Oral history interview with Martha Cooley, April 25, 1995
An edition of Oral history interview with Martha Cooley, April 25, 1995 (2007)
interview Q-0019, Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)
By Martha Cooley
Publish Date
2007
Publisher
University Library, UNC-Chapel Hill
Language
eng
Pages
-
Description:
Martha Cooley learned how to run a household when she was just a girl; by the age of twelve, she had taken charge of her home, cooking meals and hanging tobacco leaves to help her father's farming venture in Granville County, NC. Eighty-five years old at the time of this 1995 interview, Cooley describes a childhood in the rural South before the advent of the civil rights movement, the intrusion of roads and highways, or interference from industrial growth or urban sprawl. Cooley remembers her history and that of her family, recalling her education in a one-room schoolhouse, Sunday afternoons, quiltings, and cornshuckings. She creates an image of an inward-looking, supportive community.
subjects: Interviews, African American women, African Americans, Social life and customs, Farm life, Education
People: Martha Cooley (1908?-2005)
Places: North Carolina, Granville County