{"response":{"docs":[{"id":"loc_crhp_crhp0121","title":"Charles McLaurin oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Indianola, Mississippi, 2015 December 05","collection_id":"loc_crhp","collection_title":"Civil Rights History Project","dcterms_contributor":["McLaurin, Charles, interviewee","Crosby, Emilye, interviewer","Bishop, John Melville, videographer","Civil Rights History Project (U.S.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, Mississippi, 32.75041, -89.75036","United States, Mississippi, Hinds County, Jackson, 32.29876, -90.18481","United States, Mississippi, Sunflower County, Indianola, 33.45095, -90.65509"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015"],"dcterms_description":["Charles McLaurin discusses his work as a Civil Rights activist in the 1950's and 60's. He begins by discussing the racism he experienced growing up and how this shaped his personal and political values. McLaurin mainly describes working with African American voter registration rights issues, SNCC, and the Freedom Riders. He describes how he became a congressional officer for a number of years in Mississippi, working closely with Fannie Lou Hamer as her congressional campaign manager. McLaurin describes his involvement in a range of Mississippi-based protests, as well as his experiences with the judicial system and his personal arrests.","Recorded in Indianola, Mississippi, on December 5, 2015.","Civil Rights History Project collection (AFC 2010/039: 0121), Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.","Copies of items are also held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.).","The Civil Rights History Project is a joint project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture to collect video and audio recordings of personal histories and testimonials of individuals who participated in the Civil Rights movement.","In English.","Finding aid http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af013005"],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Civil Rights History Project collection AFC 2010/039: 0121"],"dcterms_subject":["Council of Federated Organizations (U.S.)","Delta Ministry","Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party","Mississippi Freedom Project","Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.)","African American civil rights workers--Mississippi--Interviews","African Americans--Suffrage--Mississippi","Civil rights demonstrations--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--United States","Discrimination in the military--United States","Freedom Rides, 1961","Nonviolence--Mississippi","Racism--Mississippi","Voter registration--Mississippi","Jackson (Miss.)--History","Mississippi--Politics and government--1951","Mississippi--Race relations"],"dcterms_title":["Charles McLaurin oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Indianola, Mississippi, 2015 December 05"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["American Folklife Center"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/afc2010039.afc2010039_crhp0121"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Collection is open for research. To request materials, please contact the Folklife Reading Room at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/folklife.contact"],"dcterms_medium":["personal narratives","interviews","oral histories (literary genre)","video recordings (physical artifacts)"],"dcterms_extent":["14 video files (Apple ProRes 422 HQ, QuickTime wrapper) (4:36:56) : digital, sound, color.","transcript 1 item (.pdf) : text files."],"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"loc_classroom-materials_civil-rights-movement","title":"Civil Rights Movement : primary source set","collection_id":"loc_classroom-materials","collection_title":"Classroom Materials at the Library of Congress","dcterms_contributor":null,"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015/9999"],"dcterms_description":["Primary source set and a teacher's guide about the Civil Rights Movement. It contains historical background, suggestions for teachers, and additional resources"],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":["Library of Congress"],"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":null,"dcterms_subject":["African Americans--Legal status, laws, etc.","African Americans--Segregation","African Americans--Civil rights","Civil rights movements"],"dcterms_title":["Civil Rights Movement : primary source set"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage","StillImage","Text"],"dcterms_provenance":["Library of Congress"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["https://www.loc.gov/classroom-materials/civil-rights-movement"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":null,"dcterms_medium":["instructional materials","teaching guides","photographs","legislative acts","newspaper clippings","writings","posters","oral histories (literary works)"],"dcterms_extent":null,"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"loc_crhp_crhp0113","title":"Clarence Magee oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, 2015 December 01","collection_id":"loc_crhp","collection_title":"Civil Rights History Project","dcterms_contributor":["Magee, Clarence, interviewee","Crosby, Emilye, interviewer","Bishop, John Melville, videographer","Civil Rights History Project (U.S.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, Mississippi, 32.75041, -89.75036","United States, Mississippi, Forrest County, Hattiesburg, 31.32712, -89.29034"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015"],"dcterms_description":["Clarence Magee discusses the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi. He recalls growing up in Marion County, Mississippi, where he was pushed by his family to pursue an education. He remembers becoming involved with the Hattiesburg branch of the NAACP after he was barred from registering to vote in 1956, then working in sensitivity training for Freedom Summer volunteers. He also discusses teaching in schools, working for the federal government, and co-founding the Hattiesburg Association for Civic Improvement.","Recorded in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, on December 1, 2015.","Civil Rights History Project collection (AFC 2010/039: 0113), Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.","Copies of items are also held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.).","Clarence Magee, born in 1932 in Columbia, Mississippi, was the oldest of ten children and was raised working on his parents' farm.  He studied biology at Alcorn A\u0026M graduating in 1954, and attended graduate school at Harvard. He served in the U.S. Army for two years and was stationed in Germany. After leaving the service he taught in several schools in Hattiesburg. He cofounded the Hattiesburg Association for Civic Improvement and was active in helping schools formulate desegregation plans. He was also involved in NAACP and in training for the Freedom Summer. He later worked for the Southern Mississippi Planning and Development Commission and the federal Department of Agriculture, Food, and Consumer Service office in Mobile, Alabama.","The Civil Rights History Project is a joint project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture to collect video and audio recordings of personal histories and testimonials of individuals who participated in the Civil Rights movement.","In English.","Finding aid http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af013005"],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Civil Rights History Project collection AFC 2010/039: 0113"],"dcterms_subject":["Deacons for Defense and Justice","Head Start Program (U.S.)","Mississippi Freedom Project","National Association for the Advancement of Colored People","African American civil rights workers--Mississippi--Interviews","African American teachers--Mississippi--Interviews","African Americans--Suffrage--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--United States","Lynching","Police-community relations--Mississippi","Segregation in education--Mississippi","Hattiesburg (Miss.)--Race relations"],"dcterms_title":["Clarence Magee oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, 2015 December 01"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["American Folklife Center"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/afc2010039.afc2010039_crhp0113"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Collection is open for research. To request materials, please contact the Folklife Reading Room at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/folklife.contact"],"dcterms_medium":["personal narratives","interviews","oral histories (literary genre)","video recordings (physical artifacts)"],"dcterms_extent":["6 video files (Apple ProRes 422 HQ, QuickTime wrapper) (1:50:33) : digital, sound, color.","transcript 1 item (.pdf) : text files."],"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"loc_crhp_crhp0132","title":"Dion Diamond oral history interview conducted by David Cline in Washington, District of Columbia, 2015 December 13","collection_id":"loc_crhp","collection_title":"Civil Rights History Project","dcterms_contributor":["Diamond, Dion T., 1941- interviewee","Cline, David P., 1969- interviewer","Bishop, John Melville, videographer","Civil Rights History Project (U.S.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, District of Columbia, Washington, 38.89511, -77.03637","United States, Louisiana, 31.00047, -92.0004","United States, Mississippi, 32.75041, -89.75036","United States, Virginia, 37.54812, -77.44675","United States, Virginia, City of Petersburg, 37.22793, -77.40193"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015"],"dcterms_description":["Dion Diamond discusses his activism and experiences during the Civil Rights Movement. He remembers growing up in segregated Petersburg, Virginia, and attending Howard University, where he began organizing for civil rights. He also recalls his work in Mississippi and Louisiana as a Freedom Rider and activist, his studies at University of Wisconsin and Harvard University, and his later career. Finally, he speaks about contemporary activism and rights issues.","Recorded in Washington, District of Columbia, on December 13, 2015.","Civil Rights History Project collection (AFC 2010/039: 0132), Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.","Copies of items are also held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.).","Dion Diamond was born in Petersburg, Virginia in 1941. Growing up in the segregated community of Petersburg, he began doing sit-ins, often by himself. He enrolled in Howard University in 1959, where he was a founding member of Nonviolent Action Group, staging protests at Glen Echo, Maryland and Arlington, Virginia. He also was a part of the Freedom Riders and was a field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in Mississippi and Louisiana from 1961 to 1963. During this time, he was arrested over 30 times. He later attended the University of Wisconsin and earned a graduate degree from Harvard University.","The Civil Rights History Project is a joint project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture to collect video and audio recordings of personal histories and testimonials of individuals who participated in the Civil Rights movement.","In English.","Finding aid http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af013005"],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Civil Rights History Project collection AFC 2010/039: 0132"],"dcterms_subject":["Harvard University","Howard University","Mississippi State Penitentiary","Nonviolent Action Group (Washington, D.C.)","Southern University and A \u0026 M College--History","Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.)","African American civil rights workers--Virginia--Interviews","Civil rights movements--Louisiana","Civil rights movements--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--Virginia","Civil rights movements--United States","Freedom Rides, 1961","Nonviolence","Voter registration--Mississippi","Petersburg (Va.)--Race relations--History"],"dcterms_title":["Dion Diamond oral history interview conducted by David Cline in Washington, District of Columbia, 2015 December 13"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["American Folklife Center"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/afc2010039.afc2010039_crhp0132"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Collection is open for research. To request materials, please contact the Folklife Reading Room at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/folklife.contact"],"dcterms_medium":["personal narratives","interviews","oral histories (literary genre)","video recordings (physical artifacts)"],"dcterms_extent":["7 video files (Apple ProRes 422 HQ, QuickTime wrapper) (1:34:38) : digital, sound, color.","transcript 1 item (.pdf) : text files."],"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"loc_crhp_crhp0125","title":"Dorothy Zellner oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Baltimore, Maryland, 2015 December 08","collection_id":"loc_crhp","collection_title":"Civil Rights History Project","dcterms_contributor":["Zellner, Dorothy, interviewee","Crosby, Emilye, interviewer","Bishop, John Melville, videographer","Civil Rights History Project (U.S.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, Maryland, City of Baltimore, 39.29038, -76.61219","United States, Mississippi, 32.75041, -89.75036","United States, Mississippi, Leflore County, Greenwood, 33.51623, -90.17953"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015"],"dcterms_description":["Dorothy Zellner reflects on her experience as one of the early organizers in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Offering a unique perspective as a white woman in a black-led organization, she sheds light on the dynamics of race and gender in the Civil Rights Movement. Detailing the efforts of her and her then husband Bob Zellner, she discusses her involvement in organizing civil liberties workshops, forming a Northeast Regional Office of SNCC, and her role in recruiting Northern volunteers for the 1964 Freedom Summer Project. She discusses SNCC's decision to exclude white workers by the late 1960s and reflects on the complexities of this consensus. Emphasizing how SNCC was dynamic in its ability to function as a non-racial community, she considers its deterioration an endured loss for American society. She continues to pride SNCC as her life's work, to this day.","Recorded in Baltimore, Maryland, on December 8, 2015.","Civil Rights History Project collection (AFC 2010/039: 0125), Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.","Copies of items are also held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.).","Dorothy \"Dottie\" Zellner was born on January 14th, 1938 in New York City. She joined the NAACP in high school, and later went to Miami, Florida to enroll in a CORE workshop, training in non-violent organizing. Under CORE, she moved to New Orleans and was involved with \"casing\" sites for sit-ins and outreach to the white community. Dotty left CORE and was hired by the Southern Regional Council and moved to Atlanta in June of 1961. Later that year, she became involved with SNCC, organizing a Civil Liberties Workshop in the spring of 1963, and later marrying her husband Bob Zellner the following August. In 1964 she moved to Boston with her husband forming a Northeast Regional Office of SNCC while recruiting and interviewing prospective volunteers for the Freedom Summer Project. In 1965, Dottie had a daughter, and moved back to Atlanta with her new child and husband. She and her husband wrote a Grassroots Organizing Work (GROW) proposal to SNCC, to stay a part of the organization. She later moved to New Orleans to work with Anne and Carl Braden of the Southern Conference Education Fund (SCEF) for five years. Zellner worked as a nurse for several years before joining the Center for Constitutional Rights in 1984. In 1998, she became director of publications and development for the Queens College School of Law. She lectures and writes frequently about the civil rights movement and co-edited Hands on the Freedom Plow: Personal Accounts by Women in SNCC. As of 2014, she is involved in advocacy work on behalf of Palestinians","The Civil Rights History Project is a joint project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture to collect video and audio recordings of personal histories and testimonials of individuals who participated in the Civil Rights movement.","In English.","Finding aid http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af013005"],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Civil Rights History Project collection AFC 2010/039: 0125"],"dcterms_subject":["Congress of Racial Equality","Mississippi Freedom Project","Southern Regional Council","Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (U.S.)","Anti-communist movements--United States","Civil rights movements--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--United States","Folk music festivals--Mississippi--Greenwood","Greensboro Sit-ins, Greensboro, N.C., 1960","Nonviolence--United States","Women civil rights workers--United States--Interviews"],"dcterms_title":["Dorothy Zellner oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Baltimore, Maryland, 2015 December 08"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["American Folklife Center"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/afc2010039.afc2010039_crhp0125"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Collection is open for research. To request materials, please contact the Folklife Reading Room at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/folklife.contact"],"dcterms_medium":["personal narratives","interviews","oral histories (literary genre)","video recordings (physical artifacts)"],"dcterms_extent":["21 video files (Apple ProRes 422 HQ, QuickTime wrapper) (3:03:01) : digital, sound, color.","transcript 1 item (.pdf) : text files."],"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"loc_crhp_crhp0115","title":"Eddie Holloway oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, 2015 December 02","collection_id":"loc_crhp","collection_title":"Civil Rights History Project","dcterms_contributor":["Holloway, Eddie A., 1952- interviewee","Crosby, Emilye, interviewer","Bishop, John Melville, videographer","Civil Rights History Project (U.S.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, Mississippi, 32.75041, -89.75036","United States, Mississippi, Forrest County, Hattiesburg, 31.32712, -89.29034"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015"],"dcterms_description":["Eddie Holloway discusses growing up in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, as well as his involvement in Freedom Schools and other civil rights causes. He remembers his experiences as a child in a segregated society and school system, attending University of Southern Mississippi during its transition from a segregated to an integrated school, and his observations of the current educational environment as Dean of Students at USM.","Recorded in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, on December 2, 2015.","Civil Rights History Project collection (AFC 2010/039: 0115), Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.","Copies of items are also held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.).","The Civil Rights History Project is a joint project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture to collect video and audio recordings of personal histories and testimonials of individuals who participated in the Civil Rights movement.","Eddie Holloway was born in Hattiesburg, Mississippi in 1952. While he grew up in Hattiesburg, he also spent summers with family in Bessemer, Alabama. He enrolled at the University of Southern Mississippi in 1970. After graduating, he was employed at William Carey University and also worked in alcohol and drug treatment facilities. He eventually returned to work at USM for 40 years before he retired. In that time, he was the first African American to serve as Dean of Students, Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs.","In English.","Finding aid http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af013005"],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Civil Rights History Project collection AFC 2010/039: 0115"],"dcterms_subject":["Mississippi Freedom Schools","University of Southern Mississippi--History","African American civil rights workers--Mississippi--Interviews","African Americans--Segregation","African Americans--Suffrage--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--United States","School integration--Mississippi--Hattiesburg","Segregation in education--Mississippi","Hattiesburg (Miss.)--Race relations"],"dcterms_title":["Eddie Holloway oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, 2015 December 02"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["American Folklife Center"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/afc2010039.afc2010039_crhp0115"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Collection is open for research. To request materials, please contact the Folklife Reading Room at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/folklife.contact"],"dcterms_medium":["personal narratives","interviews","oral histories (literary genre)","video recordings (physical artifacts)"],"dcterms_extent":["9 video files (Apple ProRes 422 HQ, QuickTime wrapper) (2:13:09) : digital, sound, color.","transcript 1 item (.pdf) : text files."],"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"loc_crhp_crhp0110","title":"Ellie Dahmer oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, 2015 November 30","collection_id":"loc_crhp","collection_title":"Civil Rights History Project","dcterms_contributor":["Dahmer, Ellie J., 1925- interviewee","Crosby, Emilye, interviewer","Bishop, John Melville, videographer","Civil Rights History Project (U.S.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, Mississippi, 32.75041, -89.75036","United States, Mississippi, Forrest County, Hattiesburg, 31.32712, -89.29034"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015"],"dcterms_description":["Ellie Dahmer discusses her involvement in the NAACP and voting rights activism in Forrest County, Mississippi. She recalls her experiences in education, both as a student at local schools, Alcorn State University, and Tennessee A\u0026I, and as a teacher in schools throughout Mississippi. Her career as a Forrest County election commissioner is also discussed. She speaks about her husband, fellow activist Vernon Dahmer, and remembers the night when Klu Kulx Klan members burned her home, killing her husband and injuring her children.","Recorded in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, on November 30, 2015.","Civil Rights History Project collection (AFC 2010/039: 0110), Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.","Copies of items are also held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.).","Ellie Jewel Davis, born in Rose Hill, Mississippi, attended Alcorn State University and Tennessee A\u0026I, and worked as a teacher throughout Mississippi. She married Vernon Ferdinand Dahmer, Sr. (1908-1966) in March of 1952. Vernon Dahmer was a leader in the Civil Rights Movement and president of the Forrest County chapter of the NAACP in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. On January 10, 1966, the Dahmer home was firebombed by the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Though Ellie escaped with the children, Vernon died from resulting injuries.","The Civil Rights History Project is a joint project of the American Folklife Center, Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African American History and Culture to collect video and audio recordings of personal histories and testimonials of individuals who participated in the Civil Rights movement.","In English.","Finding aid http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/eadafc.af013005"],"dc_format":null,"dcterms_identifier":null,"dcterms_language":["eng"],"dcterms_publisher":null,"dc_relation":null,"dc_right":["http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/"],"dcterms_is_part_of":["Civil Rights History Project collection AFC 2010/039: 0110"],"dcterms_subject":["Alcorn State University","Ku Klux Klan (1915- )--Mississippi--History","Mississippi Southern College","National Association for the Advancement of Colored People","African Americans--Suffrage--Mississippi","African American women civil rights workers--Mississippi--Interviews","African American women teachers--Mississippi--Interviews","Civil rights movements--Mississippi","Civil rights movements--United States","Mississippi Freedom Project","Murder--Mississippi--Hattiesburg","Segregation in education--Mississippi","Violence--Mississippi--History","Voter registration--Mississippi","Hattiesburg (Miss.)--Race relations--History"],"dcterms_title":["Ellie Dahmer oral history interview conducted by Emilye Crosby in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, 2015 November 30"],"dcterms_type":["MovingImage"],"dcterms_provenance":["American Folklife Center"],"edm_is_shown_by":null,"edm_is_shown_at":["http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/afc2010039.afc2010039_crhp0110"],"dcterms_temporal":null,"dcterms_rights_holder":null,"dcterms_bibliographic_citation":null,"dlg_local_right":["Collection is open for research. To request materials, please contact the Folklife Reading Room at http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.afc/folklife.contact"],"dcterms_medium":["personal narratives","interviews","oral histories (literary genre)","video recordings (physical artifacts)"],"dcterms_extent":["7 video files (Apple ProRes 422 HQ, QuickTime wrapper) (1:22:32) : digital, sound, color.","transcript 1 item (.pdf) : text files."],"dlg_subject_personal":null,"dcterms_subject_fast":null,"fulltext":null},{"id":"loc_crhp_crhp0134","title":"E. Maynard Moore oral history interview conducted by David. P. Cline in Washington, District of Columbia, 2015 December 14","collection_id":"loc_crhp","collection_title":"Civil Rights History Project","dcterms_contributor":["Moore, E. Maynard, 1938- interviewee","Cline, David P., 1969- interviewer","Bishop, John Melville, videographer","Civil Rights History Project (U.S.)"],"dcterms_spatial":["United States, 39.76, -98.5","United States, District of Columbia, Washington, 38.89511, -77.03637","United States, Georgia, 32.75042, -83.50018","United States, Illinois, Cook County, Chicago, 41.85003, -87.65005","United States, Texas, 31.25044, -99.25061"],"dcterms_creator":null,"dc_date":["2015"],"dcterms_description":["Maynard E. Moore shares his experience in the Civil Rights Movement as a minister and how the intersection of religion and education provided an opportunity for racial integration. He recalls his involvement in the Methodist Student Movement from his early career as a migrant camp worker, to later pursuits in doctoral education, up to his participation in the Selma march. Emphasizing the commitment to non-violence, he discusses how religion grounded the efforts of Civil Rights activists, was used as a tactic to navigate racial tension in the South, and inspired the growth and mobilization of student-led action groups.","Recorded in Washington, District of Columbia, on December 14, 2015.","Civil Rights History Project collection (AFC 2010/039: 0134), Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.","Copies of items are also held at the National Museum of African American History and Culture (U.S.).","Reverend E. Maynard Moore was born in Petersburg, Virginia in 1938. In his youth, he was generally unaware of the segregation in his community. As a teenager, he participated in the Methodist Student Movement and began to interact with black students in other Methodist groups and became aware of civil rights issues. After attending undergraduate college at Randolph-Macon College in Ashland, Virginia, he went to seminary school at Southern Methodist University in 1959. He participated in sit-ins in the Dallas area and worked with migrant communities during summer breaks. In 1964, he was accepted to the University of Chicago Divinity School to do doctoral work. During this time, he and classmates drove from Chicago to join the march to Montgomery for the last few miles. In 1966, he became the national coordinator for Student Interracial Ministry. 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Greene went to McComb, Mississippi during Freedom Summer 1964 and attended the National Democratic Convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey. She left Dillard University to continue her work with voter registration for African Americans. She was arrested for her demonstration efforts. She later moved to Atlanta, Georgia to work in the SNCC office and was involved with the switchboard and financing. 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