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Black Women's Worker & Liberation Movement

 File — Box: 1

Scope and Contents note

From the Collection:

The Pontiac Oral Histories collection documents life in Pontiac’s Black community in the decades between the Great Migration and the aftermath of World War II. It consists of oral histories of 25 longtime Black Pontiac residents conducted between 1975 and 1979, and recordings of 16 conferences, lectures, and other events related to Black studies, Black genealogy, and Black politics in Michigan from 1977 to 1982. The recordings are all on audiocassettes, and are in the process of being digitized. Transcripts for some recordings are already available.

Among the interviewees were T. C. Holland, father of then Pontiac mayor Wallace Holland, and Nellie Ryder, who was the first black student to graduate from Pontiac High School and was active in the Newman Methodist Church, the first black church in Pontiac.

Dates

  • 1975 - 1979

Access and Use note

The Pontiac Oral History collection is open for research and can be accessed in the reading room of the University Archives, Kresge Library.

Extent

From the Collection: 1 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Container Summary

2 cassettes.

Repository Details

Part of the Oakland University Archives and Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Kresge Library
100 Library Drive
Rochester MI 48309 USA