African Americans; Rural Farms; Rural Communities; Families; Farming; Tobacco; Manufacturing Plants; Education; Children; Preschools; State Line Children's World Preschool; UNC Pembroke; Pembroke, North Carolina; Laurinburg, North Carolina;...
Mrs. Vevely Malloy was born in a rural area of Scotland County in 1945 and grew up in what was mostly a farming community. Her family raised cotton, tobacco, corn, and soybeans.
She has witnessed a lot of changes in the way that farming is...
Library Lines is the newsletter of the Mary Livermore Library. Its mission is to publicize library events and services. With the first issue having been published in April 1992, Library Lines is published three times annually.
Lumbee Indians; Native Americans; Religion; Lumber River; Farming; Families; Sports; Football; Natural Resources; Recycling; Boy Scouts; The Bible Belt; Churches; Pembroke, North Carolina; Robeson County (N.C.); UNC Pembroke; UNC Chapel Hill
In this interview, Paul Brooks Jr. answered some questions about his life, what he did in college, the variety of issues he faced growing up, what it was like living in Pembroke, and what living in a small town means to him.
Judy O. Bunce was born and reared in Rowland, North Carolina. She presently lives in Pembroke and is employed at UNCP in the Housing and Residence Life Area. She is married and at the time of the interview was considering adopting four little...
Environmental history; Oral history; Rural communities; Rural farming; Sharecropping; Converse; Manufacturing plants; Technology; Interpersonal relationships; Religion; Womack Army Medical Center; Robeson County (N.C.); Red Springs (N.C.)
Mr. Larry Hunt was reared on a farm in Robeson County, North Carolina. He states that, in his day, they worked on the farm, day after day, sun up to sun down. Some of their farm chores were cropping tobacco, “suckering” tobacco, picking cotton,...
Library Lines is the newsletter of the Mary Livermore Library. Its mission is to publicize library events and services. With the first issue published in April 1992, Library Lines is published three times annually.
Mr. Nash Lee Musselwhite, who has always been known as “Buddy,” is a local businessman. He was interviewed by two UNCP students: his grandson, Michael Musselwhite, and Daniel Godbey.
Mr. Musselwhite, who is seventy-one at the time of the...
James McDougald was born and raised in Maxton, North Carolina. After graduating from Maxton High School (1976), he went on an Athletic Scholarship for football to Wake Forest University where he earned a BA Degree in Education. Shortly thereafter,...
Environmental history; Oral history; Rural communities; Hunting; Fishing; Gardening; Weather; Riverboats; Barges; Pollution; Oil Spills;Vance County (N.C.); Kittrell, North Carolina; Morgan City, Louisiana
Mr. Jerry Cetadol currently resides in Kittrell, North Carolina, but he grew up in Morgan City Louisiana. Most of the interview, therefore, consists of Mr. Cetadol’s thoughts and conclusions about the environment and environmental changes in...
Tonya Elk Locklear was born and reared in Pembroke, North Carolina. She is descended from Oglala Lakota Indians through her grandfather and Lumbee Indians through her grandmother. Her grandfather Ray Elk is an Oglala Sioux, who married a Lumbee...
Library Lines is the newsletter of the Mary Livermore Library. Its mission is to publicize library events and services. With the first issue published in April 1992, Library Lines is published three times annually.
Library Lines is the newsletter of the Mary Livermore Library. Its mission is to publicize library events and services. With the first issue published in April 1992, Library Lines is published three times annually.
Library Lines is the newsletter of the Mary Livermore Library. Its mission is to publicize library events and services. With the first issue published in April 1992, Library Lines is published three times annually.
Annie Lois Locklear is a seventy-eight-year-old, Lumbee Indian who was born and reared in rural Robeson County, North Carolina.
Interviewed by her granddaughter, Anna L. Locklear, Mrs. Locklear shares her memories of having grown up and lived in...
Environmental history; Oral history; Businessmen; Entrepreneurship; Funeral homes; Funeral home directors; Morticians; Funeral costs; Auctioneering; Kairos Prison Ministry; Emmaus Walk; Religion; Christianity; Sampson County (N.C.); Clinton (N.C.)
Mr. Frank Crumpler was interviewed by his granddaughter, Alexa Rafferty. He is a successful local businessman who grew up in Sampson County, Clinton, North Carolina.
Mr. Crumpler’s father, grandfather, and other relatives were all brick masons,...
Two UNCP students, Valerie Peterson and Alexis Kondratyk, interview Mr. Howard Jones and his daughter, Casondra Locklear. Mr. Jones’s wife, Alene Jones, and Ms. Barbara Deese were also present during the interview and contribute some...
Lumbee Indians; Native Americans; American Indians; Churches; Religion; Southern Baptists; Farming; Families; Sharecropping; Tobacco; Vegetable Gardens; Education; Pembroke, North Carolina; Robeson County (N.C.); Burnt Swamp Baptist Association;...
Reverend Michael Cummings grew up in the Pembroke community, across the street from the University, in the 1950s. He attended Campbell University and became a minister while he was still in college. A Lumbee Indian, he received a Bachelor of Arts...
African Americans; Rural Farms; Rural Communities; Families; Farming; Tobacco; Manufacturing Plants; Education; Children; Preschools; State Line Children's World Preschool; UNC Pembroke; Pembroke State University; Pembroke, North Carolina;...
Mrs. Vevely Malloy was born in a rural area of Scotland County in 1945 and grew up in what was mostly a farming community. Her family raised cotton, tobacco, corn, and soybeans.
She has witnessed a lot of changes in the way that farming is...