Difference between revisions of "Jamison, Mack 1969-04-10"
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− | [[Category: Needs Review ]] | + | [[Category: Needs Review ]] [[Category: SWC Interviews]] [[Category: 1960s]] [[Category: Black Lubbock]] [[Category: Lubbock, Texas]] [[Category: African American Communities]] [[Category: Great Depression]] [[Category: Migrant Labor]] [[Category: Cotton]] |
Latest revision as of 21:27, 3 July 2019
Mack Jamison recalls moving to Lubbock and the black community in the 1920s and 1930s.
General Interview Information
Interviewee Name: Mack Jamison
Additional Parties Recorded:
Date: April 10, 1969
Location: Lubbock, Texas
Interviewer: Robert Foster
Length: 1 hour, 25 minutes
Abstract
Tape 1, Side 1: Family moves to Lubbock (1918),
Decision to move,
Good pay for picking cotton,
Trip to Lubbock,
First impressions,
Cotton picking,
Coal strike,
Black section of town,
Calvin Quigley (?) first black,
Needed hands,
Anecdote about father’s arrival,
Water lines,
First school teachers,
Church meetings in home,
Teachers—Ella Iles.
Tape 1, Side 2: School buildings,
Settlement of Avenue A area,
Grocery store,
Housing,
Black churches—locations,
Public utilities,
Compress and oil-mill employed blacks,
Housing,
Bad winter (1929),
White neighbors,
Businesses on Avenue A,
Church building built,
Black population grew after 1925,
Leisure time activities,
Depression,
Jamison family’s experiences,
Early black settlers.
Range Dates: 1918-1939
Bulk Dates: 1918-1939
Access Information
Original Recording Format:
Recording Format Notes:
Transcript:
Thank you for your interest in this oral history interview. Our oral history collection is available to patrons in the Southwest Collection's Reading Room, located on the campus of Texas Tech University. For reading room hours, visit our website. Please contact Reference Staff at least one week prior to your visit to ensure the oral history you are interested in will be available. Due to copyright issues, duplications of our oral histories can only be made for family members. If an oral history transcript has been made available online, the link will be provided on this page. More information on accessing our oral histories is located here. Preferred citation style can be found here.