Oral history interview with Alice Thompson, 1999
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- Name
- Thompson, Alice (Interviewee)
- Michaels, Sheila, 1939-2017 (Interviewer)
- Title
- Oral history interview with Alice Thompson, 1999
- Other Titles
- Reminiscences of Alice Thompson, 1999; Oral history of Alice Thompson, 1999
- Abstract
- In this interview with Sheila Michaels, Alice Thompson discusses her family, her education, her involvement with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); and her arrest and imprisonment for her participation in protest activity. Thompson describes the picketing Woolworth's and K&B drug stores by New Orleans CORE; attempting t o desegregate Pontchartrain Beach; the Louisiana Project in the Florida parishes; voter education and registration campaigns; and literacy test preparation. She discusses desegregation efforts in McCombs, Mississippi, where CORE workers endured beatings and the intervention of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy was needed to ensure their safe passage out of the state. She also describes her arrest and trial in Poplarville, Mississippi. Thompson discusses the response to student participation in protest activity by faculty and administrative staff on the New Orleans campus of Southern University. She also recounts the impact of Hurricane Betsy on New Orleans, the role media played in capturing and publicizing the dangers protestors faced, the challenges her father faced after losing his job, his importance to the New Orleans community, and the pursuit of his education goals
- Collection Name
- Sheila Michaels civil rights organization oral history collection
- Subjects
- Civil rights movements--History--20th century.--United States; Civil rights demonstrations--Lousiana; Civil rights workers--History--20th century.--United States; African Americans--Suffrage; Imprisonment--United States; United States Race relations 20th century; Thompson, Alice; Congress of Racial Equality; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
- Format
- oral histories
- Genre
- Interviews
- Date
- 1999
- Physical Description
- 49 pages
- Note (Biographical)
- Alice M. Thompson (1939-2015), was one of eight children born to Cora Mae and John Henry Thompson of Lake Providence, Louisiana. Both parents were from farming families, and they moved to New Orleans when they were no longer able to support the family by sharecropping. The Thompsons were politically active, and registered to vote as soon as they relocated to New Orleans; they encouraged their children to do the same. Thompson's mother worked at a garment factory, where she attempted to unionize workers, and at Charity Hospital, where she became a shop steward. Her father was a laborer and stevedore who, after fifteen years of service, lost his job with Allen Brothers because he allowed his daughters to attend Louisiana State University's New Orleans campus. Thompson became involved in the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) activities in New Orleans because of her sister Jean's involvement. Alice earned her Bachelor's degree in Sociology from Southern University, New Orleans (SUNO) and was employed as a case manager for more than 30 years. She had one daughter, Alicia S. C. Thompson
- Note
- Interviewed by Sheila Michaels on June 13, 1999
- Note (Provenance)
- Sheila Michaels, Gift circa 1999-2005
- Language
- English
- Library Location
- Columbia Center for Oral History, Columbia University
Browse Location’s Digital Content - Catalog Record
- 11604558
- Also In
- Oral History Archives at Columbia
- Time-Based Media
- Time-Based Media
- Persistent URL
- https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8-8ndr-xq34
- Related URLs
- Available digital content for this interview.