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Susan Plyler Interview 2, 21 August 1991

 Item
Identifier: L1995-13_AV0530

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: 21 August 1991

Creator

Restrictions on Access

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

Biographical Note

Susan Plyler was a textile worker in Kannapolis, N.C. and involved with the Piedmont Peace Project.

Extent

1 item(s) (video (27:31 duration))

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Abstract

Plyler discusses the work that the Piedmont Peace Project does, growing up in the mill village, the changes she has seen in Kannapolis in her lifetime, and the impact that learning the labor history of the area has had in her life.

Subject

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections Repository

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