Correspondence from Bernice V. Robinson, VISTA Supervisor and Chairman, to Reverend John W. Heyward, District Superintendent, regarding possible funding through the Fund for Reconciliation for a Day Care Center in Kingstree, S.C.
Correspondence from Murray B. Hudson to Marsha Montz regarding statistics on the leading causes of death in Williamsburg County for 1969 with enclosed statistical tabulation of the aforementioned information.
Memorandum from Courtney Siceloff, Equal Opportunity Specialist for the Southern Regional Office of U.S. Commission on Civil Rights to South Carolina SAC Members with attached draft of the report entitled, "A Case Study of School Desegregation: Williamsburg School District, South Carolina."
Press release statement from the United States Commission on Civil Rights regarding a report on the progress of school desegregation in Williamsburg School District.
This interview with Mrs. Arlonial DeLaine Bradford details many of her experiences growing up and raising children during integration in the south. As the niece of civil rights icon, Reverend Joseph A. DeLaine, Mrs. Bradford gives firsthand and intimate accounts of his successes and struggles throughout the school desegregation movement. Mrs. Bradford also explores her children's experience being the first to integrate Anderson Elementary in Kingstree, South Carolina. The interview was done in conjunction with the "Somebody Had To Do It" project which is designed as a multi-disciplinary study to identify, locate, interview and acknowledge African American "first children" who desegregated America's schools.
Color photograph of Arthurlee Brown McFarlin, J. Arthur Brown's sister, with her husband, Livingston McFarlin, outside of their home in Kingstree, South Carolina.