-
Cabell, James Branch, 1879-1958
The Cream of the Jest: A Comedy of Evasions
New York: Robert M. McBride & Company, 1917. xv, 280 p.
-
Cabell, James Branch, 1879-1958
Jurgen: a Comedy of Justice
New York: R.M. McBride & Company, 1922, c1919. 368 p.
-
Cable, George Washington, 1844-1925
The Grandissimes: A Story of Creole Life
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1880. ix, 448 p.
-
Cable, George Washington, 1844-1925
John March, Southerner
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1899, c1894. viii, 513 p.
-
Cable, George Washington, 1844-1925
Old Creole Days
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1883. 303 p.
-
Hopkins, Samuel,
Cain, William,
Ray, David,
Thompson, Henry, and
Lytle, William
Samuel Hopkins's Bond for Building the President's House, January 25, 1794
1 pages, 1 page images.
-
Caldwell, Edwin
conducted by Oliver White
Oral History Interview with Edwin Caldwell, March 2, 2001. Interview K-0202. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Edwin Caldwell recalls a lifetime of political organization and advocacy.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Address to the Senior Class and Before the Audience Assembled at the Annual Commencement on the 28th of June, 1827
Raleigh: J. Gales & Sons, 1827. [1]-12 p.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
"An Attempt at a Most Foul and Unnatural Murder!" by Joseph Caldwell, [1805 or After]
5 pages, 5 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Autobiography and Biography of Rev. Joseph Caldwell, D.D., L.L.D., First President of the University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, [N.C.]: J.B. Neathery, 1860. 68 p.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell [to John H. Hobart, November 8, 1796]
3 pages, 3 page images.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to "My dear Friend," June 3, 1807
3 pages, 3 page images.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to Calvin Jones, September 5, 1811
3 pages, 4 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to Charles Harris, [June 1796]
3 pages, 4 page images.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to Col. William Polk, April 1, 1818
3 pages, 4 page images.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to Denison Olmsted, August 31, 1824
3 pages, 4 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to Rev. William McPheeters, January 1, 1834
9 pages, 10 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to Richard Henderson, November 1, 1805
3 pages, 4 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to the Board of Trustees, December 24, 1834
3 pages, 4 page images.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to the Board of Trustees, February 19, 1824
6 pages, 6 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to the Wilmington Gazette, 1805 or After
31 pages, 31 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to William Neill, January 5, 1815
6 pages, 7 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
Letter from Joseph Caldwell to William R. Davie, August 25, [1796]
4 pages, 4 page images.
-
Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
"A New System of Geometry," by Joseph Caldwell, Professor of Mathematics and President of UNC, Transcribed by Edward McKay, 1806
4 pages, 4 page images.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
The Numbers of Carlton, Addressed to the People of North Carolina, on a Central Rail-Road Through the State. The Rights of Freemen is an Open Trade
New-York: G. Long, 1828. 232 p.
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Caldwell, Joseph, 1773-1835
University of N.C. Account of Disturbances Which Have Lately Occurred at the University of This State. From The [Raleigh, N.C.] Star, September 13, 1811, p. 148
[Raleigh, N.C.]: [Thomas Henderson, Jr.], [1811]. 1 p.
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Caldwell, Tod Robinson, 1818-1874
Letter from Tod R. Caldwell to John Caldwell, August 2, 1837
1 pages, 2 page images.
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Califano, Joseph
conducted by William Link
Oral History Interview with Joseph Califano, April 5, 1991. Interview L-0125. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Joseph Califano served as the Secretary of the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare from 1977 to 1979. He recalls the reasons for the University of North Carolina's opposition to H.E.W.'s desegregation criteria.
-
Cameron, Annie Sutton
A Record of the War Activities in Orange County, North Carolina. 1917-1919
Transcript of the manuscript, UNC-Chapel Hill, Southern Historical Collection, 119 p.
-
Cameron, J. D. (John Donald), 1820-1897
A Sketch of the Tobacco Interests in North Carolina. Being an Account of the Culture, Handling and Manufacture of the Staple; Together with Some Information Respecting the Principal Farmers, Manufacturing Establishments and Warehouses; With Statistics Exhibiting the Growth of Tobacco in the Western Counties, and Also in the Other Tobacco Producing Regions of the State, as Shown by Comparison of the Crop of 1880 with Those of Preceding Years
Oxford, N.C.: W. A. Davis; Baltimore: Press of Isaac Friedenwald, 1881. 130 p.
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University of North Carolina (1793-1962). Board of Trustees,
Cameron, Paul C., 1808-1891,
Battle, Kemp P. (Kemp Plummer), 1831-1919, and
Saunders, William L.
Report of the Committee on Repairs, Prepared by Paul C. Cameron, with Kemp P. Battle and William L. Saunders, [1875?]
8 pages, 8 page images.
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Norton, Kenneth
conducted by Brian Campbell
Oral History Interview with Kenneth Norton, March 23, 1999. Interview K-0440. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Kenneth Norton remembers being a student at segregated Ada Jenkins School in Davidson, NC, in the 1930s.
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Moore, Vennie
conducted by Brian Campbell and Laura Hajar
Oral History Interview with Vennie Moore, February 24, 1999. Interview K-0439. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Vennie Moore recalls her childhood in segregated Davidson, NC.
-
Campbell, Green H.
Letter from Six Students to Joseph Caldwell, June 5, 1807
2 pages, 3 page images.
-
Campbell, Israel
An Autobiography. Bond and Free: Or, Yearnings for Freedom, from My Green Brier House. Being the Story of My Life in Bondage, and My Life in Freedom
Philadelphia: The Author, 1861. vi, [8]-320 p.
-
Sterling, Richard, 1812-1883 and
Campbell, J. D. (James D.)
Our Own Third Reader: for the Use of Schools and Families
Greensboro, N. C.: Sterling, Campbell, and Albright, 1862. 224 p.
-
Kirk, Bobby
conducted by K. Campbell
Oral History Interview with Bobby Kirk, October 28, 1985. Interview K-0013. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
A Farmer Responds to the Cane Creek Reservoir
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Scott, Bob
conducted by Karl Campbell
Oral History Interview with Bob Scott, September 18, 1986. Interview C-0036. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Bob Scott, former governor of North Carolina and the state's community college system president, describes his tenure as governor and discusses North Carolina politics
-
Campbell, Leroy
conducted by Goldie F. Wells
Oral History Interview with Leroy Campbell, January 4, 1991. Interview M-0007. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#40007)
Leroy Campbell describes his experiences as the principal of the all-black Unity School in Iredell County, NC.
-
Pearsall, Elizabeth
conducted by Walter Campbell
Oral History Interview with Elizabeth Pearsall, May 25, 1988. Interview C-0056. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Elizabeth Pearsall reflects on the role of her husband, Thomas Pearsall, in the North Carolina school desegregation plan. She also discusses her own efforts at fostering racial cooperation.
-
Campbell, William A., 19th cent. and
Dunn, William R. J.
The Child's First Book
Richmond: Ayres & Wade, 1864. 48 p.
-
Cannon, Isabella
conducted by Kathryn Nasstrom
Oral History Interview with Isabella Cannon, June 27, 1989. Interview C-0062. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Elected in 1977 at the age of 1973, Isabella Cannon was the first female mayor of Raleigh, North Carolina. In this interview, Cannon describes her involvement in the United Church of Christ, her support of and participation in the civil rights movement, and her advocacy of community revitalization and development. In addition, she recalls her major accomplishments as mayor and the challenges she faced in implementing her long-range comprehensive plan for the city.
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Cannon, Isabella
conducted by Jim Clark
Oral History Interview with Isabella Cannon, Spring 1993. Interview G-0188. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Isabella Cannon was the first woman mayor of Raleigh, North Carolina. Elected in 1977, at the age of 73, the "old lady who wore tennis shoes" was a staunch advocate for community growth and revitalization. During her tenure, she worked to push through the Long Range Comprehensive Plan, to reconcile tensions between the city and the police and fire departments, strengthen the relationship between the city and the state, and to revitalize the down town area.
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Cannon, Noah Calwell W., 1796?-1850
A History of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, the Only One in the United States of America, Styled Bethel Church
Rochester: Strong & Dawson, Printers, 1842. 44 p.
-
Capehart, L. C.
Reminiscences of Isaac and Sukey, Slaves of B. F. Moore, of Raleigh, N.C.
Raleigh: Edwards, 1907. 11 p.
-
Capers, William, 1790-1855
Catechism for the Use of Methodist Missions. First Part
Charleston, [S.C.?]: Published by John Early, 1853. 40 p.
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Stuart, Ruth McEnery, 1856-1917
illustrated by Smedley, Carleton, and McNair
In Simpkinsville: Character Tales
New York: Harper & Brothers, 1897. 244 p.
-
Carney, Kate S., b. 1842
Diary, April 15, 1861-July 31 1862
Transcript of the manuscript, UNC-Chapel Hill, Southern Historical Collection, 51 p.
-
Carpenter, Thomas Master of the Academy, Barking, Essex
The Scholar's Spelling Assistant; Wherein the Words Are Arranged on an Improved Plan, According to Their Respective Principles of Accentuation. In a Manner Calculated to Familiarize the Art of Spelling and Pronunciation, to Remove Difficulties, and to Facilitate General Improvement Intended for the Use of Schools and Private Tuition
Charleston, S.C.: McCarter & Dawson, 1861, [c1835]. 154 p.
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Carroll, John W. (John William), b. 1841
Autobiography and Reminiscences of John W. Carroll
Henderson, Tenn.: [s.n.], 1898. 66 p.
-
performed by Rosa Lee Carson
Little Mary Phagan
1 p.
-
Carter, Eugene J., b. 1861
Once a Methodist; Now a Baptist. Why?
Nashville, Tenn.: National Baptist Publishing Board, 1905. 238 p.
-
Carter, Hodding
conducted by Walter DeVries and Jack Bass
Oral History Interview with Hodding Carter, April 1, 1974. Interview A-0100. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Journalist Hodding Carter describes the changes wrought in Mississippi by the civil rights movement.
-
Carter, Jessie Lee
conducted by Allen Tullos
Oral History Interview with Jessie Lee Carter, May 5, 1980. Interview H-0237. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Jessie Lee Carter remembers life as a mill worker and mother in rural South Carolina.
-
Carter, Jimmy
conducted by Walter DeVries and Jack Bass
Oral History Interview with Jimmy Carter [exact date unavailable], 1974. Interview A-0066. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Jimmy Carter, the governor of Georgia, discusses the growing influence of the Democratic Party in southern states and links it to distinctly southern trends like increased voter participation and the impact of the civil rights movement.
-
Caruthers, William Alexander, 1802-1846
The Cavaliers of Virginia, or the Recluse of Jamestown. An Historical Romance of the Old Dominion. By the Author of "The Kentuckian in New-York." In Two Volumes. Vol. I
New York: Harper & Brothers, 1834. 228 p.
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Caruthers, William Alexander, 1802-1846
The Cavaliers of Virginia, or the Recluse of Jamestown. An Historical Romance of the Old Dominion. By the author of "The Kentuckian in New-York." In Two Volumes. Vol. II
New York: Harper & Brothers, 1835. 246, [i] p.
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Caruthers, William Alexander, 1802-1846
The Knights of the Horse-Shoe; A Traditionary Tale of the Cocked Hat Gentry in the Old Dominion
Wetumpka, AL: Charles Yancey, 1845. iv, 248 p.
-
Carver, F. O.
Carver Places Patriotism First. It Demands Support of the Democratic Nominees, Says Republican Ex-Legislator
[Burlington, N.C.: s. n., 1918]. 1 p.
-
Cavenaugh, Aaron and
Cavenaugh, Jenny
conducted by Charles Thompson and Charles Thompson
Oral History Interview with Aaron and Jenny Cavenaugh, December 8, 1999. Interview K-0281. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Aaron and Jenny Cavenaugh, long-time Duplin County, N.C., residents, lost their antiques business and turkey farm in the flooding that accompanied Hurricane Floyd.
-
Cavenaugh, Bernice and
Easter, Betsy
conducted by Charles Thompson and Charles Thompson
Oral History Interview with Bernice Cavenaugh and Betsy Easter, December 8, 1999. Interview K-0279. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Earl and Mattie Bell Cavanaugh, both over 80, express concern with the erosion of more values and discuss their frustrations with the government after Hurricane Floyd.
-
Cavenaugh, Mattie Bell,
Cavenaugh, Earl,
Cavenaugh, Artis,
Cavenaugh, Thomas, and
Easter, Betsy
conducted by Charles Thompson, Charles Thompson, and Rob Amberg
Oral History Interview with Mattie Bell, Earl, Artis and Thomas Cavenaugh and Betsy Easter, December 7, 1999. Interview K-0282. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Earl and Mattie Bell Cavanaugh, both over 80, express concern with the erosion of more values and discuss their frustrations with the government after Hurricane Floyd.
-
Cesare, Oscar Edward, 1885-1948
Remember the Bond
New York: Color plates made and donated by Powers Engraving Co. ; Nation Press, Inc., [between 1914 and 1918].
-
Henderson, Madison,
Warrick, Alfred Amos,
Seward, James W., and
Brown, Charles
edited by A. B. Chambers
Trials and Confessions of Madison Henderson, Alias Blanchard, Alfred Amos Warrick, James W. Seward, and Charles Brown, Murderers of Jesse Baker and Jacob Weaver, as Given by Themselves; and a Likeness of Each, Taken in Jail Shortly after Their Arrest
Saint Louis: Chambers & Knapp, 1841. [iv], 76 p.
-
Chambers, Henry
Letter from Henry Chambers to John Steele, September 17, 1805
3 pages, 4 page images.
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Brown, John, fl. 1854
edited by Louis Alexis Chamerovzow
Slave Life in Georgia: A Narrative of the Life, Sufferings, and Escape of John Brown, a Fugitive Slave, Now in England
London: [W. M. Watts], 1855. ii, 250 p.
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King, Edward, 1848-1896
illustrated by James Wells Champney
The Great South; A Record of Journeys in Louisiana, Texas, the Indian Territory, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland
Hartford, Conn.: American Publishing Co., 1875. xiv, [17]-802, [4] p.
-
Charleston (S.C.). City Council
Census of the City of Charleston, South Carolina, for the Year 1861. Illustrated by Statistical Tables. Prepared under the Authority of the City Council by Frederick A. Ford.
Charleston: Evans & Cogswell, 1861. 271 p.
-
Charleston (S.C.). City Council. Committee on Retrenchment and Relief
Circular of the City Council on Retrenchment: And Report of the Commissioners of the Orphan House
Charleston: Steam-Power Presses of Evans & Cogswell, 1861. 14 p.
-
Charleston Orphan House
By-laws of the Orphan House of Charleston, South Carolina. Revised and Adopted by the Board of Commissioners, 4th April, 1861. Submitted to and Approved by the City Council of Charleston, 23d April, 1861
Charleston: Steam-Power Presses of Evans & Cogswell, 1861. 40 p.
-
Charleston and Savannah Railroad
Tenth Annual Report of the President and Directors of the Charleston and Savannah R. R. Co. to the Stockholders, at the Meeting, February 17, 1863
Columbia: Steam Power Presses of Evans & Cogswell, 1864. 31 p.
-
Charlotte and South Carolina Railroad Company
Charlotte & S. C. R. R. and Atlantic, Tenn. & Ohio R. R. Companies' Rates Passenger Fare: May, 1863
Columbia, S. C.: Guardian Steam-power Press, 1863. 12 p.
-
Charlton, Lewis
edited by Edward Everett Brown
Sketch of the Life of Mr. Lewis Charlton, and Reminiscences of Slavery
S. l.: s. n., ?. 10 p.
-
Chaudron, A. de V. (Adelaide de Vendel)
Chaudron's Spelling Book, Carefully Prepared for Family and School Use
Mobile: S.H. Goetzel, 1865. 48 p.
-
Chaudron, A. de V. (Adelaide de Vendel)
The Third Reader, Designed for the Use of Primary Schools
Mobile, Ala.: W. G. Clark, 1864. 150 p.
-
Cheatham, Annie Bell Williams
conducted by James Eddie McCoy
Oral History Interview with Annie Bell Williams Cheatham, March 21, 1995. Interview Q-0015. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
A black sharecropper's daughter discusses her difficult upbringing on the farm and the many stories of slavery on which she was raised.
-
Sanford, Terry
conducted by Cindy Cheatham
Oral History Interview with Terry Sanford, December 18, 1990. Interview L-0050. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Former Governor of North Carolina Terry Sanford lauds the leadership of Anne Queen, director of the YMCA/YWCA at University of North Carolina. In addition, Sanford discusses his advocacy of the civil rights movement and argues that the University of North Carolina was a particularly powerful force for social change during the mid-twentieth century.
-
Friday, William C.
conducted by Cindy Cheatham
Oral History Interview with William C. Friday, December 18, 1990. Interview L-0049. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Former President of the University of North Carolina, William C. Friday, describes his working relationship with Anne Queen, who was director of the campus YWCA and YMCA-YWCA from the late 1950s into the 1970s. Friday discusses Queen's relationship with students and her leadership qualities.
-
Cheeks, Kathryn
conducted by Susan Upton
Oral History Interview with Kathryn Cheeks, March 27, 2003. Interview K-0203. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
White student remembers fear and violence during desegregation in Chapel Hill.
-
Cherry, Steve
conducted by Mark Jones
Oral History Interview with Steve Cherry, February 19, 1999. Interview K-0430. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Steve Cherry describes desegregation from the perspective of a coach and a principal in Lincoln County, North Carolina.
-
Chesney, Pharaoh Jackson, b. 1781? and
Webster, J. C. (John Coram), b. 1861
Last of the Pioneers: Or, Old Times in East Tenn., Being the Life and Reminiscences of Pharaoh Jackson Chesney (Aged 120 Years)
Knoxville, Tenn.: S. B. Newman & Co., Printers & Book Binders, 1902. 129, [1] p.
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Chesnut, Mary Boykin Miller, 1823-1886
A Diary from Dixie, as Written by Mary Boykin Chesnut, Wife of James Chesnut, Jr., United States Senator from South Carolina, 1859-1861, and Afterward an Aide to Jefferson Davis and a Brigadier-General in the Confederate Army
New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1905. xxii, 424 p.
-
Chesnutt, Charles Waddell, 1858-1932
The Colonel's Dream
New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1905. ix, 294 p.
-
Chesnutt, Charles Waddell, 1858-1932
The Conjure Woman
Boston; New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1899. 229 p.
-
Chesnutt, Charles Waddell, 1858-1932
Frederick Douglass
Boston: Small, Maynard, 1899. [vii]-xix, 141, [2] p.
-
Chesnutt, Charles Waddell, 1858-1932
The House Behind the Cedars
Boston; New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1900. 294 p.
-
Chesnutt, Charles Waddell, 1858-1932
The Marrow of Tradition
Boston; New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1901. vi, 329 p.
-
Chesnutt, Charles Waddell, 1858-1932
illustrated by Clyde O. De Land
The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line
Boston; New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1901. 323 p.
-
Jacobs, Harriet A. (Harriet Ann), 1813-1897
edited by Lydia Maria Francis Child
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Written by Herself
Boston: Published for the Author, 1861, c1860. 306 p.
-
Chopin, Kate, 1851-1904
The Awakening
Chicago; New York: Herbert S. Stone & Co., 1899. 303 p.
-
Chopin, Kate, 1851-1904
Bayou Folk
Boston; New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company; Cambridge [Mass.]: The Riverside Press, 1894. 313 p.
-
Chopin, Kate, 1851-1904
A Night in Acadie
Chicago: Way & Williams, 1897. 416 p.
-
Christy, Howard Chandler, 1873-1952
Fight or Buy Bonds : Third Liberty Loan
Boston: Forbes, 1917.
-
Christy, Howard Chandler, 1873-1952
The Spirit of America : Join
[Boston?]: American Red Cross, 1919.
-
Harris, Joel Chandler, 1848-1908
illustrated by Frederick S. Church and James Henry Moser
Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings: The Folk-Lore of the Old Plantation. By Joel Chandler Harris. With Illustrations by Frederick S. Church and James H. Moser
New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1881. 231, [viii] p.
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Clark, Adele
conducted by Winston Broadfoot
Oral History Interview with Adele Clark, February 28, 1964. Interview G-0014-2. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Adele Clark was a founding member of the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia and the League of Women Voters. In this interview, she describes how the suffrage movement unfolded in Virginia, discussing the successes as well as the obstacles suffragettes faced during their struggle.
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Anderson, Thomas, b. 1785? and
Clark, J. P.
Interesting Account of Thomas Anderson, a Slave, Taken from His Own Lips. Ed. J. P. Clark
Virginia: s. n., 1854?. 12 p.
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Clark, Rebecca
conducted by Bob Gilgor
Oral History Interview with Rebecca Clark, June 21, 2000. Interview K-0536. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Rebecca Clark describes the economic impact of Jim Crow: denying African Americans desirable jobs, forcing them into low-paying jobs, and humiliating African American consumers.
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Clark, Septima Poinsette
conducted by Jacquelyn Hall
Oral History Interview with Septima Poinsette Clark, July 25, 1976. Interview G-0016. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Septima Clark served as a board member and education director for the Highlander Folk School and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in the 1950s and 1960s. She links her activism to the memory of her parents' struggles with poverty and racism. She also describes how community relations functioned within the NAACP and SCLC. Her plans for increasing community involvement, protecting the labor rights of black teachers, and educating black voters were often ignored because she was female. She discusses why these types of gender roles persisted in the SCLC and the role of leaders in the black community.
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Clark, Septima Poinsette
conducted by Eugene Walker
Oral History Interview with Septima Poinsette Clark, July 30, 1976. Interview G-0017. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Septima Clark describes the work of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in the late 1950s to mid 1960s, especially the community education programs that she directed for the SCLC and the Highlander Folk School. She rejoices in the new voters and civil rights legislation that resulted from their work but noticed drawbacks arising from prejudice against female leaders, disdain for the poor, and clashes in leadership styles.
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Clark, Walter McKenzie, 1846-1924
Address by Chief Justice Walter Clark Before the Federation of Women's Clubs, New Bern, N. C., 8 May, 1913
[S. l.: s. n., 1913?]. 24 p.
-
Clark, Walter McKenzie, 1846-1924
Ballots for Both. An Address by Chief Justice Walter Clark at Greenville, N.C., 8 December, 1916
Raleigh: Commercial Printing Co., [1917]. 16 p.
-
Clark, Walter McKenzie, 1846-1924
History of the Raleigh & Gaston Railroad Company, Including All the Acts of the General Assembly of North Carolina Relating Thereto.
Raleigh: Raleigh News Steam Job Print, 1877. ii, 141 p.
-
Clark, Walter McKenzie, 1846-1924
The Negro in North Carolina and the South. His Fifty-five Years of Freedom and What He Has Done. Commencement Address at St. Augustine's School, Raleigh, N. C., May 26, 1920, by Chief Justice Walter Clark, of North Carolina
From St. Augustine's Record, Vol. 25, no. 5. Raleigh, N. C.: [St. Augustine's School?], 1920. 8 p.
-
Clark, Walter, 1885-1933
North Carolina in the World War. An Address Delivered before the North Carolina Bar Association at Blowing Rock, N. C., July 5, 1923
Charlotte, N. C.: Charlotte Chamber of Commerce, 1924. 20 p.
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Clark, Walter McKenzie, 1846-1924
Relating to Right of Women in North Carolina to be Notaries Public. "The Right of Women to Make a Living." Dissenting Opinion of Chief Justice Walter Clark in Beckett [sic] V. Knight
[St. Paul]: [West Pub. Co.], [1915?]. 4 p.
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Clarke, H. C.
Diary of the War for Separation, a Daily Chronicle of the Principal Events and History of the Present Revolution, to Which is Added Notes and Descriptions of All the Great Battles, Including Walker's Narrative of the Battle of Shiloh
Augusta, Ga.: Steam Press of Chronicle & Sentinel, 1862. 191 p.
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Clarke, Lewis Garrard, 1812-1897
Narrative of the Sufferings of Lewis Clarke, During a Captivity of More than Twenty-Five Years, Among the Algerines of Kentucky, One of the So Called Christian States of North America
Boston: David H. Ela, Printer, 1845. 104 p.
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Clarke, Lewis Garrard, 1812-1897 and
Clarke, Milton, 1817?-1901
Narratives of the Sufferings of Lewis and Milton Clarke, Sons of a Soldier of the Revolution, During a Captivity of More than Twenty Years Among the Slaveholders of Kentucky, One of the So-Called Christian States of North America
Boston: Published by Bela Marsh, 1846. 144 p.
-
Clay-Clopton, Virginia, 1825-1915
A Belle of the Fifties: Memoirs of Mrs. Clay, of Alabama, Covering Social and Political Life in Washington and the South, 1853-66
New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1905, c1904. xxii, 386 p.
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Clayton, Eva
conducted by Kathryn Nasstrom
Oral History Interview with Eva Clayton, July 18, 1989. Interview C-0084. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Activist and politician Eva Clayton describes her years of service in and out of politics in Warren County, NC.
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Clement, Josephine
conducted by Kathryn Nasstrom
Oral History Interview with Josephine Clement, July 13 and August 3, 1989. Interview C-0074. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Josephine Dobbs Clement talks about her various civic roles, including her activity as a member of the League of Women Voters, the Durham City-County Charter Commission, the Board of Education, and the Board of County Commissioners. She also discusses her efforts on behalf of social justice and her views on race, gender, and environmental issues.
-
Clement, Ralph A. and
Hartwell, Charles P.
Letter from R. A. Clement and Charles P. Hartwell to Edmund T. Wilkins, February 20, 1839
1 pages, 2 page images.
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Clement, Samuel Spottford
Memoirs of Samuel Spottford Clement Relating Interesting Experiences in Days of Slavery and Freedom
Steubenville, Ohio: Herald, 1908. 67 p.
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Clement, William and
Clement, Josephine
conducted by Walter Weare and Juanita Weare
Oral History Interview with William and Josephine Clement, June 19, 1986. Interview C-0031. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Josephine and William Clement were both born and raised in the South. Both describe their family backgrounds and education. Josephine focuses on race relations in Atlanta and her father's radical politics, while William describes his participation with the Masons and his work with North Carolina Mutual.
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Clemon, U. W.
conducted by Jack Bass
Oral History Interview with U.W. Clemon, July 17, 1974. Interview A-0006. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Birmingham lawyer and politician U.W. Clemon describes his place in Birmingham politics and the city's continuing problems with race.
-
Clinker, L. C. and
Dwyer, M. J.
Don't Waste Food While Others Starve!
[United States]: United States Food Administration, [between 1914 and 1918].
-
Clinkscales, J. G. (John George), 1855-1942
On the Old Plantation: Reminiscences of His Childhood
Spartanburg, S.C.: Band & White Publishers, 1916. 142 p.
-
Clinton, William J. (Bill Clinton)
conducted by Walter DeVries and Jack Bass
Oral History Interview with William J. (Bill) Clinton, June 15, 1974. Interview A-0027. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Bill Clinton discusses his victory in an Arkansas Democratic Congressional primary and his upcoming race against the incumbent Republican Congressman.
-
Cloniger, Loy Connelly
conducted by Allen Tullos
Oral History Interview with Loy Connelly Cloniger, June 18, 1980. Interview H-0158. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Former mechanic and streetcar foreman Loy Connelly Cloniger recalls the 1919 Charlotte Streetcar Strike by the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. Though five strikers were killed, the strikers soon returned to work without the raise they demanded.
-
Coates, Albert, 1896-
The University Purpose in War Education
From University of North Carolina Magazine, Vol. 48, no. 3 (December, 1917). [Chapel Hill, N.C.]: [Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies of the University of North Carolina], 1917. [179-183] p.
-
Cochran, Salter and
Cochran, Doris
conducted by Karen Kruse Thomas
Oral History Interview with Salter and Doris Cochran, April 12, 1997. Interview R-0014. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Salter and Doris Cochran reflect on the many challenges that faced them in their efforts to desegregate medical care and public education in Weldon, North Carolina.
-
Woods, Ruth Dial
conducted by Anne Mitchell Coe and Laura Moore
Oral History Interview with Ruth Dial Woods, June 12, 1992. Interview L-0078. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Ruth Dial Woods describes growing up as a Lumbee Indian in Robeson County, North Carolina, in the 1930s and 1940s. During the 1960s, Woods participated in the civil rights and women's liberation movements. In 1985, she was appointed to the University of North Carolina Board of Governors, where she worked to promote equality for minority students.
-
Coffin, Haskell
Share in the Victory : Save for Your Country, Save for Yourself : Buy War Saving Stamps
Rusling Wood: Mural Advertising, [between 1914 and 1918].
-
Coffin, Levi, 1798-1877
Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, the Reputed President of the Underground Railroad: Being a Brief History of the Labors of a Lifetime in Behalf of the Slave, with the Stories of Numerous Fugitives, Who Gained Their Freedom through His Instrumentality, and Many Other Incidents
Cincinnati: Robert Clark & Co., 1880. viii, 3-732 p.
-
Cole, Louise
conducted by Priscilla Murphy
Oral History Interview with Louise Cole, March 16, 1995. Interview G-0157. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Louise Cole, a devout Mormon, discusses her childhood in Baltimore, Maryland, and her education in microbiology and biochemistry at Brigham Young University in the mid-1960s. In 1977, Cole settled in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, with her family. In the late 1980s, she became actively involved in Putting Children First, a group concerned with issues in school curriculum such as multiculturalism and sex education and its impact on their children.
-
Cole, Robert
conducted by Jacquelyn Hall
Oral History Interview with Robert Cole, May 10, 1981. Interview H-0311. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Robert Cole recalls a violent strike in a textile mill located near the Tennessee-North Carolina border.
-
Coleman, James P.
conducted by John Egerton
Oral History Interview with James P. Coleman, September 5, 1990. Interview A-0338. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Former attorney general and governor of Mississippi James P. Coleman discusses his role in southern politics from the 1930s through the 1960s. Coleman focuses specifically on the issue of racial segregation and its impact on Mississippi politics.
-
Coleman, William Macon, 1838-ca. 1916
Debate Speech of William M. Coleman for the Dialectic Society, June 2, 1857: "Have Men of Action Been More Beneficial to the World Than Men of Thought?"
14 pages, 16 page images.
-
Collier, Robert R. (Robert Ruffin), 1805-1870
Remarks on the Subject of the Ownership of Slaves, Delivered by R. R. Collier of Petersburg, in the Senate of Virginia, October 12, 1863
Richmond: Printed by James E. Goode, 1863. 28 p.
-
Collins, Wilkie, 1824-1889
The Stolen Mask; or The Mysterious Cash-box. A Story for a Christmas Fireside
Columbia, S.C.: Steam Power-press of F.G. DeFontaine, 1864. 31 p.
-
Collis, Septima M. (Septima Maria), 1842-1917
A Woman's War Record, 1861-1865
New York; London: G.P. Putnam's Sons; Knickerbocker Press, 1889. 78 p.
-
Colored Orphan Asylum (Oxford, N.C.)
Annual Report of the Colored Orphan Asylum December 1, 1910 to December 1, 1911
Oxford, N.C.: [The Asylum, 1912?]. 19 p.
-
Colored Orphan Asylum (Oxford, N.C.)
Annual Report of the Colored Orphan Asylum Located at Oxford, North Carolina from December 1, 1908, to December 1, 1909
Oxford, N.C.: The Asylum, 1910. 16 p.
-
Colored Orphan Asylum (Oxford, N.C.)
Annual Report of the Colored Orphan Asylum Located at Oxford, North Carolina from December 1, 1909, to December 1, 1910
Oxford, N.C.: The Asylum, 1911. 15 p.
-
Colored Orphan Asylum (Oxford, N.C.)
Annual Report of the Colored Orphan Asylum Located at Oxford, North Carolina from January 1, 1908, to December 1, 1908
Oxford, N.C.: The Asylum, 1909. 11 p.
-
Colored Orphan Asylum (Oxford, N.C.)
An Appeal for Help to the People of the State in Behalf of the Colored Orphan Children of North Carolina
[Oxford? N.C.]: The Asylum, 1890. 1 p.
-
Colored Orphan Asylum (Oxford, N.C.)
Colored Orphan Asylum of North Carolina, Oxford, N.C.
Oxford, N.C.: Public Ledger Print, 1900. 14 p.
-
Colored Orphanage of North Carolina (Oxford, N.C.),
Borders, T. K.,
Tony, E. E.,
Parham, B. W. (Benjamin Wingate), b. 1883,
Medford, J. W.,
Spaulding, C. C. (Charles Clinton), 1874-1952, and
WPTF (Radio station : Raleigh, N.C.)
My Future Depends Upon You! The Colored Orphanage of North Carolina
[Oxford, N.C.]: [The Orphanage], 1939. [8] p.
-
Colored Orphanage of North Carolina (Oxford, N.C.)
Report of Superintendent, the Colored Orphanage of North Carolina, February 1, 1937 to June 30, 1940
[Oxford, N.C.]: [Colored Orphanage of North Carolina], [1940]. 79 p.
-
Colton, Henry E.
Mountain Scenery. The Scenery of the Mountains of Western North Carolina and Northwestern South Carolina
Raleigh, N.C.:: W.L. Pomeroy. Philadelphia: Hayes & Zell, 1859. 2 p., [ix]-xii, [13]-120 p.
-
Commission on Interracial Cooperation
Southern Women and Race Coöperation. A Story of the Memphis Conference, October Sixth and Seventh, Nineteen Hundred and Twenty
S. l.: The Commission, 1921. 16 p.
-
Commission to Study Public Schools and Colleges for Colored People in North Carolina
Report and Recommendations of the Commission to Study Public Schools and Colleges for Colored People in North Carolina. Authorized by the General Assembly in Resolution No. 28, March 10, 1937, and Appointed by Governor Clyde R. Hoey
Raleigh, N.C.: [State of N.C.], [1937]. 62 p.
-
Compton, Lucius B. (Lucius Bunyan), 1875-1948
Life of Lucius B. Compton, the Mountain Evangelist, or, From the Depths of Sin to the Heights of Holiness
Cincinnati, Ohio: Office of God's Revivalist, c1903. 102 p.
-
Comrades of the Southern Cross
Constitution of the Comrades of the Southern Cross. Adopted August 28th, 1863
Macon: Printed by Burke, Boykin & Company, 1863. 24 p.
-
Cone, Bonnie E.
conducted by Lynn Haessly
Oral History Interview with Bonnie E. Cone, January 7, 1986. Interview C-0048. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Bonnie Cone describes her career as an educator in South Carolina and North Carolina during the first half of the twentieth century. After teaching at Duke University during World War II, she moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, and became one of the primary personages behind the successful establishment of a university in that city.
-
Cone, Caesar
conducted by Harry Watson
Oral History Interview with Caesar Cone, January 7, 1983. Interview C-0003. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Mill owner Caesar Cone reflects on the textile industry and what he views as the pernicious influence of government in business and society.
-
Confederate States of America
An Act Authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to Borrow Specie to be Applied to the Redemption and Reduction of the Currency
[Richmond?: s. n., 1865?]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America
An Act Relative to Prisoners of War
[Montgomery?: s.n., 1861]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America
Acts and Resolutions of the First Session of the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States, Held at Montgomery, Ala.
Richmond: Enquirer Book and Job Press by Tyler, Wise, Allegre & Smith, 1861. 35-159 p.
-
Confederate States of America
Acts and Resolutions of the Second Session of the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States: Held at Montgomery, Ala.
Richmond: Enquirer Book and Job Press by Tyler, Wise, Allegre & Smith, 1861. 119 p.
-
Confederate States of America
A Digest of the Military and Naval Laws of the Confederate States, From the Commencement of the Provisional Congress to the End of the First Congress Under the Permanent Constitution
Columbia: Evans and Cogswell, 1864. 329 p.
-
Confederate States of America
(House of Representatives, No. 379.): An Act to Levy Additional Taxes for the Year Eighteen Hundred and Sixty-Five for the Support of the Government
[Richmond: s.n., 1865]. 8 p.
-
Confederate States of America
Laws of Congress in Regard to Taxes, Currency and Conscription, Passed February 1864.
Richmond: James E. Goode, Senate Printer, 1864. 35 p.
-
Confederate States of America
Provisional and Permanent Constitutions, of the Confederate States
Richmond: Tyler, Wise, Allegre and Smith, Printers, 1861. 32 p.
-
Confederate States of America
The Statutes at Large of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Fourth Session of the First Congress; 1863-4. Carefully Collated with the Originals at Richmond. Public Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Fourth Session of the First Congress; 1863-4. Private Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Fourth Session of the First Congress; 1863-4
Richmond: R. M. Smith, 1864. viii, 171-252, xxiii, 7 p.
-
Confederate States of America
The Statutes at Large of the Confederate States of America, Commencing with the First Session of the First Congress; 1862. Public Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the First Session of the First Congress; 1862. Private Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the First Session of the First Congress; 1862
Richmond: R.M. Smith, Printer to Congress, 1862. 70 p.
-
Confederate States of America
The Statutes at Large of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the First Session of the Second Congress; 1864. Carefully Collated with the Originals at Richmond. Public Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the First Session of the Second Congress; 1864. Private Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the First Session of the Second Congress; 1864
Richmond: R. M. Smith, 1864. viii, 253-288, xii, 13-18 p.
-
Confederate States of America
The Statutes at Large of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Second Session of the First Congress; 1862. Carefully Collated with the Originals at Richmond. Public Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Second Session of the First Congress; 1862. Private Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Second Session of the First Congress; 1862.
Richmond: R. M. Smith, 1862. vi, 57-92, ix, [5] p.
-
Confederate States of America
The Statutes at Large of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Third Session of the First Congress; 1863. Carefully Collated with the Originals at Richmond. Public Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Third Session of the First
Congress; 1863. Private Laws of the Confederate States of America, Passed at the Third Session of the First Congress; 1863
Richmond: R. M. Smith, 1863. viii, 93-170, xx, 5-11 p.
-
Confederate States of America
The Statutes at Large of the Provisional Government of the Confederate States of America, from the Institution of the Government, February 8, 1861, to its Termination, February 18, 1862, Inclusive; Arranged in Chronological Order. Together with the Constitution for the Provisional Government, and the Permanent Constitution of the Confederate States, and the Treaties Concluded by the Confederate States with Indian Tribes. Edited by James M. Matthews
Richmond: R. M. Smith, Printed to Congress, 1864. xv, 411, xlviii p.
-
Confederate States of America
Tariff of the Confederate States of America: Approved by Congress, May 21, 1861: To be of Force From and After August 31, 1861
Charleston: Steam-Power presses of Evans & Cogswell, 1861. 16 p.
-
Confederate States of America
Tax and Assessment Acts, and Amendments: The Tax Act of 24th April 1863, as Amended
[Richmond: s.n., 1864]. 44 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Adjutant and Inspector-General's Office
Circular ... [concerning the employment of free negroes and slaves in certain capacities ...]
S. l.: s. n., 1864. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Army of the Potomac
[Call for enlistment of Virginians in the Potomac Military Department]
S. l.: s. n., 1861. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Army. Dept. of North Carolina
General Orders, No. 12. Petersburg, March 7th, 1864. Before a General Court Martial, Convened at Kinston, North Carolina
Petersburg, [Va.: s.n.], 1864. 16 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Bureau of Conscription
Circular No. 1: Jan. 13, 1864
Richmond: s. n., 1864. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Bureau of Conscription
Circular No. 25: June 30, 1864
Richmond, VA.: s. n., 1864. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Bureau of Conscription
Circular No. 6: April 1, 1864
Columbia, S. C.: s. n., 1864. 19 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Bureau of Conscription
Circular No. 8: March 18, 1864
Richmond: s. n., 1864. 20 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress
Address of Congress to the People of the Confederate States: Joint Resolution in Relation to the War
[Richmond: s.n., 1864]. 8 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Conference Committee.
Report of the Conference Committee on the Exemption Bill
[Richmond?: The Congress, 1863?]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
Amendment to the Negro Soldier Bill.
[Richmond, Va.: The House, 1865]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
A Bill to be Entitled An Act to Establish a Bureau of Foreign Supplies
[Richmond: The House, 1863]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
A Bill to be Entitled an Act to Provide for Holding Elections for Representatives in the Congress of the Confederate States, in States Occupied by the Forces of the Enemy
[Richmond: The House, 1863]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
A Bill To Exempt Certain Persons from Military Duty, and To Repeal the Acts Heretofore Passed by Congress on the Same Subject
[Richmond]: [The House], [1863]. 8 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
A Bill to Regulate the Navigation of the Confederate States and to Establish Direct Trade with Foreign Nations
[Richmond, Va?: House of Representatives?, 1862?]. 4 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
House Bill, No. 242: A Bill to be Entitled an Act to Provide for Sequestrating the Property of Persons Liable to Military Service, Who Have Departed, or Shall Depart, from the Confederate States Without Permission
[Richmond: The House, 1864]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
House Bill, No. 267: Secret: A Bill to Suspend the Privilege of Writ of Habeas Corpus, in Certain Cases, for a Limited Time
[Richmond: The House, 1864]. 6 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
House Bill, No. 3: A Bill to Prohibit Dealing in the Paper Currency of the Enemy
[Richmond: The House, 1863]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
House Bill, No. 93: A Bill to be Entitled An Act for the Organization of the Bureau of Conscription, and the Appointment of Officers in Said Bureau
[Richmond: The House, 1864]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
House Bill: A Bill to be Entitled An Act to Provide for Wounded and Disabled Officers and Soldiers an Asylum to be Called "The Veteran Soldiers Home"
[Richmond: The House, 1863]. 4 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
House, No. 21: Joint Resolutions Expressing Opinion of Congress in Relation to the Conduct of Certain Citizens of Louisiana Within the Lines, and in the Presence of the Enemy
[Richmond: The House, 1863]. 2 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
Mr. Foster's Amendment to Bill to Fund the Currency
[Richmond: The House, 1863]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives
Resolutions Endorsing the Recent Proclamation and Order of the President on the Subject of Retaliation
[Richmond: The House, 1863]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives. Committee on Military Affairs.
A Bill To Be Entitled an Act To Amend the Existing Acts for the Exemption of Persons from Military Service
[Richmond: The House, 1862]. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. House of Representatives. Select Committee on Increase of Military Force
Mr. Rogers' Minority Report
[Richmond, Va.]: The House, [1865]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Joint Select Committee to Investigate the Condition and Treatment of Prisoners of War
Report of the Joint Select Committee Appointed to Investigate the Condition and Treatment of Prisoners of War
[Richmond: The Congress], 1865. 17 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate
A Bill to be Entitled "An Act to Provide for the Further Issue of Treasury Notes, and for Other Purposes." [Secret] [Senate Bill no. 11.]
[Richmond: The Senate, 1863]. 7 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate
Senate Bill, No. 109: An Act to Amend an Act Entitled "An Act to Increase the Efficiency of the Army by Employing Free Negroes and Slaves in Certain Capacities," Approved February 17th, 1864
[Richmond: s.n., 1864]. 2 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate
Senate Bill, No. 119: Secret: A Bill to Suspend the Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus in Certain Cases
[Richmond: The Senate, 1864]. 8 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate
Senate Bill, No. 129: A Bill to Provide for the Employment of Free Negroes and Slaves to Work Upon Fortifications and Perform Other Labor Connected with the Defences of the Country
[Richmond: s.n., 1864]. 6 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate
Senate Bill, No. 16: Joint Resolution Defining the Position of the Confederate States, and Declaring the Determination of the Congress and the People Thereof to Prosecute the War Till Their Independence is Acknowledged
[Richmond: The Senate, 1864]. 4 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate
Senate Bill, No. 190. A Bill to Provide for Raising Two Hundred Thousand Negro Troops
[Richmond: The Senate, 1865]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate
Senate Bill, No. 51: A Bill to Provide Supplies for the Army and to Prescribe the Mode of Making Impressments
[Richmond: The Senate, 1864]. 5 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance
Amendment Proposed by the Committee on Finance, to the Bill (H.R. 229) to Provide More Effectually for the Reduction and Redemption of the Currency
[Richmond: s.n., 1865]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance
Report of the Committee on Finance on the Bill (H. R., 92) to Tax, Fund, and Limit the Currency
[Richmond: The Senate, 1864]. 12 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations
Report of the Committee on Foreign Relations, on the Resolution of the Senate Asking for the Facts in Relation to the Lawless Seizure and Capture of the Confederate Steamer Florida in the Bay of Bahia, Brazil, and What Action Should be Taken by the Government to Redress the Outrage
[Richmond: The Senate, 1864]. 9 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of State
Correspondence of the Department of State, in Relation to the British Consuls Resident in the Confederate States.
Richmond: Printed at the Sentinel Office, 1863. 55 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Additional Estimates for the Support of the Government
[Richmond: The House, 1864]. 14 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Communication from Secretary of Treasury. February 20th, 1865
[Richmond: The House, 1865]. 8 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Communication with Accompanying Copies of Circulars Issued in Respect to the Produce Loan
[Richmond: The Department, 1862]. 18 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Instructions for Collectors of Taxes
Richmond: The Department, 1863. 15 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
[Open Letter to the Banks Concerning the Act of Congress to Reduce the Currency]
Richmond: The Dept., 1864. 2 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Report of Secretary of Treasury. May 2, 1864
Richmond: The Dept., 1864. 13 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Report of the Secretary of the Treasury to Congress Submitting Information from the Various State Governments in Regard to the Value of the Property, the Revenue System, and the Amount Collected during the Last Fiscal Year in Each of the Confederate States
Richmond: The Dept., 1861. 7 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Report of the Secretary of the Treasury. December 7th, 1863
Richmond: The Dept., 1863. 29 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Report of the Secretary of the Treasury. January 10, 1863
Richmond: The Dept., 1863. 78 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Report of the Secretary of the Treasury. Nov. 7, 1864
Richmond: The Dept., 1864. 56 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Dept. of the Treasury
Special Report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the Subject of the Finances
Richmond: The Dept., 1865. 4 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Post-Office Dept
Instructions to Post Masters
Richmond, Va.: Printed by Ritchie & Dunnavant, 1861. 23 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Produce Loan Office
Report on the Condition of Government Cotton, Contiguous to the Mississippi and its Tributaries
[Richmond: The House, 1864]. 7 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Surgeon-General's Office
Circular No. 17
[Richmond: Surgeon General's Office, 1864]. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Surgeon-General's Office
General Directions for Collecting and Drying Medicinal Substances of the Vegetable Kingdom: List and Description of Indigenous Plants, etc., Their Medicinal Properties, Forms of Administration, and Doses
[Richmond, Va.: Surgeon General's Office, 1862]. 22 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Surgeon-General's Office
Guide for Inspection of Hospitals and for Inspector's Report
[Richmond?: s.n., between 1861 and 1865]. 4 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Surgeon-General's Office
[Letter Regarding Medical Property]
Richmond: Surgeon General's Office, 1864. 1 p.
-
Confederate States of America. Surgeon-General's Office
Standard Supply Table of the Indigenous Remedies for Field Service and the Sick in General Hospitals
[Richmond?]: s.n., 1863. 5 p.
-
Confederate States of America. War Dept
Communication from Secretary of War. Feb. 18th, 1865
Richmond, Va.: [The House], 1865. 2 p.
-
Confederate States of America. War Dept
Communication from Secretary of War: November 28, 1864
[Richmond, Va.: The House, 1864]. 4 p.
-
Confederate States of America. War Dept
Communication from the Secretary of War. February 27, 1863
[Richmond, Va.: s. n., 1863]. 7 p.
-
Confederate States of America. War Dept
Communication from the Secretary of War. February 4th, 1863
[Richmond, Va.: s. n., 1863]. 6 p.
-
Confederate States of America. War Dept
[Communication from the Secretary of War. Jan. 23, 1864]
Richmond, Va.: [s. n.], 1864. 7 p.
-
Confederate States of America. War Dept
Communication of Secretary of War. Feb. 22, 1865
Richmond, Va.: [s. n.], 1865. 3 p.
-
Confederate States of America. War Dept
Regulations for the Medical Department of the C.S. Army
Richmond: Ritchie & Dunnavant, Printers, 1862. 58 p.
-
Conference of Teachers and Friends of Education (1861: Raleigh, N. C.) and
Wiley, Calvin Henderson, 1819-1887
Address to the People of North Carolina
[S. l.: s. n., between 1861 and 1865]. 15 p.
-
Connor, Henry G. (Henry Groves), 1852-1924
The Convention of 1835
Raleigh: Edwards & Broughton Printing Company, 1908. 24 p.
-
Connor, James (Jim)
conducted by Charles Thompson
Oral History Interview with James (Jim) Connor, December 19, 1999. Interview K-0818. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Hog farmer James Connor describes the impact of Hurricane Floyd and the details of his business, and emphasizes his concern for the environment.
-
Connor, R. D. W. (Robert Digges Wimberly), 1878-1950 and
Poe, Clarence Hamilton, 1881-
The Life and Speeches of Charles Brantley Aycock
Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1912. xxiii, 369, [1] p.
-
edited by R. D. W. Connor
A Manual of North Carolina Issued by the North Carolina Historical Commission for the Use of the Members of the General Assembly Session 1913
Raleigh: E. M. Uzzell & Co., State Printer, 1913. 1053 p.
-
edited by R. D. W. Connor
The Woman's Association for the Betterment of Public School Houses in North Carolina
Raleigh, [N.C.]: Office of the State Supt. of Public Instruction, [1906]. 60 p.
-
Convention of Teachers of the Confederate States (1863: Columbia, S.C.)
Proceedings of the Convention of Teachers of the Confederate States, Assembled at Columbia, South Carolina, April 28th, 1863
Macon, Ga.: Burke, Boykin, 1863. 19 p.
-
Convention of the People of the State of Alabama (1861: Montgomery)
Ordinances and Constitution of the State of Alabama: With the Constitution of the Provisional Government and of the Confederate States of America
Montgomery: Barrett, Wimbish & Co., Steam Printers and Binders, 1861. 152 p.
-
Conway, Coleman Berkley, b. 1893
History 119th Infantry, 60th Brigade, 30th Division, U.S.A. Operations in Belgium and France, 1917-1919
[Wilmington, N.C.]: Wilmington Chamber of Commerce, [1920]. 140 p.
-
Seeman, Ernest
conducted by Mimi Conway
Oral History Interview with Ernest Seeman, February 13, 1976. Interview B-0012. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Ernest Seeman offers a critical assessment of life in Durham, North Carolina, during the late nineteenth century. Seeman spent his early career as a printer, first as his father's apprentice and later as sole proprietor of the Seeman Printery, and he discusses interactions between his family and the Duke family. In addition, Seeman explains his increasing radicalization as head of the Duke Press (1925 to 1934) and briefly discusses his decision to become a writer in later years.
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Arnow, Harriette
conducted by Mimi Conway
Oral History Interview with Harriette Arnow, April, 1976. Interview G-0006. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Southern novelist Harriette Arnow discusses what it was like to grow up in Kentucky during the 1910s and 1920s. The teacher turned writer focuses especially on her family relationships, her experiences in school and in teaching, her goals as a writer, and her views on marriage and family.
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Cook, Clyde
conducted by Rosemarie Hester
Oral History Interview with Clyde Cook, July 10, 1977. Interview H-0003. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Clyde Cook describes life and work for African Americans in Badin, North Carolina. Discussing such topics as school segregation, racial hierarchies in the workplace, and the lack of job opportunities, Cook offers insight into social and economic inequalities in a Southern working community.
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Cook, Cynthia Sykes
conducted by Valerie Pawlewicz
Oral History Interview with Cynthia Sykes Cook, February 19, 1994. Interview K-0091. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Cynthia Sykes Cook recalls the closing of the White Furniture Factory in Mebane, NC.
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Cooley, Martha
conducted by Eddie McCoy
Oral History Interview with Martha Cooley, April 25, 1995. Interview Q-0019. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Martha Cooley describes her childhood in rural Granville County, NC, during the early part of the 20th century.
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Coon, Charles L. (Charles Lee), 1868-1927
The Beginnings of Public Education in North Carolina; A Documentary History, 1790-1840. Vol. I
Raleigh: Edwards & Broughton Printing Company, 1908. xlvii, 531 p.
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Coon, Charles L. (Charles Lee), 1868-1927
The Beginnings of Public Education in North Carolina; A Documentary History, 1790-1840. Vol. II
Raleigh: Edwards & Broughton Printing Company, 1908. vii, [532]-1077 p.
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Coon, Charles L. (Charles Lee), 1868-1927
North Carolina Schools and Academies 1790-1840 A Documentary History
Raleigh: Edwards & Broughton, State Printers and Binders, 1915. lii, 846 p.
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Cooper, Anna J. (Anna Julia), 1858-1964
A Voice from the South
Xenia, Ohio: The Aldine Printing House, 1892. iii, 304 p.
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Cooper, Ezekiel, 1763-1847
compiled by Geo. A. Phoebus
Beams of Light on Early Methodism in America. Chiefly Drawn from the Diary, Letters, Manuscripts, Documents, and Original Tracts of the Rev. Ezekiel Cooper
New York: Phillips and Hunt, 1887. xiv, 337 p.
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Cooper, F. G., b. 1883
Food... Don't Waste It
[United States]: U.S. Food Administration, [between 1914 and1918].
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Cooper, F. G., b. 1883
Save ... and Serve the Cause of Freedom
[United States]: U.S. Food Administration, [between 1914 and 1918].
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Cooper, F. G., b. 1883
Save a Loaf a Week : Help Win the War
[United States]: U.S. Food Administration, [between 1914 and 1918].
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Hassan, Adetola
conducted by Barbara Copeland
Oral History Interview with Adetola Hassan, December 16, 2001. Interview R-0160. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Adetola Hassan, a British citizen of Nigerian descent, was a freshman student at Duke University at the time of this interview in 2001. In the interview, she discusses her Mormon faith, focusing on tensions surrounding Mormonism in the South as well as issues related to gender and race within the Church.
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Edwards, Margaret
conducted by Barbara Copeland
Oral History Interview with Margaret Edwards, January 20, 2002. Interview R-0157. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Margaret Edwards grew up in a large, African American sharecropping family in Ayden, North Carolina during the 1950s and 1960s. She eventually settled in the Raleigh area. Following her experiences with the Baptist and Pentecostal Holiness churches, she converted to Mormonism in 1998. In this interview, she discusses her role within the Mormon Church as an African American woman; the intersections between race, gender, and religion; and the attitude of other denominations toward Mormonism.
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Copley, John M.
A Sketch of the Battle of Franklin, Tenn.; with Reminiscences of Camp Douglas
Austin, Tex.: Eugene von Boeckmann, 1893. 206 p.
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Coppin, Fanny Jackson
Reminiscences of School Life, and Hints on Teaching
Philadelphia, Pa.: A.M.E. Book Concern, 1913. 191 p.
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Coppin, Levi Jenkins, 1848-1923
Unwritten History
Philadelphia, Pa.: A. M. E. Book Concern, c1919. 375 p.
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Cosby, Dabney, 1779-1862
Dabney Cosby's Agreement for Repairs to the Chapel, April 1847
2 pages, 2 page images.
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Cosby, Dabney, 1779-1862
Letter from Dabney Cosby to Collier & Waitt and David L. Swain, February 25, 1845
2 pages, 3 page images.
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Cosby, Dabney, 1779-1862
Letter from Dabney Cosby to David L. Swain, May 11, 1846
1 pages, 2 page images.
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Cotten, Sallie Southall
History of the North Carolina Federation of Women's Clubs 1901-1925
Raleigh: Edwards & Broughton, 1925. [3], 214 p.
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Couch, Thurman
conducted by Bob Gilgor
Oral History Interview with Thurman Couch, February 12, 2001. Interview K-0537. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Thurman Couch describes social, cultural, and economic splintering in African American networks in Chapel Hill following integration.
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Coughlin, John A.
Go Over the Top with U.S. Marines
[United States]: [ U.S. Marines?], [between 1914 and 1918].
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Graham, Terry
conducted by Amanda Covington
Oral History Interview with Terry Graham, March 22, 1999. Interview K-0434. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Terry Graham, Mooresville, NC, resident and taxi service operator, describes his changing town and its relationship to Charlotte. He also discusses the desegregation of the local schools.
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Covington, Edmund DeBerry, 1823-1845
Excerpts from the Diary of Edmund D. Covington, September 25 and October 3, 1843
3 pages, 3 page images.
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Covington, Edmund DeBerry, 1823-1845
"What Is Life?" Poem by Edmund D. Covington, March 1844
2 pages, 2 page images.
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Coward, Clyda and
Coward, Debra
conducted by Leda Hartman
Oral History Interview with Clyda Coward and Debra Coward, May 30, 2001. Interview K-0833. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Clyda Coward, joined by her sister Debra and other family members, reflects on her childhood in rural North Carolina and the state of the small community of Tick Bite in the aftermath of Hurricane Floyd.
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Foley, Andy
conducted by Jeff Cowie
Oral History Interview with Andy Foley, May 18, 1994. Interview K-0095. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Andy K. Foley lost his job when the White Furniture Company closed, but he lost friendships and a playful work atmosphere as well. In this interview he recalls the fun he had on the job and laments the factory's closing.
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Jones, Ivey C.
conducted by Jeff Cowie
Oral History Interview with Ivey C. Jones, January 18, 1994. Interview K-0101. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Ivey C. Jones, who spent sixteen years working at the White Furniture Factory in Mebane, NC, describes the effects of the plant's takeover and closing.
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Burnett, Tracy L. H.
conducted by Jeff Cowie
Oral History Interview with Tracy L. H. Burnett, November 15, 1994. Interview K-0088. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Tracy L. H. Burnett finds financial success after the closing of the White Furniture Company.
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Page, Thomas Nelson, 1853-1922
illustrated by Genevieve Cowles and Maude Cowles
Social Life in Old Virginia before the War
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1897. viii, 109 p.
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Cowper, R. Lynden
Poem: "Confederate America"
Raleigh: Book and Job Office Steam Power Press Print, 1864. 16 p.
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edited by Mary L. Cox and Susan H. Cox
Narrative of Dimmock Charlton, a British Subject, Taken from the Brig "Peacock" by the U.S. Sloop "Hornet," Enslaved while a Prisoner of War, and Retained Forty-Five Years in Bondage
Philadelphia: The Editors, 1859. 15 p.
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Craddock, Charles Egbert, 1850-1922
In the Tennessee Mountains
Boston; New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1885, c1884. 322 p.
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Craddock, Charles Egbert, 1850-1922
The Prophet of the Great Smoky Mountains
Boston; New York: Houghton Mifflin Company; Cambridge: The Riverside Press, [1885]. 308 p.
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Craft, William
Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom; or, the Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery
London: William Tweedie, 1860. iv, 111 p.
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Craik, Dinah Maria Mulock, 1826-1887
Mistress and Maid. A Household Story
Richmond: West & Johnston, 1864. 121 p.
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Crawford, Sam
conducted by Judith Wheeler
Oral History Interview with Sam Crawford, October 26, 1985. Interview K-0006. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Sam Crawford describes the formation and activities of the Cane Creek Conservation Authority in their battle against the Orange Water and Sewer Authority's effort to build a reservoir on Cane Creek in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. He focuses on the grassroots nature of the CCCA's actions and offers commentary about what he views as the exploitative nature of land development.
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Crews, Willie Mae Lee
conducted by Kimberly Hill
Oral History Interview with Willie Mae Lee Crews, June 16, 2005. Interview U-0020. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Willie Mae Crews, the daughter of a sharecropper, was a teacher at Hayes High School, an African American school in Birmingham, Alabama, during the 1960s and 1970s. Crews describes Hayes as an excellent segregated school that did not benefit from the desegregation that began during the 1970-1971 school year.
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Crisp
Motherless, Fatherless, Starving : How Much to Save These Little Lives? : War Fund Week : One Hundred Million Dollars : May 20th-27th
[United States]: [Red Cross], [between 1914 and 1918].
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Cromwell, John W. (John Wesley), b. 1846
The First Negro Churches in the District of Columbia
From The Journal of Negro History 7, no. 1 (January 1922), 64-107. Lancaster, Pa.; Washington D. C.: The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Inc., 1922. 64-107 p.
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Crooks, E. W. (Elizabeth Willets)
Life of Rev. A. Crooks, A. M.
Syracuse, N.Y.: Published by D. S. Kinney, Wesleyan Methodist Publishing House, 1875. iv, 8-312 p.
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Crumly, William W.
The Soldier's Bible
[Raleigh, N. C.: s. n., between 1861 and 1865]. 16 p.
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Crumpler, Thomas N.
Speech of T. N. Crumpler, of Ashe, on Federal Relations, Delivered in the House of Commons, Jan. 10, 1861
Raleigh [N.C.]: Printed at the Office of the Raleigh Register, 1861. 16 p.
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Crumpton, H. J. (Hezekiah Jones), b. 1828 and
Crumpton, Washington Bryan, 1842-1926
The Adventures of Two Alabama Boys
Montgomery, Ala.: Paragon Press, 1912. 238 p.
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Cugoano, Ottobah
Narrative of the Enslavement of Ottobah Cugoano, a Native of Africa; Published by Himself in the Year 1787. In "The Negro's Memorial; or, Abolitionist's Catechism; by an Abolitionist" (pp. 120-127), by [Fisher, Thomas] 1781?-1836
London: Printed for the Author and Sold by Hatchard and Co., 1825. 8 p.
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Culp, William
conducted by Pamela Grundy
Oral History Interview with William Culp, February 19, 1999. Interview K-0277. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
A white teacher recalls a harmonious racial atmosphere at West Charlotte High School during his short stint there in the 1970s.
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Curry, J. L. M. (Jabez Lamar Monroe), 1825-1903
The South in the Olden Time
Harrisburg, Pa.: Harrisburg Publishing Company, 1901. 16 p.
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Curry, James, b. 1815?
Narrative of James Curry, A Fugitive Slave
The Liberator, 10 January 1840: 1 p.
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North Carolina Emergency Relief Administration
edited by J. S. Kirk, Walter A. Cutter, and Thomas W. Morse
Emergency Relief in North Carolina. A Record of the Development and the Activities of the North Carolina Emergency Relief Administration, 1932-1935. North Carolina Emergency Relief Commission, State Administrator, Mrs. Thomas O'Berry. Edited by J.S. Kirk, Walter A. Cutter [and] Thomas W. Morse
[Raleigh]: [Edwards & Broughton], 1936. 544 p.