Skip to main content

Interview with Morris and Wilma Simpson

View
@ Western Carolina University

Crittenden, Lorraine

Description

Morris and Wilma Simpson are interviewed by Lorraine Crittenden on May 19, 1986 as part of the Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project. Born in 1914, Mr. Simpson discusses his family members and growing up in Bryson City, North Carolina during the Great Depression. He recalls segregation of troops during his time in the Airforce in World War II. Mr. Simpson and his wife Wilma describe segregation and integration in Bryson City. They both remember church services. Mr. Simpson recalls his work as a butler and chauffer to the Enloe family at Western Carolina University in 1948. Wilma also describes working as a housekeeper at Western, the job discrimination she witnessed against African Americans, and seeing some of the first African American women living in the dormitories during the 1960s.
Type:
Text
Format:
Sound Recordings Transcripts0:56:25 (Sound Recording)20 Pages (Transcript)Application/Pdf Audio/Mp3
Contributors:
Simpson, Morris, 1914Simpson, Wilma, 1914-2008
Rights:
All rights reserved. For permissions, contact Hunter Library Special Collections, Western Carolina U, Cullowhee, NC 28723;
View Original At:

Record Contributed By

Western Carolina University

Record Harvested From

North Carolina Digital Heritage Center