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Interview with Betty "Bee Jay" Caldwell, 2016 September 08

 Item
Identifier: OHI-0222

Scope and Contents

Betty Caldwell shares a colorful recollection of memories from her childhood and adult life, focusing on her experience living in the Pottstown neighborhood of Huntersville. She describes her experience attending a Rosenwald school and the days of the Huntersville Colored School, which became Torrence-Lytle High School in 1953/54. Her words describe much of the social life in Pottstown, with memories of picnics, sports, pictures, food, and the role of the AME Zion Church. Caldwell comments about the commercial aspect of the town and a few black-owned businesses. As she continues to talk about her life, she mentions community organizing, issues of civil rights and discrimination, and discusses racial integration especially related to education and educational labor spaces. Notably, she mentions being the author of the book “Historic Pottstown Families in Stories and Pictures,” and finishes the interview with important comments about the current state of Huntersville and ongoing gentrification.

Dates

  • Creation: 2016 September 08

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

This interview is open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

Access to this interview is given for personal research use and does not imply the right to use it for other purposes, including publication. Use of our collections is subject to the provisions of current intellectual property, privacy, and libel laws. Researchers assume full responsibility for their use of these materials. For publication or other use requests, email archives@davidson.edu.

Extent

2 Digital (Sound recordings) (WAV and MP3)

1 Transcripts (Digital) (PDF)

Language

English