Stories of Segregation in Bluefield, Virginia Oral History Collection Stories of Segregation in Bluefield, Virginia Oral History Collection, 2023 Ms.2024.076

Stories of Segregation in Bluefield, Virginia Oral History Collection, 2023 Ms.2024.076


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Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech

Special Collections and University Archives, University Libraries (0434)
560 Drillfield Drive
Newman Library, Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, Virginia 24061
Business Number: 540-231-6308
specref@vt.edu
URL: http://spec.lib.vt.edu

Kristin Nivera, COH Emergency Hire

Repository
Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech
Identification
Ms.2024.076
Title
Stories of Segregation in Bluefield, Virginia Oral History Collection 2023
Quantity
0.1 Cubic Feet
Language
The material of this collection is in English.

Administrative Information

Use Restrictions

Permission to publish material from the Bluefield Oral History Project must be obtained from Special Collections and Universtiy Archives, Virginia Tech.

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research, with the exception fo some restricted materials that are not available to the public.

Preferred Citation

Researchers wishing to cite this collection should include the following information: Stories of Segregation in Bluefield,Virginia, Ms2024-076, Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Va.

Source of Acquisition

Interivews were acquired by Special Collections and University Archives in 2023. Additional oral histories will be added to the collection as they are conducted and processed.

Processing Information

The processing, arrangement, and description of the Bluefield Oral History Project was completed in August 2024.


Biographical Note

This collection began as a research project for how segregation changes over time in Bluefield, Virginia. Bluefield was established as a railway hub that served the Appalachian coalfields of southern West Virginia. The coal produced great wealth in the region, and Bluefield was the recipient. The railroad lines that served as its economic lifeline went down the middle of the valley with high mountains on both the north and south sides. The boundary of the railroad and mountain provided the physical limitations of the town, easing the establishment of segregated neighborhoods that faced each other across the valley.

Scope and Content

This collection was donated as a research project on the personal significance of the historically segregated neighborhoods of Bluefield, West Virginia, and Bluefield, Virginia. Gregory Galford, Vonnia Davis, Micaela Appelbaum, and Jessica Taylor interviewed residents and former residents of these segregated neighborhoods to reconstruct a previously unrecorded history of how segregated space in this regional hub has changed over time.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

  • African Americans -- History
  • Local/Regional History and Appalachian South

Container List

Joseph Bundy
2023-05-04
William Connelly
2023-05-10
Tyrone Curtis
2023-06-21
Deloris French
2023-02-24
Alethia Gore
2023-02-24
Ray Hamlet
2023-02-24
Pamela and Cloyd Jeffries
2023-02-24
Harry Johnson
2023-06-21
Freddie Millner
2023-02-24
Tim Moore
2023-02-24
Cecilia Myers
2023-05-03
Anneka Perry
2023-06-06
Sarah Ponder
2023-02-24
James Robinson -- Restricted
2023-06-21
Vance Ross
2023-06-21
Sevealyn Smith
2023-05-03
Charles Thompson
2023-02-24
Angelia Whiting
2023-05-10