Hicks, Mary A.
Found in 27 Collections and/or Records:
Mary A. Hicks interview with Mary Barbour
Photocopy of a microfilmed copy of a typescript of an interview. Barbour was interviewed by Mary A. Hicks in 1937 as part of the Federal Writer's Project for the Works Progress Administration. The item includes handwritten corrections. Barbour relates the story of her family's escape at the end of the Civil War. They were "reffes who fled to Roanoke, Virginia, so thay they could [join] the Yankees."
Mary A. Hicks interview with Mattie Curtis
Mary A. Hicks interview with Milly Henry
Photocopy of a microfilmed copy of a typescript of an interview. Henry was interviewed by Mary A. Hicks in 1937 as part of the Federal Writer's Project for the Works Progress Administration. The item includes handwritten corrections. Henry was on a plantation in Mississippi but was moved to North Carolina when the Union Army approached. She was in Raleigh at the end of the Civil War and saw a Confederate soldier hanged for shooting at the Union forces and then laughing about it.
Mary A. Hicks interview with Sarah Harris
Photocopy of a microfilmed copy of a typescript of an interview. Harris was interviewed by Mary A. Hicks in 1937 as part of the Federal Writer's Project for the Works Progress Administration. The item includes handwritten corrections. Harris says that after the Civil War, she wanted to remain on the plantation because she was hungry and because she loved her "white folks." She tells how she and her mother worked hard after emancipation to buy land and build a home.
Mary A. Hicks interviews with Midge Burnett
Photocopy of a microfilmed copy of a typescript of an interview. Burnett was interviewed by Mary A. Hicks in 1937 as part of the Federal Writer's Project for the Works Progress Administration. The item includes handwritten corrections. Burnett talks about his work as a slave and also tells what the slaves did for recreation. He claims that the master only hit one slave once, and he gives an account of that occurrence.
Henry Bobbitt interview
Oral history interview with Martha Bryant Allen
Photocopy of a microfilmed copy of a typescript of an interview. Allen was interviewed by Mary A. Hicks on June 7, 1937 as part of a Federal Writer's Project assignment for the Works Progress Administration. The item includes handwritten corrections. Allen talks about her mixed-ethnic background, how hard the slave women had to work, the "carpet gitters" who pursued slave women, and the Ku Klux Klan.
Additional filters:
- Subject
- Interviews 25
- Politics, Government, and Law 21
- Civic Activism 20
- Slavery -- North Carolina 19
- Slaves -- Emancipation -- North Carolina 17
- Slaves -- North Carolina -- Interviews 17
- Freedmen -- North Carolina -- Interviews 7
- Slavery -- North Carolina -- History 7
- Material Types 5
- Oral Histories 5
- Photocopies 5
- Slaves -- Emancipation -- North Carolina -- History 5
- Civil Rights 1
- North Carolina -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 1
- Slavery -- Georgia 1
- Slaves -- Emancipation -- Georgia 1
- Slaves -- Georgia -- Interviews 1 + ∧ less