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Title
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Thereasea Delerine Elder oral history interview 2, 2001 May 9
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Interviewee
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Elder, Thereasea D. Clark (Thereasea Delerine Clark), 1927-
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Interviewer
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Desmarais, Melinda
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Place of Publication
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Charlotte, North Carolina
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Publisher
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J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
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Date of Interview
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2001-05-09
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Physical Description
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1 audio file (2:03:14) : digital, MP3 + 1 transcript (40 pages : PDF)
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Object Type
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Audio
text
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Genre
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spoken word
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Language
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eng
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Interviewee Biography
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Thereasea Elder was a 73-year-old woman at the time of interview, which took place in her home in Charlotte, North Carolina. She was born in Charlotte on September 27, 1927. She was educated at Johnson C. Smith University, Lincoln Hospital (Durham, North Carolina) School of Nursing, Livingstone College, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; and was employed as a nurse.
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Abstract
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Thereasea Elder recounts her and her family's experiences living in Charlotte throughout the twentieth century, as well as her forty-five years as a nurse. Growing up in a segregated Charlotte, she describes life in the close-knit African American community and details the central role of the church and the focus on education within the community. Ms. Elder's medical career began at the white only Charlotte Memorial Hospital, and after earning her nursing degree she went to work at Good Samaritan Hospital, Charlotte's only medical facility for African Americans. She explains the disparities between the two and recounts the difficulties Good Samaritan's staff faced due to the scarcity of resources. Joining the Mecklenburg County Health Department as a public health nurse in 1962, Ms. Elder was part of the pilot program in the 1960s to integrate Charlotte's community health program. This led to her experiences working in the Paw Creek area, an economically disadvantaged white community. Describing the region as 'Klan country', she recounts the racism she faced from residents and how ultimately she and her fellow nurses were able to make the program a success, leading to the full integration of the health department. Ms. Elder discusses the integration of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system from the perspective of a parent whose two sons were bused to a formerly all-white school. She discusses her views on the limited success of integration and the current state of race relations in Charlotte, with particular attention to the role housing policy could have played in producing a more fully integrated Charlotte with improved health and educational outcomes for disadvantaged Charlotteans of all races.
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Digital Object Notes
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MP3 access copy created on ingest from WAV optimized production master file. Interview originally recorded on two minidiscs and digitized using a Digidesign 003 rack.
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Subjects--Names
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Elder, Thereasea D. Clark (Thereasea Delerine Clark), 1927-
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Subjects--Organizations
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Mecklenburg County (N.C.). Health Department
Good Samaritan Hospital (Charlotte, N.C.)
Charlotte Memorial Hospital (Charlotte, N.C.)
Ku Klux Klan (1915- )
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Subjects--Topics
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Public health nurses
Nurses
African American nurses
Public health nursing
Health and race
Discrimination in medical care
Household employees
Housing
Race relations
Civil rights movements
Segregation
School integration
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Subjects--Geographic
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North Carolina--Charlotte
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Subjects--Genre
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Interviews
Oral histories
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Coverage--Dates
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1930-2000
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Digital Collection Title
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Civil rights and desegregation in Charlotte
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Digital Project Title
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Living Charlotte : the postwar development of a New South city
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Related Materials Note
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Thereasea D. Elder papers, circa 1930-2014. J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections, University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
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Rights
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The materials included on this web site are freely available for private study, scholarship or non-commercial research under the fair use provisions of the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, United States Code). Any use beyond the provisions of fair use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly publication, broadcast, redistribution or mounting on another web site always require prior written permission and may also be subject to additional restrictions and fees. UNC Charlotte does not hold literary rights to all materials in its collections and the researcher is responsible for securing those rights when needed. Copyright information for specific collections is available upon request.
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Grant Information
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Digitization made possible by funding from the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by the State Library of North Carolina, a division of the Department of Cultural Resources.
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Internet Media Type
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audio/mpeg
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Related Interviews
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Thereasea Delerine Elder oral history interview 1, 1993 June 25, J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections and University Archives, University of North Carolina at Charlotte (https://goldmine.uncc.edu/islandora/object/uncc%3A332); Thereasea Delerine Elder oral history interview 3, 2004 March 7, J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections and University Archives, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Thereasea Delerine Elder oral history interview 4, 2004 March 19, J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections and University Archives, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
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Related Materials
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Thereasea D. Elder papers, circa 1930-2014, J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections and University Archives, University of North Carolina at Charlotte (https://findingaids.uncc.edu/repositories/4/resources/589)
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Identifier
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OH-EL0055
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Handle URL
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13093/uncc:69