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Description
Date

From the Oral History Collection. A leaflet for a CD that includes an ink drawn cartoon and track listings.

2007

From the Oral History Collection. A typed list of students from the University of Guelph's alternative spring break program. The program allowed the students to travel to the Mississippi Gulf Coast to interview survivors of Hurricane Katrina.

2007; 2008; 2009

From the Oral History Collection. A program from the December 1, 2007 Roots Reunion, held at the Saenger Theater in downtown Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

01 December 2007

Oral history.; Interview conducted June 17, 2007 in West Point, Mississippi. Brown was born August 3, 1948 in Maben, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi. He discusses living and growing up in West Point, Mississippi. He discusses how he came to be involved in the civil rights movement and includes being imprisoned, working Freedom Summer, voter registration, and integration at local facilities.

2007-06-17

Oral history.; Interview conducted June 17, 2007 in West Point, Mississippi. Brown was born August 3, 1948 in Maben, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi. He discusses living and growing up in West Point, Mississippi. He discusses how he came to be involved in the civil rights movement and includes being imprisoned, working Freedom Summer, voter registration, and integration at local facilities.

2007-06-17

Oral history.; Interview conducted June 17, 2007 in West Point, Mississippi. Brown was born August 3, 1948 in Maben, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi. He discusses living and growing up in West Point, Mississippi. He discusses how he came to be involved in the civil rights movement and includes being imprisoned, working Freedom Summer, voter registration, and integration at local facilities.

2007-06-17

Oral history.; Interview conducted June 17, 2007 in West Point, Mississippi. Brown was born August 3, 1948 in Maben, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi. He discusses living and growing up in West Point, Mississippi. He discusses how he came to be involved in the civil rights movement and includes being imprisoned, working Freedom Summer, voter registration, and integration at local facilities.

2007-06-17

Oral history.; Interview conducted June 17, 2007 in West Point, Mississippi. Brown was born August 3, 1948 in Maben, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi. He discusses living and growing up in West Point, Mississippi. He discusses how he came to be involved in the civil rights movement and includes being imprisoned, working Freedom Summer, voter registration, and integration at local facilities.

2007-06-17

Oral history.; Interview conducted June 17, 2007 in West Point, Mississippi. Brown was born August 3, 1948 in Maben, Oktibbeha County, Mississippi. He discusses living and growing up in West Point, Mississippi. He discusses how he came to be involved in the civil rights movement and includes being imprisoned, working Freedom Summer, voter registration, and integration at local facilities.

2007-06-17

From the University of Southern Mississippi Yearbooks Collection. Annual issued by the students of the University of Southern Mississippi in 2007.

2007

Oral history.; Howard Cole discusses his Mississippi roots in the early nineteenth century, his childhood, including his interactions in North Mississippi with Native Americans, the Neshoba County Fair, the Great Depression, and military service which interrupted his college education. He recounts his service in Europe during World War II, his injuries there, and his return to the United States. Unable to finish college in his original field of study, chemistry, he became the owner of a radio station, during which time he employed Charles Evers as the first black disc jockey in Mississippi. Cole describes the civil rights movement that unfolded around him in the 1960s, including the murders of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, the activists who came to Mississippi during Freedom Summer, the organizing in the black community, race relations, and the desegregation of public schools. He recalls supporting the Neshoba County Fair after World War II through radio coverage at his station, and the growth that the fair has seen from the 1940s to the 1970s.

2007-07-25

Oral history.; Howard Cole discusses his Mississippi roots in the early nineteenth century, his childhood, including his interactions in North Mississippi with Native Americans, the Neshoba County Fair, the Great Depression, and military service which interrupted his college education. He recounts his service in Europe during World War II, his injuries there, and his return to the United States. Unable to finish college in his original field of study, chemistry, he became the owner of a radio station, during which time he employed Charles Evers as the first black disc jockey in Mississippi. Cole describes the civil rights movement that unfolded around him in the 1960s, including the murders of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, the activists who came to Mississippi during Freedom Summer, the organizing in the black community, race relations, and the desegregation of public schools. He recalls supporting the Neshoba County Fair after World War II through radio coverage at his station, and the growth that the fair has seen from the 1940s to the 1970s.

2007-07-25

Oral history.; Interview conducted May 26, 2007 with Wayne Crawford in West Point, Mississippi, at the home of Terry Buffington. Crawford talks about coming of age during the civil rights movement in West Point. He discusses the continued activism in Mississippi after 1964, including figures like Stokely Carmichael.

2007-05-26

Oral history.; Interview conducted May 26, 2007 with Wayne Crawford in West Point, Mississippi, at the home of Terry Buffington. Crawford talks about coming of age during the civil rights movement in West Point. He discusses the continued activism in Mississippi after 1964, including figures like Stokely Carmichael.

2007-05-26

Oral history.; Interview conducted May 26, 2007 with Wayne Crawford in West Point, Mississippi, at the home of Terry Buffington. Crawford talks about coming of age during the civil rights movement in West Point. He discusses the continued activism in Mississippi after 1964, including figures like Stokely Carmichael.

2007-05-26

Oral history.; Interview conducted May 26, 2007 with Wayne Crawford in West Point, Mississippi, at the home of Terry Buffington. Crawford talks about coming of age during the civil rights movement in West Point. He discusses the continued activism in Mississippi after 1964, including figures like Stokely Carmichael.

2007-05-26

Oral history.; Interview conducted May 26, 2007 with Wayne Crawford in West Point, Mississippi, at the home of Terry Buffington. Crawford talks about coming of age during the civil rights movement in West Point. He discusses the continued activism in Mississippi after 1964, including figures like Stokely Carmichael.

2007-05-26

Oral history.; Interview conducted May 26, 2007 with Wayne Crawford in West Point, Mississippi, at the home of Terry Buffington. Crawford talks about coming of age during the civil rights movement in West Point. He discusses the continued activism in Mississippi after 1964, including figures like Stokely Carmichael.

2007-05-26

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