-
J. R. Anderson & Co., et al
Circular, December 29th, 1862
S. l.: s. n., 1862. 1 p.
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Jackson, Andrew, b. 1814
Narrative and Writings of Andrew Jackson, of Kentucky; Containing an Account of His Birth, and Twenty-Six Years of His Life While a Slave; His Escape; Five Years of Freedom, Together with Anecdotes Relating to Slavery; Journal of One Year's Travels; Sketches, etc. Narrated by Himself; Written by a Friend
[Syracuse: Daily and Weekly Star Office, 1847]. vi, 7-120 p.
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Jackson, Blyden
conducted by Freddie L. Parker
Oral History Interview with Blyden Jackson, June 27, 1991. Interview L-0051. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
A native of Louisville, Kentucky, Blyden Jackson devoted his life to education. Beginning as a teacher for the WPA during the Great Depression, Jackson eventually taught at Fisk University and Southern University, before becoming the first African American professor at the University of North Carolina. In this interview, he discusses the trajectory of his academic career, paying particular attention to issues of race and education.
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Jackson, E. M. Gran
If Your Soldier's Hit
Washington, D.C.: Division of Films, Committee on Public Information, [between 1914 and 1918].
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Jackson, John Andrew
The Experience of a Slave in South Carolina
London: Passmore & Alabaster, 1862. 48 p.
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Jackson, Mattie J.
The Story of Mattie J. Jackson: Her Parentage, Experience of Eighteen Years in Slavery, Incidents During the War, Her Escape from Slavery: A True Story
Lawrence [Mass.]: Sentinel Office, 1866. 34 p.
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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.
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Jacobs, John S., 1815-1875
A True Tale of Slavery. From The Leisure Hour: A Family Journal of Instruction and Recreation, February 7, 14, 21, 28, 1861
London: Stevens and Co., 1861. 85-87, 108-110, 125-127, p.
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Jacobs, Vickie
conducted by Joyce Blackwell-Johnson
Oral History Interview with Vickie Jacobs, December 11, 1993. Interview K-0100. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Vickie Jacobs describes her career in North Carolina's furniture industry, including her time on the job and her response to the closing of the Hillsborough location of the White Furniture Company.
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Bates, Daisy
conducted by Elizabeth Jacoway
Oral History Interview with Daisy Bates, October 11, 1976. Interview G-0009. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Journalist and activist Daisy Bates recalls working for civil rights in desegregation-era Arkansas.
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Brewer, Vivion Lenon
conducted by Elizabeth Jacoway
Oral History Interview with Vivion Lenon Brewer, October 15, 1976. Interview G-0012. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
In this interview, Vivion Lenon Brewer explains how her awareness of racial disparities caused her to support school desegregation in Little Rock, Arkansas. She discusses her leadership in pushing politicians to reopen the closed public schools during the 1958-1959 Little Rock school crisis.
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James, Thomas, 1804-1891
Life of Rev. Thomas James, by Himself
Rochester, NY: Post Express, 1886. 23 p.
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Said, Omar ibn, b. 1770?
edited by J. Franklin Jameson
Autobiography of Omar ibn Said, Slave in North Carolina, 1831. Ed. John Franklin Jameson. From The American Historical Review, 30, No. 4. (July 1925), 787-795
Washington, D. C.: American Historical Association, 1925. 787-795 p.
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Jamison, M. F. (Monroe Franklin), 1848-1918
Autobiography and Work of Bishop M. F. Jamison, D.D. ("Uncle Joe") Editor, Publisher, and Church Extension Secretary; a Narration of His Whole Career from the Cradle to the Bishopric of the Colored M. E. Church in America
Nashville, TN: Published for the Author by the Publishing House of the M. E. Church, 1912. 206 p.
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Janney, Samuel M. (Samuel McPherson), 1801-1880
Memoirs of Samuel M. Janney: Late of Lincoln, Loudoun County, Va.: A Minister in the Religious Society of Friends
Philadelphia: Friends' Book Association, 1881. x, 309 p.
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Jarvis, Thomas Jordan, 1836-1915
[Letter] May 20th, 1908, Greenville, N.C. [to the men of Pitt County]
[Greenville, N.C.]: [The Author], [1908]. 1 p.
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Jarvis, Thomas Jordan, 1836-1915
Schools vs. Saloons: Governor Jarvis on the Eternal Conflict That Is Raging between the School-Room and the Bar-Room - That Is the Reason for the Election in May
Raleigh, N.C.: Edwards & Broughton Printing Co., [1908?]. [2] p.
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Jea, John, b. 1773
The Life, History, and Unparalleled Sufferings of John Jea, the African Preacher. Compiled and Written by Himself
Portsea, England: Author, [1811]. 96 p.
-
Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826
Notes on the State of Virginia
Philadelphia: Prichard and Hall, 1788. [ii], 244 p.
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Rankin, Edward L.
conducted by Jay Jenkins
Oral History Interview with Edward L. Rankin, Jr., August 20, 1987. Interview C-0044. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Edward L. Rankin served as private secretary to North Carolina Governors William Umstead (1952-1954) and Luther Hodges (1954-1961). In this interview he describes their political leadership, the Pearsall Plan, and the spectrum of political responses to the Brown v. Board of Education decision.
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Herring, William Dallas
conducted by Jay Jenkins
Oral History Interview with William Dallas Herring, February 14, 1987. Interview C-0034. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
William Dallas Herring discusses his rise to membership and tenure on the North Carolina State Board of Education and the struggle to create a community college system.
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Herring, William Dallas
conducted by Jay Jenkins
Oral History Interview with William Dallas Herring, May 16, 1987. Interview C-0035. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
William Dallas Herring, longtime chairman of the North Carolina State Board of Education, discusses the ins and outs of education in his state.
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Finlator, William W.
conducted by Jay Jenkins
Oral History Interview with William W. Finlator, April 19, 1985. Interview C-0007. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
The Reverend William W. Finlator speaks about his Christian devotion to racial and economic justice and his fear that the modern-day mingling of religion and politics is polluting both.
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Jenkins, John Wilber
North Carolina's Part in the War
In Training School Quarterly. Vol. 4, no. 1 (Apr., May, June 1917). Greenville, N. C.: East Carolina Teachers Training School, 1917. 2-6 p.
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Jennings, Paul, b. 1799
A Colored Man's Reminiscences of James Madison
Brooklyn: G.C. Beadle, 1865. 19 p.
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Jervey, Susan R. (Susan Ravenel), b. 1840 and
Ravenel, Charlotte St. J.
Two Diaries from Middle St. John's, Berkeley, South Carolina, February-May, 1865
[Pinopolis, S.C.]: St. John's Hunting Club, 1921. 56 p.
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Jessup, John
conducted by Goldie F. Wells
Oral History Interview with John Jessup, January 11, 1991. Interview M-0024. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
John Jessup discusses his employment as the principal of a North Carolina public school and as an administrator in the Winston-Salem public schools. He describes the challenges he faced as an African American as well as the changes brought about by desegregation.
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Jeter, Gloria Register
conducted by Bob Gilgor
Oral History Interview with Gloria Register Jeter, December 23, 2000. Interview K-0549. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Integration was incomplete and did little to rid schools of racism, maintains Gloria Register Jeter in this interview. The close ties between school and community that existed in segregated black Chapel Hill evaporated when black schools were absorbed into a system that Jeter believed had little interest in black students' success.
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Jeter, Henry N. (Henry Norval), 1851-1938
Pastor Henry N. Jeter's Twenty-five Years Experience with the Shiloh Baptist Church and Her History. Corner School and Mary Streets, Newport, R. I.
Providence, R. I.: Remington, 1901. 98 p.
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Jeter, Jeremiah Bell, 1802-1880
The Evils of Gaming. A Letter to a Friend in the Army
[Raleigh, N.C.: s.n., between 1861 and 1865]. 8 p.
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Jeter, Nannie F.
What We Are Doing to Conserve Food and Keep Down Waste
In Training School Quarterly. Vol. 4, no. 4 (Jan., Feb., Mar. 1918). Greenville, N. C.: East Carolina Teachers Training School, 1918. 305-308 p.
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Johnson, Charles E. (Charles Earl), 1812-1876
An Address before the Medical Society of North Carolina, at Its Second Annual Meeting, in Raleigh, May 1851, by Charles E. Johnson, M.D.
Raleigh: Seaton Gales, 1851. 32 p.
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Johnson, Charles
conducted by Goldie F. Wells and Goldie F. Wells
Oral History Interview with Charles Johnson, December 29, 1990. Interview M-0025. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Black principal Charles Johnson describes the challenges of his profession and his extra effort to maintain discipline in a post-desegregation environment.
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Johnson, Edward S.
conducted by Patricia E. Sloan
Oral History Interview with Edward S. Johnson, October 28, 1985. Interview K-0012. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Edward S. Johnson describes the emergence of a coherent grassroots opposition to the Cane Creek Reservoir project and describes how the opposition worked.
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Johnson, Edward A. (Edward Austin), 1860-1944
A School History of the Negro Race in America, from 1619 to 1890, with a Short Introduction as to the Origin of the Race; Also a Short Sketch of Liberia
Raleigh: Edwards & Broughton Printers, 1890. 194 p.
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Johnson, Guion Griffis, 1900-1989
Ante-Bellum North Carolina: A Social History
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1937. xvi, 935 p.
-
Johnson, Guion Griffis, 1900-1989
conducted by Jacquelyn Hall and Mary Frederickson
Oral History Interview with Guion Griffis Johnson, August 19, 1974. Interview G-0029-1. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Guion Griffis Johnson was among the first generation of female professional historians and a pioneer of social history. For this interview, she discusses the work she did for Dr. Howard Odum of the University of North Carolina Department of Sociology from 1923 until 1934. She also describes the research she did for projects on St. Helena's Island and on antebellum North Carolina while working toward her Ph.D. She explains how she lost her job at the University of North Carolina in 1930 but continued to work until she and her husband transferred to Baylor College in 1934.
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Johnson, Guion Griffis, 1900-1989
conducted by Mary Frederickson
Oral History Interview with Guion Griffis Johnson, July 1, 1974. Interview G-0029-4. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Southern sociologist Guion Griffis Johnson describes her work with the Georgia Conference on Social Welfare during the 1940s and her involvement with the women's movement and civil rights activism during the 1960s and 1970s in North Carolina. She discusses strategies for effecting change, the achievements of the Georgia Conference in promoting awareness of social welfare and race-related issues, and the progress of women and African Americans in their struggle for equality.
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Johnson, Guion
conducted by Mary Frederickson and Mary Frederickson
Oral History Interview with Guion Johnson, May 17, 1974. Interview G-0029-2. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Guion Griffis Johnson, a Southern sociologist who received her Ph.D. in sociology from UNC-Chapel Hill in 1927, discusses the challenges she faced as she balanced career and family as a woman. Johnson describes women's changing roles in American society, and addresses her involvement in voluntary organizations, advances in birth control and abortion, and the evolving nature of marriage, divorce, and family.
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Johnson, Guy B.
conducted by Jacquelyn Hall
Oral History Interview with Guy B. Johnson, December 16, 1974. Interview B-0006. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Dr. Guy B. Johnson was a UNC sociology professor and author. This interview focuses on his work as the first executive director of the Southern Regional Council (SRC) and as a member of the North Carolina Committee for Interracial Cooperation. Johnson discusses the role that women and church groups played in the Interracial Commission, and he describes the debate over issues such as segregation among SRC members. He also describes the conflict between SRC leaders and the Southern Conference for Human Welfare. The interview ends with Johnson's analysis of post-war economic issues and foreign politics in relation to the Southern Conference and SRC.
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Johnson, Guy B.
conducted by John Egerton
Oral History Interview with Guy B. Johnson, July 22, 1990. Interview A-0345. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Sociologist Guy B. Johnson describes his path to sociology and recalls his participation in the Southern Regional Council in the 1940s.
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Johnson, Isaac, 1844-1905
Slavery Days in Old Kentucky. A True Story of a Father Who Sold His Wife and Four Children. By One of the Children
Ogdensburg, N.Y.: Republican & Journal Print, 1901. 40 p.
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Johnson, James Weldon, 1871-1938
Illustrated by Aaron Douglas and C. B. Falls
God's Trombones. Seven Negro Sermons in Verse
New York: The Viking Press, 1927. [vii], 56 p.
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Tapia, Brenda
conducted by Jonetta Johnson
Oral History Interview with Brenda Tapia, February 2, 2001. Interview K-0476. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
The Reverend Brenda Tapia, one of the first African Americans to attend North Mecklenburg High School in Charlotte, NC, describes an alternative view of desegregation.
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Johnson, Junior
conducted by Pete Daniel
Oral History Interview with Junior Johnson, June 4, 1988. Interview C-0053. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Junior Johnson became a stock car racer during the early 1950s and participated in the exponential growth of that industry. He describes growing up in Wilkes County, North Carolina, his role in the evolution of NASCAR, and his business endeavors in poultry farming.
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Johnson, Lyman
conducted by John Egerton
Oral History Interview with Lyman Johnson, July 12, 1990. Interview A-0351. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Lyman Johnson traces his lifelong pursuit of racial equality through his father's rejection of racial hierarchies, his experiences as an educated black Navy solder, his observations of racial violence, and his efforts to get equal pay and union representation for Louisville teachers.
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Johnson, Thomas L. (Thomas Lewis), b. 1836?
Africa for Christ. Twenty-Eight Years a Slave
London: Alexander and Shepheard, 1892. 112 p.
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Johnson, Thomas L. (Thomas Lewis), b. 1836?
Twenty-Eight Years a Slave, or The Story of My Life in Three Continents
Bournemouth, Eng.: W. Mate & Sons, 1909. 266 p.
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Johnston, David E. (David Emmons), 1845-1917
The Story of a Confederate Boy in the Civil War
Portland, Or.: Glass & Prudhomme Co., c1914. xiv , 379 p.
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Johnston, Mary, 1870-1936
To Have and to Hold
Boston; New York: Houghton, Mifflin, and Co., c1900. vi, 403 p.
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Johnston, Richard Malcolm, 1822-1898
Autobiography of Col. Richard Malcolm Johnston
Washington: The Neale Company, 1900. 190 p.
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Johnstone, Abraham, d. 1797
The Address of Abraham Johnstone, a Black Man, Who Was Hanged at Woodbury, in the County of Glocester, and State of New Jersey, on Saturday the the [sic] 8th Day of July Last; to the People of Colour. To Which Is Added His Dying Confession or Declaration. Also, a Copy of a Letter to His Wife, Written the Day Previous to His Execution
Philadelphia: The Purchasers, 1797. 47 p.
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Jones, Alpheus
Letter from Alpheus Jones to Peter W. Hairston, May 9, 1838
3 pages, 4 page images.
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Jones, Alpheus
Letter from Alpheus Jones to Peter W. Hairston, October 23, 1837
3 pages, 4 page images.
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Jones, Atlas, d. 1841
Letter from Atlas Jones to Calvin Jones, [April 1803]
3 pages, 4 page images.
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Barbee, Annie Mack
conducted by Beverly Jones
Oral History Interview with Annie Mack Barbee, May 28, 1979. Interview H-0190. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Annie Mack Barbee describes her life as a worker in the segregated Liggett & Myers tobacco factories, and discusses how gender, class and race affected her life and the choices she made.
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Scott, Blanche
conducted by Beverly Jones
Oral History Interview with Blanche Scott, July 11, 1979. Interview H-0229. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Blanche Scott describes her careers as a tobacco factory worker and beautician in Durham, NC.
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Miller, Dora Scott
conducted by Beverly Jones
Oral History Interview with Dora Scott Miller, June 6, 1979. Interview H-0211. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Dora Scott Miller reflects on the changes in tobacco factory work from the perspective of an African American woman.
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Brooks, Elizabeth
conducted by Beverly Jones
Oral History Interview with Elizabeth Brooks, October 2, 1974. Interview E-0058. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Elizabeth Brooks was one of the leaders of the UNC Food Workers' Strike of 1969. As a new worker in the Lenoir Dining Hall, Brooks helped to organize the food workers with the help of Preston Dobbins and the Black Student Movement. This interview focuses on the first strike, which was sparked by the unexpected firing of one worker, low wages, and withheld back pay for overtime.
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Jones, Charles M.
conducted by John Egerton
Oral History Interview with Charles M. Jones, July 21, 1990. Interview A-0335. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Charles Jones led the First Presbyterian Church in Chapel Hill as pastor in the late 1940s. He describes his education and ministry in this interview and the controversies during his time at the church. The regional presbytery disapproved of Jones's active support of the Freedom Riders, black attendance in the church, and his failure to read the Article of Faith during services. He describes how he was expelled from the church despite the support of some UNC students and faculty. At the end of the interview, he discusses his views on why "separate but equal" failed and whether people missed an opportunity to change race relations between 1945 and 1950.
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Jones, Charles Colcock, 1804-1863
The Religious Instruction of the Negroes in the United States
Savannah: Published by Thomas Purse, 1842. 277 p.
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Jones, Charles Colcock, 1831-1893
The Siege of Savannah in December, 1864, and the Confederate Operations in Georgia and the Third Military District of South Carolina During General Sherman's March from Atlanta to the Sea
Albany, N.Y.: J. Munsell, 1874, c1875. x, 184 p.
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Jones, Edmund
Letter from Edmund Jones to his Father Edmund W. Jones, July 29, 1867
4 pages, 4 page images.
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Jones, Edmund
Letter from Edmund Jones to his father, Edmund W. Jones, August 26, 1867 (In Which He Comments on the University's Debts)
4 pages, 4 page images.
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Jones, Friday, 1810-1887
Days of Bondage. Autobiography of Friday Jones. Being a Brief Narrative of His Trials and Tribulations in Slavery
Washington, D.C.: Commercial Pub. Co., 1883. 18 p.
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Jones, Hamilton Chamberlain, 1837-1904
Debate Speech of Hamilton C. Jones, Jr., for the Dialectic Society, June 2, 1857: "Have Men of Action Been More Beneficial to the World Than Men of Thought?"
10 pages, 11 page images.
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Jones, Henry Francis
Henry Francis Jones's Journal on Student Life, September 14, 1857 — April 6, 1858
3 pages, 3 page images.
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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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Jones, James Arthur
conducted by Malinda Maynor
Oral History Interview with James Arthur Jones, November 19, 2003. Interview U-0005. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
A principal remembers integration in a majority-Native American community.
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Jones, John Cargill
Letter from John C. Jones to Thomas W. Jones, September 8, 1813
4 pages, 4 page images.
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Jones, John T., d. 1838
Letter from John T. Jones to Mary Ann Lenoir, February 11, 1836
4 pages, 4 page images.
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Jones, Johnnie
conducted by Brent Glass
Oral History Interview with Johnnie Jones, August 27, 1976. Interview H-0273. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Johnnie Jones remembers his fifty-year career at the Pomona Terra Cotta Factory in Greensboro, N.C.
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Jones, Joseph, 1833-1896
Agricultural Resources of Georgia. Address before the Cotton Planters Convention of Georgia at Macon, December 13, 1860
Augusta, Ga.: Steam Press of Chronicle and Sentinel, 1861. 13 p.
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Jones, Julia Virginia
conducted by Nancy Sara Friedman
Oral History Interview with Julia Virginia Jones, October 6, 1997. Interview J-0072. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Judge Julia Virginia Jones traces the development of her professional career, which culminated in a federal judgeship. She illuminates the impact her gender had on her growth in the legal field.
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Jones, Louise
conducted by Mary Frederickson and Mary Frederickson
Oral History Interview with Louise Rigsbee Jones, October 13, 1976. Interview H-0085-2. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Louise Jones describes life and work in Bynum, North Carolina, a cotton mill town, during the first half of the twentieth century. Jones discusses the role of religion, marriage, and family in her life and in the community. In addition, she describes working as a winder in the cotton mill, focusing on such issues as work conditions, gender, balancing work and family, relationships between workers, and workers' benefits.
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Jones, Louise Rigsbee
conducted by Mary Frederickson
Oral History Interview with Louise Rigsbee Jones, September 20, 1976. Interview H-0085-1. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Louise Riggsbee Jones describes growing up in Bynum, North Carolina—a cotton mill town—during the early twentieth century. She discusses her family and household economy, the role of religion in the community, her experiences in school, her work as a spinner in the cotton mill, and the different ways in which people received medical care in this small mill community.
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Hopkins, Eva
conducted by Lu Ann Jones
Oral History Interview with Eva Hopkins, March 5, 1980. Interview H-0167. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Eva Hopkins worked in a cotton mill from the 1930s until 1952 and recalls various aspects of millwork, union activity, social activities, and life in the mill villages.
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Dyer, George and
Dyer, Tessie
conducted by Lu Ann Jones
Oral History Interview with George and Tessie Dyer, March 5, 1980. Interview H-0161. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
George and Tessie Dyer discuss their jobs in Charlotte cotton mills and their lives outside of work. They describe their childhood and the work their parents and grandparents did. They recall the parties and social events that their friends participated in after work. The interview ends with their observations about local union activity.
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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.
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Jones, Thomas H.
Experience and Personal Narrative of Uncle Tom Jones; Who Was for Forty Years a Slave. Also the Surprising Adventures of Wild Tom, of the Island Retreat, a Fugitive Negro from South Carolina
Boston: Published by H. B. Skinner, [185-?]. 54 p.
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Jones, Thomas H.
The Experience of Rev. Thomas H. Jones, Who Was a Slave for Forty-Three Years. Written by a Friend, as Related to Him by Brother Jones
New Bedford: E. Anthony & Sons, Printers, 1885. 84 p.
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Jones, Thomas H.
The Experience of Thomas H. Jones, who was a Slave for Forty-Three Years
Boston: Printed by Bazin & Chandler, 1862. 46 p.
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Jones, William Watts
Letter from William Watts Jones to Robert Williams, March 17, 1818
1 pages, 2 page images.
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Jones, William H.,
Mallett, Edward J.,
Scales, James P.,
Iredell, Samuel Tredwell, and
Dortch, William Baskerville, 1828-1882
Petition of a Committee of Students for the Erection of a Building, September 1, 1848
2 pages, 4 page images.
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Jordan, Cornelia J. M. (Cornelia Jane Matthews), 1830-1898
Flowers of Hope and Memory: A Collection of Poems
Richmond, Va.: A. Morris, 1861. 330 p.
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Dabney, Virginius
conducted by Daniel Jordan and William H. Turpin
Oral History Interview with Virginius Dabney, July 31, 1975. Interview A-0311-2. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
Virginius Dabney traces his involvement with the school desegregation crisis in post-1954 Virginia. Dabney's political and social beliefs about integration appeared in the newspaper he edited, the Richmond Times Dispatch. This interview spans the breadth of his career from the 1920s to the 1970s.
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Joseph, John
The Life and Sufferings of John Joseph, a Native of Ashantee, in Western Africa: Who Was Stolen from His Parents at the Age of 3 Years, and Sold to Mr. Johnstone, a Cotton Planter, in New Orleans, South America
Wellington: Printed for John Joseph by J. Greedy, 1848. 8 p.
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Joyce, John, 1784 (ca.)-1808 and
Matthias, Peter, ca. 1782-1808
Confession of John Joyce, Alias Davis, Who Was Executed on Monday, the 14th of March, 1808. For the Murder of Mrs. Sarah Cross; With an Address to the Public and People of Colour. Together with the Substance of the Trial, and the Address of Chief Justice Tilghman, on His Condemnation. Confession of Peter Mathias, Alias Matthews, Who Was Executed on Monday, the 14th of March, 1808. For the Murder of Mrs. Sarah Cross; With an Address to the Public and People of Colour. Together with the Substance of the Trial, and the Address of Chief Justice Tilghman, on His Condemnation
Philadelphia: Printed for the benefit of Bethel Church, 1808. 36 p.
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Junius and
Parens
Conscription of Teachers. Exemptions
[S.l.: s.n., between 1861 and 1865]. 12 p.