Object Type: Folder
In Folder: Oral History
Oral history.; Transcript of interview conducted with Eldora Johnson. Johnson, born August 20, 1902, discusses living in the segregated South. During the 1960s era of the civil rights movement, Johnson participated in workplace integration, as she worked with the local education system in earning placement at a local school lunchroom. She also discusses some of the early days of Jim Crow, specifically regarding black landownership and labor.
1995-12-14
Oral history.; Interview conducted with Eldora Johnson. Johnson, born August 20, 1902, discusses living in the segregated South. During the 1960s era of the civil rights movement, Johnson participated in workplace integration, as she worked with the local education system in earning placement at a local school lunchroom. She also discusses some of the early days of Jim Crow, specifically regarding black landownership and labor.
1995-12-14
Oral history.; Interview conducted with Eldora Johnson. Johnson, born August 20, 1902, discusses living in the segregated South. During the 1960s era of the civil rights movement, Johnson participated in workplace integration, as she worked with the local education system in earning placement at a local school lunchroom. She also discusses some of the early days of Jim Crow, specifically regarding black landownership and labor.
1995-12-14
Oral history.; Interview conducted with Eldora Johnson. Johnson, born August 20, 1902, discusses living in the segregated South. During the 1960s era of the civil rights movement, Johnson participated in workplace integration, as she worked with the local education system in earning placement at a local school lunchroom. She also discusses some of the early days of Jim Crow, specifically regarding black landownership and labor.
1995-12-14
Oral history.; Interview conducted with Eldora Johnson. Johnson, born August 20, 1902, discusses living in the segregated South. During the 1960s era of the civil rights movement, Johnson participated in workplace integration, as she worked with the local education system in earning placement at a local school lunchroom. She also discusses some of the early days of Jim Crow, specifically regarding black landownership and labor.
1995-12-14