Identifier |
NCOH-0004 |
Creator(s) |
Salisbury University Archives |
Acquisition |
This collection is still being added to as of Fall, 2019. |
Language(s) |
English |
Use |
Records are open for research. Copyright, including literary rights, belongs to the author(s) or their legal heirs. Permission to publish or reproduce must be obtained from the Nabb Research Center which extends beyond "fair use." |
Preferred Citation |
"Item, collection title and identifier, box # and folder # (if applicable), Edward H. Nabb Research Center for Delmarva History and Culture, Salisbury University, Salisbury, Maryland." |
Attribution |
Finding aid written by Mike Setzler, February 2020 |
Related Materials |
Wicomico County Board of Education records (1886 – 2009) Walter Thurston Photograph Collection (circa 1850 – 1970s) Lift Every Voice Project (circa 2020) |
Separated Materials |
Interview questions, release forms, and notes can be found in the archive folder of the Edward H. Nabb Reseach Center for Delmarva History and Culture. Transcriptions are also available online in PDF form via Dropbox. |
Scope and Content Note
NCOH-0004_00001: This interview was conducted by Aly Lloyd with Norman Conway on October 31, 2017. Norman Conway was an educator and administrator in Wicomico County during the period of integration in the mid-1960's. He soeaks of the transition felt by students and faculty alike of all races, the changes that have occured in the school system during and since integration, and his later work as a member and President of the Salisbury City Council and a member of the Maryland House of Delegates.
NCOH-0004_00002: This interview was conducted by Creston Long with Anthony Sarbanes on November 7, 2017. Anthony "Tony" Sarbanes was an educator and administrator in Wicomico County from 1961 until he retired in 1989. He was a teacher for four years before becoming an administrator in 1965 right before integration in 1966, and he speaks of the various challenges assiciated with that timultuous time. He also speaks of his actions that helped establish Parkside High School in Salisbury.
NCOH-0004_00003: This interview was conducted by Letia Cooper with Allen C. Brown on July 17, 2019. Allen Brown began teaching, and later administration, in 1968 right after integration had taken effect in Wicomico and Salisbury. He speaks of his experience as an administrator in the early 70's with the freshly-integrated schools and the community surrounding those schools during his career. He remained as a principal at Bennett Middle School until his retirement in 2008, where he later became a member of the Wicomico Board of Education where he remains as of 2019.
NCOH-0004_00004: This interview was conducted by Andrea Vincent with Nevette Wesley Muir on July 17, 2019. Nevette Muir was an educator and administrator in Wicomico county from 1972 until his retirement. His career ocurred all over Wicomico from Hebron to Fruitland, experiencing the aftermath of integration less than a decade prior. He speaks of his various experiences related to the many schools he taught and administered at.
NCOH-0004_00005: This interview was conducted by Tim Larimore and Harry Suber with William "Butch" Waller on July 17, 2019. Butch Waller was a renowned physical education teacher at Wicomico High School from 1966 until his retirement. He speaks of his experience as a physical education teacher in the midst of integration, his enthusiasm for sports in education regardless of race, and challenges he encountered as a coach after integration.
NCOH-0004_00006: This interview was conducted by Kristene Sieloff with Anne Suthowski on July 17, 2019. Anne Suthowski was an educator in Laurel, Delaware, from 1962 to 1995 and is now a member of the Wicomico Board of Education. She speaks of her time as a teacher during integration in the mid-1960's, with a detailed description of how that worked from her perspective, and gives a very thorough description of her movements to get elected to the Board of Education and her actions since then.
NCOH-0004_00007: This interview was conducted by Creston Long with Mary Gladys Jones on July 2, 2019. Mary Gladys Jones is a renowned community member in Fruitland, MD, and a retired educator in Wicomico country. She describes her move into education in the early 1940's and 50's and her experience as one of the first African-American teachers to be assigned to a previously all-white school in Salisbury, MD. She chronicles her experience as an educator in Wicomico county and as a founding member of the Fruitland Community Center after her retirement in 1981.
NCOH-0004_00008: This interview was conducted by Creston Long with Daniel Savoy on September 30, 2019. Daniel Savoy was an educator and administrator in Wicomico County. He describes growing up on a sharecropper farm, then moving towards his desire to become an educator. He attended Maryland State College (UMES) in the 1960's during a time of racial tension in Princess Anne, MD, and describes his experiences of being an African-American student at that time. He later became a teacher in Wicomico County, culminating in his being the vice-principal and principal of James M. Bennet High until 1997 when he retired.
Archive.org Links:
- https://archive.org/details/ncoh000400001
- https://archive.org/details/ncoh000400002
- https://archive.org/details/ncoh0004000031
- https://archive.org/details/ncoh000400004
- https://archive.org/details/ncoh000400005
- https://archive.org/details/ncoh000400007
- https://archive.org/details/ncoh000400008