
<record>
<id>noa_sohpcr_m-0007</id>
<item>m-0007</item>
<coll>sohpcr</coll>
<repo>noa</repo>
<public>yes</public>
<dc_title>Oral history interview with Leroy Campbell, January 4, 1991</dc_title>
<dc_creator>Campbell, Leroy</dc_creator>
<dc_creator>Wells, Goldie F. (Goldie Frinks)</dc_creator>
<dc_subject>African American school principals--North Carolina--Iredell County</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>School principals--North Carolina</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>African American schools--North Carolina--Iredell County</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>High schools--North Carolina--Iredell County--Administration</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>African Americans--Education (Secondary)--North Carolina--Iredell County</dc_subject>
<dc_subject>Race relations in school management--North Carolina--Iredell County</dc_subject>
<dc_subject_personal>Campbell, Leroy</dc_subject_personal>
<dc_description>After traveling the world, Leroy Campbell entered the education field motivated to share his experiences. He became a high school principal at the all-black Unity School in Iredell County, North Carolina, in the mid-1960s. In this interview, he responds to the interviewers&apos; checklist of questions and offers his thoughts on the effects of desegregation on Iredell schools. Understaffed and underfunded, Campbell found support in a cohesive black community and a relationship with a county official who provided him with new school buses to drive the convoluted routes necessary to maintain segregation. The core of this interview may be Campbell&apos;s description of the black community&apos;s anxieties about desegregation, including the fear that the process would splinter the community and affect the quality of education. Their fears were well-founded, and Campbell ends the interview by recalling the closing of Unity School, the dispersal of its students, and his departure from the profession.</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>2007</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/M-0007/menu.html</dc_identifier>
<dc_format>Text (HTML and XML/TEI source file) and audio (MP3); 2 files: ca. 88 kilobytes, 129 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. 129 MB, 01:10:40</dc_format>
<dc_source>Title from menu page (viewed on Dec. 2, 2008).</dc_source>
<dc_source>Interview participants: Leroy Campbell, interviewee; Goldie F. Wells, interviewer.</dc_source>
<dc_source>Duration: 01:10:40.</dc_source>
<dc_source>This electronic edition is part of the UNC-Chapel Hill digital library, Documenting the American South. It is a part of the collection Oral histories of the American South.</dc_source>
<dc_source>Text encoded by Jennifer Joyner. Sound recordings digitized by Aaron Smithers.</dc_source>
<dc_relation>Forms part of Oral histories of the American South collection.</dc_relation>
<dc_coverage_temporal>1991-01-04</dc_coverage_temporal>
<dc_coverage_spatial>Statesville (N.C.)</dc_coverage_spatial>
<dc_coverage_spatial>Iredell County (N.C.)</dc_coverage_spatial>
<upd>20090729 105956</upd>
</record>
