Browse Items (23 total)
- Tags: Civil Rights Movement
Oviedo Citizens in Action
Asa Philip Randolph
Tags: activist; Asa Philip Randolph; Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; BSCP; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; Cookman Institute; Crescent City; Freedom Budget; Great March on Washington; Jacksonville; labor; labor movement; labor union; March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom; March on Washington Movement; MOWM; Randolph Freedom Budget; socialism; socialist
RICHES Podcast Documentaries, Episode 45: An Interview with Joy Wallace Dickinson, Part 1
Tags: African American; Amtrak; Central Boulevard; cherry; Cherry Plaza; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; desegregation; Dickinson, Joy Wallace; Dickson & Ives Building; Dickson & Ives Company; Disney, Walt; Disney, Walter "Walt" Elias; documentary; Downtown Orlando; Eola Plaza; Eola Plaza Hotel; Florida Flashback; Florida State University; FSU; high school; HOTEL; Howard Junior High School; integration; Johnson, Lyndon Baines; journalism; journalist; Kennedy, John Fitzgerald; Lake Eola; Lake Eola Park; Lee, Harper; Lee, Nelle Harper; local history; Martínez-Fernández, Luis; newspaper; Orange Avenue; orange county; orlando; Orlando High School; Orlando: City of Dreams.; podcast; railroad; Remembering Orlando: Tales from Elvis to Disney; retail; RICHES Podcast Documentaries; school; segregation; Sligh Boulevard; South; Spanish Mediterranean Architecture; St. Augustine; The Orlando Sentinel; To Kill a Mockingbird; tourism; tourist attraction; train; train station; Walt Disney World; Yowell-Drew Company
RICHES Podcast Documentaries, Episode 36: Harry T. Moore, Part 2
Tags: African American; assassination; Barnes, Althemese; Barton, Juanita; Beiler, Rosalind J.; block voting; bomb; Brevard County; Brevard County NAACP; Brevard County National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; citrus; citrus industry; civil rights; civil rights activist; Civil Rights Movement; Clark, Jim; Dickson, Oscar; documentary; educator; equal pay; Evers, Medgar Wiley; FBI; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Florida African-American Heritage Preservation Network; Florida State Attorney's Office; Gary, Bill; Green, Ben; Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore Cultural Complex; historic preservation; homesite development committee; Jacksonville; John Gilmore Riley Research Center; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; KKK; Ku Klux Klan; labor; Lake County; law enforcement; lynching; martyr; McCall, Willis Virgil; Moore Cultural Complex, Inc.; Moore Festival; Moore, Angela; Moore, Harriette Vyda Simms; Moore, Harry Tyson; murder; museum; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; open records law; orange; orange county; orange industry; orlando; park; podcast; police; police brutality; Poole, T. H.; preservation; principal; public history; public record; race relations; racism; RICHES Podcast Documentaries; Sanford; segregation; Simms, Harriette Vyda; teacher; terrorism; terrorist; The Orlando Sentinel; UCF; University of Central Florida; voter registration; voting; voting rights; wages; white supremacy; Wolfinger, Norm; Wolfinger, Norman "Norm" Robert
RICHES Podcast Documentaries, Episode 35: Harry T. Moore, Part 1
Tags: African American; Apopka; Apopka KKK; Apopka Ku Klux Klan; assassination; bomb; Brevard County; Brevard County NAACP; Brevard County National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka; citrus; citrus industry; civil rights; civil rights activist; Civil Rights Movement; Clark, James C.; Clark, Jim C.; court; court case; Democrat; Democratic Party; documentary; educator; efore His Time: The Untold Story of Harry T. Moore, America's First Civil Rights Martyr; El-Shabazz, El-Hajj Malik; FBI; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Florida State Attorney; Green, Ben; Jacksonville; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; KKK; Ku Klux Klan; Lake County; Library of Congress; Little, Malcolm; Live Oak; LOC; lynching; martyr; McCall, Willis Virgil; Moore, Angela; Moore, Evangeline; Moore, Harriette Vyda Simms; Moore, Harry Tyson; murder; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; orange; orange county; Orange County Sheriff's Office; orange industry; podcast; principal; racism; RICHES Podcast Documentaries; Simms, Harriette Vyda; Suwannee County; teacher; terrorism; terrorist; The Orlando Sentinel; tourism; voter registration; voting; X, Malcolm
RICHES Podcast Documentaries, Episode 11: Harry T. Moore: An Interview with Dr. Jim Clark
Tags: Apopka; Apopka KKK; Apopka Ku Klux Klan; assassination; baseball; bomb; Brevard County; Brevard County NAACP; Brevard County National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Brooklyn, Earl J.; Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka; citrus; citrus industry; civil rights; civil rights activist; Civil Rights Leader Harry T. Moore and the Ku Klux Klan in Florida; Civil Rights Movement; Clark, Jim; desegregation; documentary; FBI; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Florida State Attorney; hate group; historic preservation; integration; investigative journalism; journalism; journalist; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; KKK; klansman; Ku Klux Klan; labor; laborer; Lake County; McCall, Willis V.; Moore, Harriette Vyda Simms; Moore, Harry Tyson; murder; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; newspaper; newspaper editor; newspaper publisher; open records law; orange county; Orange County Sheriff; Orange County Sheriff's Office; orlando; Orlando Magazine; podcast; Powell, Angelea; preservation; public records law; RICHES Podcast Documentaries; Robinson, Jack "Jackie" Roosevelt; Sacher, John; Sanford; segregation; sheriff; Simms, Harriette Vyda; Star, Dave; The Orlando Sentinel; tourism; tourist; UCF; UF; University of Central Florida; University of Florida; Winter Park Magazine; Wolfinger, Norman "Norm" Robert
Oral History of Algerine Miller
Tags: 13th Street; 7th Street; A. Duda & Son, Inc.; African Americans; Beiler, Rosalind J.; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; class reunion; Crooms Academy; Crooms Academy Alumni Association; Crooms Academy Alumni Exhibit: Triumph Through Adversity; Crooms Academy of Information Technology; desegregation; Duda, D. A.; executive secretary; exhibit; Five Points Operation Complex; Gibson, Colonel; Goldsboro; Goldsboro Museum; high school; Hopper Academy; ice house; integration; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; Miller, Algerine; museum; Museum of Seminole County History; Oliver, Francis; oral history; Orangeburg; pool; Sanford; Sanford Civic Center; Sanford Museum; Savannah State University; school; SCPS; segregation; Seminole County Board of Education; Seminole County Community College; Seminole County Public Schools; Seminole County Public Schools School Board; Seminole High School; Seventh Street; SSU; State of Florida; Student Museum and Center for Social Studies; Thirteenth Street; trade school; Vance, Meghan; Walker Business School; Williams
A History of Central Florida, Episode 42: Jim Crow Signs
Tags: 15th Amendment; 7-Up; A History of Central Florida; activism; African American; Amendment XV; American Civil War; Bailey, Tom; bomber; Boo-Boo's Bar; Brooks, Gwendolyn; Brooks, Gwendolyn Elizabeth; Brown v. the Board of Education of Topeka; bus; business; Campus Theater; Carver Theater; Castiglia, Francesco; Central Boulevard; Chambliss, Julian C.; City of Sanford; civil rights; Civil Rights Act of 1964; Civil Rights Movement; Civil War; Clarke, Bob; class; clinic; colored section; Constitution; constitutionality; Costello, Frank "The Prime Minister; county government; Crow, Jim; desegregation; Downtown Orlando; Durrance Elementary School; Eatonville; economic class; economics; education; equal rights; equality; Fifteenth Amendment; Ford, Chip; Fort Lauderdale; France; French; French Republic; French, Scot; gang; Georgetown; Gibson, Ella; Goldsboro; Goldwyn Avenue; government; Hannibal Square; Hazen, Kendra; imprisonment; incarceration; Indochina; integration; jail; Jim Crow; Jordan, Louis; Jordan, Lucius; Kelley, Katie; Key West; law; Lincoln, Abraham; local business; local government; Mainland Southeast Asia; mayor; McCarthy; Miami; middle class; minstrel; minstrelsy; mob; movie theater; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; OCRHC; orange county; Orange County Courthouse; Orange County Public Schools; Orange County Regional History Center; organized crime; orlando; parole; Parramore; Plessy v. Ferguson; podcast; primary election; Prime Minister of the Underworld; prison; public education; public school; race relations; racism; racist; railroad; Reconstruction; RICHES; Robert Cassanello; Rollins College; Sanford; school; segregation; Seminole State College; separate but equal; sign; slavery; social class; SSC; Stapleton, Kevin; state government; State of Florida; stereotype; Stone's; street car; Supreme Court; Taylor, Robert; The Bribe; The Prime Minister; The Tallahassee Democrat; theater; Town & Country; U.S. Constitution; U.S. Supreme Court; UCF; unconstitutional; University of Central Florida; upper class; Velásquez, Daniel; war; Washington Shores Federal Savings and Loan Association; welfare; welfare board; welfare department; Winter Park; working class; Wright, Stephen Caldwell
A History of Central Florida, Episode 42: Jim Crow Signs
Tags: 15th Amendment; 7-Up; A History of Central Florida; activism; African American; Amendment XV; American Civil War; Bailey, Tom; bomber; Boo-Boo's Bar; Brooks, Gwendolyn; Brooks, Gwendolyn Elizabeth; Brown v. the Board of Education of Topeka; bus; business; Campus Theater; Carver Theater; Castiglia, Francesco; Central Boulevard; Chambliss, Julian C.; City of Sanford; civil rights; Civil Rights Act of 1964; Civil Rights Movement; Civil War; Clarke, Bob; class; clinic; colored section; Constitution; constitutionality; Costello, Frank "The Prime Minister; county government; Crow, Jim; desegregation; Downtown Orlando; Durrance Elementary School; Eatonville; economic class; economics; education; equal rights; equality; Fifteenth Amendment; Ford, Chip; Fort Lauderdale; France; French; French Republic; French, Scot; gang; Georgetown; Gibson, Ella; Goldsboro; Goldwyn Avenue; government; Hannibal Square; Hazen, Kendra; imprisonment; incarceration; Indochina; integration; jail; Jim Crow; Jordan, Louis; Jordan, Lucius; Kelley, Katie; Key West; law; Lincoln, Abraham; local business; local government; Mainland Southeast Asia; mayor; McCarthy; Miami; middle class; minstrel; minstrelsy; mob; movie theater; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; OCRHC; orange county; Orange County Courthouse; Orange County Public Schools; Orange County Regional History Center; organized crime; orlando; parole; Parramore; Plessy v. Ferguson; podcast; primary election; Prime Minister of the Underworld; prison; public education; public school; race relations; racism; racist; railroad; Reconstruction; RICHES; Robert Cassanello; Rollins College; Sanford; school; segregation; Seminole State College; separate but equal; sign; slavery; social class; SSC; Stapleton, Kevin; state government; State of Florida; stereotype; Stone's; street car; Supreme Court; Taylor, Robert; The Bribe; The Prime Minister; The Tallahassee Democrat; theater; Town & Country; U.S. Constitution; U.S. Supreme Court; UCF; unconstitutional; University of Central Florida; upper class; Velásquez, Daniel; war; Washington Shores Federal Savings and Loan Association; welfare; welfare board; welfare department; Winter Park; working class; Wright, Stephen Caldwell
Disney’s Black Heritage Celebration, February 1998
Oral History of Debbie Simmons
Tags: 2016 Orlando nightclub shooting; activism; activists; Barbara Poma; Brian De Hubert-Arbagast; chamber of commerce; Charlene Bell; Christian Coalition; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; David Boies; Debbie Simmons; Dick Shaw; discrimination; Dorothy Coleman; Eileen Bell; Family Research Council; Gay and Lesbian Bisexual Student Union; gay marriage; GLBSU; GLBT; GLBT History Museum of Central Florida; GLBTQ+; Glenda Evans Hood; government; gun violence; Harvey Bernard Milk; homophobia; homosexuality; Human Relations Board of the City of Orlando; Human Rights Campaign; James T. “Jimmy” Brock; John Butler Booke; John Hugh "Buddy" Dyer; Joy Metropolitan Community Church; Karen Goode; Keith Morrison; Ken Kasmerski; Lake Eola Park; lesbians; LGBT; LGBT+ Center Orlando; LGBTIQ; LGBTQ; LGBTQ+; Liberty Council; Linda Welch Chapin; Maitland Civic Center; Mallory Wells; Marcy Singhouse; marriage equality; Mary Brooks; mass shootings; Metropolitan Business Association; Mike Sipoligo; National Coming Out Day; National Gay and Lesbian History Month; Obergefell v. Hodges; Orange County Regional History Center; orlando; Orlando Anti-Discrimination Committee; Orlando Regional Pride; parades; Phyllis Murphy; Prop 8; Proposition 8; Pulse massacre; Pulse nightclub; Pulse nightclub shooting; Radisson Hotel Group; Sam Singhouse; Sandy Fink; Sara Raffel; Shelbie Press Print & Copy; Stonewall Riots; Ted Olsen; terrorist attacks; The Center on Mills; The Watermark; Tom Dyer; UCF; University of Central Florida; University of Central Florida Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Student Union; Vicki Vargo; Vicky Meechum
Oral History of Patty Sheehan
Tags: 2016 Orlando nightclub shooting; Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome; activism; activists; African-American caucus; AIDS; Asian Winter New Year; Asian-American community; Audubon Park Covenant Church; Bill Stevens; Bob Brings; Brian Arbogast de Hubert-Miller; Caryn Elaine Johnson; Charles "Chase" Smith; city commissioner; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; Cleve Jones; Democratic Party; Democrats; discrimination; divorce; DNC; Edith "Edie" Windsor; Edwin DeJesus; elections; feminist movement; feminists; Florida Department of Agriculture; Gary Bailey; Gay Lesbian Bisexual Community Services; gay marriage; Gay-related Immune Deficiency; Geoffrey Cravero; GLBCS; GLBT; GLBT History Museum of Central Florida; GLBT Services; GLBTQ+; governmnet; Greenwood Cemetery; Grid; gun violence; hate crimes; HIV; homophobia; homosexuality; HRC; human immunodeficiency virus; Human Rights Campaign; immigration; It Gets Better Project; Jingle Eve; John Hugh "Buddy" Dyer; Kalynn Smith; Lake Eola; Lake Eola Bandshell; Lake Eola Fountain; Lake Eola Park; Latinx; LCN Express; lesbians; LGBT; LGBTIQ; LGBTQ; Lou Tozer; Loving - Commitment - Networking. A Women's Organization; Main Street districts; March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay and Bi Equal Rifhts and Liberation; marriage equality; mass shootings; Michael Wanzie; Michael's March; Mills 50 District; municipal government; Names Project; NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt; orlando; Orlando city commissioner; Orlando City Hall; Orlando City SC; Orlando Regional Pride; Patty Sheehan; Paul Efthemios Tsongas; pedestrian safety; public art; public service; Pulse massacre; Pulse nightclub; Pulse nightclub shooting; Pulse tributes; QLatinx; sidewalks; slow food movement; Teresa Jacobs; terrorist attacks; tyranny of the majority; UCF; United States v. Windsor; University of Central Florida; urban chickens; Walt Disney World; Westboro Baptist Church; When We Rise; Whoopie Goldberg; women's liberation movement; women's movement
Oral History of Charlie Morgan
Tags: 3rd Street; African Americans; African-American community; agriculture; apples; B. Edwards; Belinda Morgan; Bookertown; Briar Team; Buchanan; cabbage; cantaloupe; celery; Celery City; Charlie Carlson; Charlie Morgan; cherries; cherry; citrus; Civil Rights Movement; construction; Crooms Academy; Crooms High School; Downtown Sanford; farming; farms; Hawk Tower 3; Hogan; honor guards; Jeanette Morgan; Joseph Morris; Josephine Morgan; Labor Local 517; Linda McKnight Batman Oral History Project; Mary Jane McLeod; Mary Jane McLeod Bethune; Mary McLeod Bethune; Mary White Overton; Michael Brothers; Moore; Museum of Seminole County History; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Niagara Movement; octagon soaps; okra; oranges; Pamela Brown; Pamela Morgan; Pamela Morgan Brown; potbellied stoves; race relations; Sanford; Sanford Avenue; Sanford Civic Center; segregation; spirituality; Sunniland; televisions; Third Street; TV; Viet Cong; Vietnam; Vietnam War
Florida Historical Quarterly, Episode 8: Vol. 89, No. 3, Winter 2011
Tags: activism; African Americans; anti-war movement; Antonio Rafael de la Cova; Black Freedom Movement; Black Student Union; C. Farris Bryant; Cecil Farris Bryant; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; colleges; Connie Lester; Cuban Americans; Cubans; desegregation; diversity; Eric Jarvis; evolution; exiles; FHQ; Florida Historical Quarterly; Florida land boom; Florida Legislative Investigation Committee; Florida Legislature; Florida Supreme court; Gainesville; gay; gay liberation movement; GLBT; Great War; Hamilton Holt; higher education; homosexuality; homosexuals; integration; J. Wayne Reitz; Jessica Clawson; Johns Committee; Joseph Crespino; Julius Wayne Reitz; Kent State shootings; Key West; land-grant universities; land-grant university; LeRoy Collins; LGBT; Miami; peace movement; pox; private education; private university; public education; public university; race relations; red plague; Robert Cassanello; Rollins College; segregation; smallpox; Stephen C. O'Connell; Stephen Cornelius O'Connell; Stephen O'Connell; student movement; student protests; Supreme Court of Florida; Tampa; Ten Years' War; Thomas LeRoy Collins; tourism; UF; University of Florida; Variola vera; Virgil D. Hawkins; War of '68
Florida Historical Quarterly, Episode 5: Vol. 88, No. 4, Spring 2010
Tags: Army; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; Confederacy; Confederates; Connie Lester; construction; Coral Gables; David Nelson; demographics; demography; Derrick E. White; desegregation; Dixie; Dixie's Land; education; extracurricular; FDOA; FHQ; Florida Department of Agriculture; Florida Historical Quarterly; football; fortifications; forts; Gainesville; Great Depression; I Wish I Was in Dixie; integration; LeRoy Collins; Miami; military slave rentals; music; Navy; Navy Yards; Old South; Pensacola; Pensacola Navy Yard; race relations; Robert Cassanello; segregation; slavery; slaves; songs; sporting; sports; Sun Belt; Thomas Hulse; Thomas LeRoy Collins; tourism; UA; UF; UM; University of Alabama; University of Florida; University of Miami; World Fair
A History of Central Florida, Episode 40: Icons of Hate
Tags: 1st Avenue; A History of Central Florida; African American; assassination; Before His Time: The Untold Story of Harry T. Moore, America's First Civil Rights Martyr; bomb; Central Boulevard; Chamberlain, J. N.; Christmas; civil rights; civil rights activist; Civil Rights Movement; Civil War; Clarke, Bob; Confederacy; Confederate Flag; Confederate States of American; Confederate veteran; Democrat; Democratic Party; desegregation; Dixon, Thomas; Evers, Medgar Wiley; First Avenue; Flagler Street; Ford, Chip; fraternal organization; Freedom Avenue; Gibson, Ella; Greater Miami Estates; Green, Ben; Griffith, D. W.; Harry and Harriette Moore Memorial Park; Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore Cultural Complex; hate group; Hazen, Kendra; Hialeah Riding Academy; Hughes, Langston; Imperial Wizard; integration; Kelley, Katie; Kendall Road; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; KKK; Klan Circus; Klan robe; Krome Avenue; Ku Klux Klan; Ku Klux Klan of Florida, Inc.; Meacher Brothers; Miami; Mims; Moore, Harriette V.; Moore, Harry T.; murder; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Newton, Michael; OCRHC; orange county; Orange County Regional History Center; orlando; parade; podcast; poem; political rally; race relations; racism; Reconstruction; RICHES; Robert Cassanello; segregation; Simmons, William Joseph; slave; slavery; South; Southern Democrat; Spingarn Medal; St. Johns Manor; terrorism; terrorist; The Ballad of Harry Moore; The Birth of a Nation; The Invisible Empire: The Ku Klux Klan in Florida; Velásquez, Daniel; veteran; Vigilante; vigilantism; White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan; White League; white power; World War I; WWI
The Long History of the African American Civil Rights Movement in Florida
Tags: 101st Airborne Division; 14th Amendment; 15th Amendment; 99th Fighter Squadron; A Red Record; African Americans; Afro-Cubans; American Civil War; Anderson, Patrick; Asa Philip Randolph; Atlanta Exposition; Bahamians; Barton, Juanita; beach; beaches; Bethel Baptist Institutional Church; Bethune-Cookman College; Bethune, Mary McLeod; Black Cabinet; Booker Taliaferro Washington; Brevard County; Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters; Brown v. Board of Education of Topek; bus boycotts; Callovi, Andrew; Central Florida; Cepero, Laura; Chambers v. Florida; Chaney, James; Charles Kenzie Steele; Chicago, Illinois; civil disobedience; civil rights; Civil Rights Act of 1875; Civil Rights Act of 1964; Civil Rights March; Civil Rights Movement; Clara White Mission; Cocoa; Cocoa Elementary School; Confederates; Constitution; Constitutional League of Florida; Cook, Jennifer; Cookman Institute; Corbett, Joseph Francis II; Dale Mabry Field; Davis, Ed; Davis, John A.; Daytona Beach; Democratic Party; desegregation; discrimination; disfranchisement; Double V Campaign; Dwight David Eisenhower; Eartha M. M. White; Eartha Mary Magdalene White; Eatonville; educators; Eisenhower, Dwight D.; Englehardt, Tanya; equal pay; exhibits; FDR; Federal Council of Negro Affairs; Fifteenth Amendment; Florida Civil Rights Act; Florida Memorial college; Florida Photographic Collection; Florida Streetcar Segregation Law; Florida Supreme court; Florida Teachers Association; Flynn, Jacob; Fort Lauderdale; Fourteenth Amendment; Franklin D. Roosevelt; Franklin Delano Roosevelt; Franklin, William; Freedom Riders; Freedom Rides; Freedom Summer; Garvey, Marcus; Gary, Bill; Gibson v. Board of Public Instruction of Dade County; Goff, Cynthia; Goodman, Andrew; Grant, Ulysses S.; Great Depression; Greensboro Sit-in; Greensboro, North Carolina; Groveland; Groveland Four; Harry T. & Harriette V. Moore Cultural Complex, Inc.; Hawkins, Virgil D.; Holland; Houser, Barbara; Houston, Texas; Howard, Willie James; Hurston, Zora Neale; Ida Bell Wells-Barnett; Ike Eisenhower; Jacksonville; Jakes, Wilhelmina; Jim Crow South; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; KKK; Knoxville, Tennessee; Ku Klux Klan; Library of Congress; Lincoln, Abraham; Literary and Industrial Training School for Negro Girls; Little Rock 9; Little Rock Central High School; Little Rock Nine; Little Rock, Arkansas; Live Oak; Lloyd, Rustin; lynchings; Madison County; Marcus Mosiah Garvey, Jr.; Marshall, Thurgood; Mary Jane McLeod Bethune; McCall, Willis V.; McDivitt, Anne Ladyem; Miami; Michael Henry Schwerner; Mississippi Plan; Montgomery Bus Boycott; Montgomery, Alabama; Moore, Harriette V.; Moore, Harriette Vyda Simms; Moore, Harry T.; Moore, Harry Tyson; NAACP; National Afro-American League; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; National Equal Rights League; NERL; New Deal; New York; Niagara Movement; Ocoee Massacre; Ocoee Riot; Omaha, Nebraska; Orchard Villa Elementary School; Palatka; Parks, Rosa; Patterson, Carrie; Payne, Jesse; Petitt, Joshua; Plessy v. Ferguson; Progressive Voter's League; protests; Pulaski, Tennessee; race relations; race riots; racial equality; racism; Randolph, A. Philip; Reconstruction; Red Summer of 1919; Republican Party; Robert Cassanello; Rosa Louise McCauley Parks; Rosewood Massacre; Saunders, Robert; Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture; Schwerner, Michael; Scottsboro Boys; Scottsboro, Alabama; SCOTUS; segregation; Selma, Alabama; separate but equal; Shepard; sit-ins; slavery; Sociedad la Union Marti-Maceo; soldiers; South Carolina; Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases; St. Augustine; State Library and Archives of Florida; Steele, C. K.; Supreme Court; Supreme Court of the United States; Syracuse, New York; Tallahassee; Tallahassee Bus Boycott; Tampa; teachers; The Long History of the African American Civil Rights Movement in Florida; Timothy Thomas Fortune; To Secure These Rights: The Report of the President's Committee on Civil rights; Truman, Harry S.; Turnbull, Lindsey; Tuskegee University; Tuskegee, Alabama; U.S. Armed Forces; U.S. Army; U.S. Supreme Court; UF; UNIA; Union; Universal Negro Improvement Association; University of Florida; veterans; voting; voting rights; Voting Rights Act of 1965; W. E. B. Du Bois; wade-ins; Waldron, J. Milton; Washington, Booker T.; Wells, Ida B.; Wetmore, J. Douglas; white supremacy; White, Clara; William Edward Burghardt Du Bois; Williams, Alice; Willis Virgil McCall; Wolfe, Jon; Woolworth; Woolworth's; World War II; WWII
RICHES Podcast Documentaries, Episode 50: An Interview with Paul Ortiz, Part 2
Tags: 19th Amendment; African American; Bartow; Bethune-Cookman College; Bethune, Mary Jane McLeod; Birmingham, Alabama; boycott; Chicago, Illinois; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; Cole, Johnnetta Betsch; Cravero, Geoffrey; debt peonage; Detroit, Michigan; disenfranchisement; documentary; Election of 1920; emancipation; Emancipation Betrayed: The Hidden History of Black Organizing and White Violence in Florida from Reconstruction to the Bloody Election of 1920; Florida Voter Registration Movement; fraternal organization; Gainesville; Grand Court Order of Calanthe; Great Depression; Great Migration; Great War; Hurston, Zora Neale; Jacksonvile; Jacksonville; Jim Crow; Johnson, James Weldon; Knights of Pythias; Lakeland; Louie, M. M.; lynching; Masons; meeting; Memphis, Tennessee; migration; Montgomery Bus Boycott; Moore, Harriette Vyda Simms; Moore, Harry Tyson; museum; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; New York City, New York; Nineteenth Amendment; Ocoee; Ocoee Massacre; Ocoee Race Riot; oral history; orange county; Order of the Eastern Star; organizing; orlando; Ortiz, Paul; Pensacola; Pensacola Streetcar Boycott; podcast; poll tax; Randolph, A. Philip; Reconstruction; RICHES Podcast Documentaries; Robert Cassanello; Samuel Proctor Oral History Program; secret society; Simms, Harriette Vyda; St. Augustine; St. Petersburg; suffrage; Tampa; Thurmond, Howard; UF; University of Florida; voter registration; voter registration movement; voting; voting rights; West Orange County; white supremacy; women's suffrage; World War I; World War II; WWI; WWII
RICHES Podcast Documentaries, Episode 4: Gentrification and Urban Renewal: Revitalizing Central Florida’s African American Communities
Tags: African American; African-American community; African-American neighborhood; Amway Center; apartheid; Bank of America; Basie, William James "Count"; Bellows, Dan; Beyond the Theme Parks: Exploring Central Florida; Brotemarkle, Benjamin D.; Carver Shores; casino; Chambliss, Julian C.; Chapman, Oliver E.; Chase, Loring; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; Community Redevelopment Agency; CRA; Cravero, Geoffrey; crime; Crossing Division Street: An Oral History of the African-American Community in Orlando; desegregation; Dexter's; displacement; doctor; documentary; Downtown Orlando; East Winter Park; elderly; Ellington, Edward Kennedy "Duke"; ethnicity; Faribanks Avenue; federal courthouse; FHS; Fitzgerald, Ella James; Florida A&M University; Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University; Florida Frontiers; Florida Historical Society; Florida House of Representatives; Florida Legislature; gentrification; Habitat for Humanity; Hannibal Square; Hannibal Square Community Land Trust; heritage; historic preservation; historic restoration; HOTEL; I-4; integration; Interstate Highway 4; Jones High School; legislature; Lester, Connie L.; Livingston, Fairolyn; Mediterranean revival architecture; Morris Avenue; museum; Nap Ford Community School; orlando; Orlando Avenue; park; Park Avenue; Parramore; physician; podcast; preservation; property value; race; race relations; real estate; real estate bubble; real estate development; real estate industry; real estate value; revitalization; RICHES Podcast Documentaries; Richmond Heights; Rogers, James Gamble; Rollins College; school; segregation; Shady Park; South Street Casino; taxes; Thompson, Gerladine F.; tourist; U.S. 17-92; U.S. Route 17-92; urban development; urban renewal; Valencia Community College; VCC; Washington Shores; Webster Avenue; Wells, William Monroe; Wells' Built Hotel; Wells' Built Museum of African American History and Culture; West Winter Park; Winter Park; Winter Park Community Center; World War II; WWII
Florida Historical Quarterly, Episode 13: Vol. 90, No. 4, Spring 2012
Tags: A.L. Lewis; Abraham Lincoln Lewis; African Americans; Afro-American Life Insurance Company; Alexander H. Darnes; Anderson Bank; Anderson Fish and Oyster Company; attorneys; Booker T. Washington; Booker Taliaferro Washington; business class; business owners; Charles Anderson; Charlotte Anderson Lewis; Charlotte Scott Anderson; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; Cuban Americans; Cubans; culture; Daniel S. Murphree; David Jackson, Jr.; doctors; Eartha M. M. White; ethnohistory; FHQ; FHS; Florida Historical Quarterly; Florida Historical Society; folk; Jacksonville; Jillian Prescott Memorial; Jim Crow South; John Mitchell; lawyers; life insurance; Miami; Minorcans; NAACP; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Ocala; physicians; professional class; race relations; ranching; Richard D. Anderson; Robert Cassanello; Robert Lewis; Simuel Decatur McGill; St. Augustine; Tina Bucuvalas; traditions; upper class
RICHES Podcast Documentaries, Episode 58: Museum Tour
Tags: 14th Avenue; African American; Barton, Juanita; Bush Boulevard; Cassanello, Robert A.; citrus; citrus grove; citrus industry; city hall; civil rights; civil rights activist; Civil Rights Movement; Country Club Road; documentary; Downtown Vero Beach; Duryea, Mary Jane; Fourteenth Avenue; Freedom Avenue; grove; Harry T. and Harriette V. Moore Memorial Park; Heritage Center and Indian River Citrus Museum; Historic Downtown Vero Beach; I-95; Indian River Citrus Museum; Interstate Highway 95; Kenovich, Jane; Lake Mary; Lake Mary City Hall; Lake Mary Historical Museum; Mims; Moore, Harriette Vyda Simms; Moore, Harry Tyson; museum; Museum of Seminole County History; Nelson, Kim; Old Folks' Home; podcast; RICHES Podcast Documentaries; Rickey, Rebecca; Seminole County; Seminole County Historical Society; Simms, Harriette Vyda; Spingarn Medal; Vero Beach
Oral History of Bernie Blackwood
Tags: 11th Avenue; 16th Street; 1st Avenue; 25th Street; 34th Street; Alafaya Woods; Anden Group; Bay Vista Elementary School; Bayfront Center; Ben Ward, Jr.; Bernard O. Blackwood; Bernie Blackwood; Bill Martin; Blackwood Construction Corporation; Bob Beleren; Bob Ward; bussing; Central Avenue; Central Florida Research Park; Charles N. Millican; Charles Norman Millican; city managers; city planners; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; colleges; construction; demonstrations; desegregation; Division Street; Downtown St. Petersburg; Dyson Drive; educators; Eleventh Avenue; First Avenue; Florida State Road 426; Florida Technological University; Frank Wheeler; Fred Marquis; FTU; Garden Grove; Gore; Habanero's Mexican Grill; integration; Joe Gomez; John Evans; labor; labor rights; land development; Lutheran Haven; Lynn H. Andrews; Marguerite Partin; Mead Drive; Mead Manor; neighborhoods; Northeast Park; Oviedo; Oviedo Land Group; Oviedo Oaks; Oviedo Office Park; Partin Elementary School; Phil Gorey; Pinellas County; professors; protesters; protests; public employees; race relations; real estate; residential developments; riots; Ronald Reagan; Ronald Wilson Reagan; Roy Clontz; Saint Petersburg; school bus; school buses; schools; Scott Blackwood; SCPS; Seminole County Public Schools; Sixteenth Street; Southside Park; SR 426; St. Pete; St. Petersburg; strikers; strikes; subdivisions; Sue Blackwood; Suzanne A. Blackwood; teachers; The St. Petersburg Times; Tiger Station; Tom Phillips; Tuscawilla; Tuskawilla Road; Twin Rivers; UCF; unionization; unions; universities; university; University of Central Florida; Westwood Square; Whispering Oaks; Windmill Farms
Oral History of Ida Boston
Tags: Academy Place; African American; agriculture; Alexander Atkinson; Antioch Missionary Baptist Church; Baptist; barber; barbershop; Boston Alley; Boston Hill Cemetery; Boston Street; bus; bus driver; Butler Boston Project; Canterbury Retreat; carpenter; cemetery; church; citrus; City of Oviedo; civil rights; Civil Rights Movement; desegregation; Division Street; doctor; drugstore; education; equal rights; farmer; farming; First United Methodist Church of Oviedo; graveyard; grower; Henry Jackson; Ida Boston; integration; Jackson Heights Elementary School; Jackson Heights Middle School; James Bordy; Joseph Boston; Julia Boston; Lake Gem; Lindsay Lane; Little Red School House; nonviolent resistance; OCIAC; OHS; oral history; orange; Oviedo; Oviedo Citizens in Action; Oviedo Colored School; Oviedo High School; physician; plantation; Porsha Dossie; Prince Butler Atkinson; Prince Butler Boston; protest; race relations; racism; Russell W. Boston; Sanford; school; SCPS; segregation; Seminole County; Seminole County Public Schools; sit-down; sit-in