In this interview, Emma Harvin details her experience being among the group of students to mass integrate Edmunds High School (currently Sumter High School) of Sumter, SC in 1971. The interview was completed 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.
Y.W.C.A. of the Sumter Area memorandum to Mary A. Dow regarding the recipient being "considered as a prospective new member of the Y.W.C.A./Sumter Area Board of Directors, Nominating Committee, and/or Advisory Panel." Enclosed Nominating Committee materials.
Y.W.C.A. of the Sumter Area memorandum to Mary A. Dow regarding the recipient being "considered as a prospective new member of the Y.W.C.A./Sumter Area Board of Directors, Nominating Committee, and/or Advisory Panel."
Information from Benevolent Societies from January to June, 1970, with information on various ailments and diseases in localities including Sumter and Williamsburg, South Carolina.
The program from the 46th annual meeting of the South Carolina Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, held at Morris College Chapel and Lincoln High School in Sumter, South Carolina.
In this one-page, handwritten letter, Warren Hubert Moise corrects a statement made in a previous letter—that is, that Edwin Warren Moise (b. 1832) of Sumter, South Carolina, had been attorney general of the state. He had heard E. W. Moise referred to as "General Moise," and assumed that, since Moise was a lawyer, he had been attorney general. [Hubert was not far off: E. W. Moise (b. 1832) was elected Adjutant General of South Carolina in 1876 under Wade Hampton, hence the moniker "The General."]
In this fifteen-page, handwritten letter, Warren Hubert Moise responds to questions his nephew Edwin Warren Moise (b. 1889) had asked in previous letters, expanding on the Moise family history.