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Evelyn Clary, Russell Clary, and Bruce Clary Interview

 Item
Identifier: L1995-13_AV0308

Scope and Contents of the Collection

From the Collection:

The Uprising of '34 Collection demonstrates how communities can be impacted in contemporary ways by history and memory, decades after a series of events occur. Veterans of the events of 1934 and their descendants-black, white, mill worker, manager, union, and non-union- were interviewed about mill village life, work conditions, southern contemporaneous culture as well as the strike itself. This finding aid describes the digitized oral history-style interviews available in Georiga State University Library's Digital Collections.

Dates

  • Creation: 1987-1995

Creator

Restrictions on Access

All of the interviews are available online in GSU's Digital Collections.

Biographical Note

Russell Clary was a textile worker at the Smyre Mill in East Gastonia, N.C. Evelyn Clary is his wife. Bruce Clary is their son.

Extent

1 item(s) (video (1:00:32 duration))

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Abstract

Stoney and Helfand play newsreels from the 1934 strike for Evelyn and Russell and ask them what they remember of the events. They discuss a strict mill superintendent, Marshall Dilling, living in mill villages, and other topics.

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections Repository

Contact:
100 Decatur St., S.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
404-413-2880
404-413-2881 (Fax)