<dc_creator>Clark, Rebecca, b. 1920?</dc_creator>
<dc_creator>Gilgor, Bob</dc_creator>
<dc_subject>African Americans--North Carolina--Chapel Hill</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Lincoln High School (Chapel Hill, N.C.)</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>African Americans--North Carolina--Chapel Hill</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>African Americans--North Carolina--Chapel Hill--Economic conditions</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Chapel Hill (N.C.)--Race relations</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Blacks--Segregation--North Carolina--Chapel Hill</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Chapel Hill (N.C.)--Politics and government</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>School integration--North Carolina--Chapel Hill</dc_subject>
<dc_subject_personal>Clark, Rebecca, b. 1920?</dc_subject_personal>
<dc_subject_personal>Lee, Howard, 1934-</dc_subject_personal>
<dc_description>Rebecca Clark recalls living and working in segregated North Carolina. She finished her schooling in all-black schools, so the bulk of her experience with white people in a segregated context took place in the work world. There she experienced economic discrimination in a variety of forms, and despite her claims that many black people kept quiet in the face of racial discrimination at the time, she often agitated for, and won, better pay. Along with offering some information about school desegregation, this interview provides a look into the constricted economic lives of black Americans living under Jim Crow.</dc_description>
<dc_description>The Civil Rights Digital Library received support from a National Leadership Grant for Libraries awarded to the University of Georgia by the Institute of Museum and Library Services for the aggregation and enhancement of partner metadata.</dc_description>
<dc_publisher>[Chapel Hill, N.C.] : University Library, UNC-Chapel Hill.</dc_publisher>
<dc_contributor>Southern Oral History Program</dc_contributor>
<dc_contributor>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Documenting the American South (Project)</dc_contributor>
<dc_contributor>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library</dc_contributor>
<dc_contributor>Oral histories of the American South (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Documenting the American South (Project))</dc_contributor>
<dc_date>2006</dc_date>
<dc_type>Transcripts</dc_type>
<dc_type>Sound recordings</dc_type>
<dc_type>Oral histories</dc_type>
<dc_identifier>http://docsouth.unc.edu/sohp/K-0536/menu.html</dc_identifier>
<dc_format>Text (HTML and XML/TEI source file) and audio (MP3); 2 files : 87.6 kilobytes, 363.8 megabytes</dc_format>
<dc_format>Mode of access: World Wide Web</dc_format>
<dc_format>System requirements: Web browser with Javascript enabled and multimedia player</dc_format>
<dc_format>MP3 format / ca. 363 MB, 03:18:40</dc_format>
<dc_source>Duration: 03:18:40</dc_source>
<dc_relation>Forms part of Oral histories of the American South collection.</dc_relation>
<dc_coverage_temporal>2000-06-21</dc_coverage_temporal>
<dc_coverage_spatial>Chapel Hill (N.C.)</dc_coverage_spatial>
<dc_coverage_spatial>Orange County (N.C.)</dc_coverage_spatial>
<upd>20090729 164038</upd>
</record>
