Media-Part II


 

 

Look What Andrea got! Please go to Archve Team Requests at the bottom of the page it's noted "South Week"

The image is complete with man in blackface.

 

 

 

Source" Professor Mayo's College pg 132

 

Old South Week was an event held each year by the fraternity Kappa Alpha. The male students emulated cavaliers of the antebellum period while the women dressed up in hooped skirts and dresses similar to the costumes in Gone with the Wind. They even went as far as holding mock slave auctions where fraternity pledges dressed up in black face to play the role of slaves. This event was finally moved off campus in (year) when African American students protested.

 

 

3/1/12 *Please see images uploaded in our Flikr account.

Flikr account name is clictamu

 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/77177894@N04/

 

In remix:

If possible, list where you think it might work, why you suggest it might work there, and link directly to the item you are suggesting.  

 

--http://www.archive.org/details/Plantati1950?start=239.5 (plantation system in modern life--4:20)

*This might work well at the end of Old South Week.

 

 

In popcorn:

If you are uncomfortable adding suggestions to the table below, you can list after table or copy and paste in another table or complete list/table elsewhere and link to it here.

 

White Scourge --(cotton culture--)

 

Note to Christina & Dr. Carter: I have a Word docuement that includes the images. I will email this to you both. I couldn't figure out how to link it. sorry!

 

Timestamp

Narrative

Audio

Video

Image

Map

Timeline

Context

Footnote

Permissions

 

In 1889, William L. Mayo, a rouge educator from Kentucky, established this teacher training school for the area’s white farmers and their children with the mandate that “any person, of whatever age, wealth, or previous advantages” who desired a college education could have one, “regardless of their ability to pay” (Catalog, 1908).

(Music)

 

 

(Please remove photo of Mayo at Plow from the beginning. I’m not sure if it fits)

 

Mayo portrait from flickr

Mayo Portrait

 

 

ET First Building

 

 

First Dormitory

 

Commerce, TX

(or NE TX

Region)

1899

From the beginning, as David Gold argues, “Mayo sought to make [the University] integral to the community” by providing local citizens with extensive rhetorical training (Gold 122).

 

 

 

Mayo images, building up of campus, students

 

(Music)

 

See flickr account for the following images:

ET Second Building

 

 

Admin Building

 

 

 

 

Gee Library

1899

describe celebratory elements of campus life from Memories of Old ET, from various local histories and/or draw in link to other college start ups in region

cite a relevant history or other relevant details

 

 

Like any such institutional across the Jim Crow South, however, “any person” meant “any white person.”  

As above

 

[kid holding sign (do we have permission to use this?) 

Or use the Greenville sign

Found in flikr account

 

 

 

18?? (Plessy v. Ferguson)

 

1954 (B v. B)

 And…

 

 

 

 

I did not see mysef in photos of the basketball team.

 

 

Use Basketball images, as before.

Plus the following from flikr:

Basketball Action From 1955 Locust

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

There were no faces like mine on the football field.

 

 

Use images of football team here.

Start from the oldest image and move forward through time. Use the portrait-style photos as before and add the following action shots.

You may also use this one

*Flickr Football Team 1917

 

*See in Wiki under Archive Team, 1930 football (image too large to post here)

 

Football1920 (Flickr)

 

 

 

 

 

 

*flickr football action1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I didn’t see myself in the band.

 

 

From the Wiki – look under Archive Team and use:

1940band

1940Majorette

From Flickr use:

East_Texas_Band

 

 

 

Headlines from social events

 

 

 

At social events.

 

 

Images of dances (nix the costume

dance) and add the following:

Flickr account:

Students in Action 1952

 

 

 

 

 

 

Headlines from social events in East Texas/Locust

 

 

 

In the classroom

 

 

From Wiki – look under Archive Team and use

1930class

1930class-2

1940scienceclass

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quote from Caroline Prendergast on race as “absent presence” or something from Cox on the same

 

 

Old South Week images as before

You may also add these from

Flickr:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Articles on Old South and Down South weeks from East Texan/Locust

 

 

 

 

 

Video:

The Plantation System in Southern Life

 

 

 

 

Reference White Scourge

 

 

Down South Week

 

 

Images as before

 

 

 

Articles from ET or Locust

 

 

“Eventually I found them.”

 

 

No image/Screen goes dark

 

 

 

 

 

 

“They were in old fragements of slave receipts.”

Soundtrack for a Revolution music perhaps woke up in the AM or Turn Me Around depending on desired tempo

 

See Flickr account:

Slave receipt 1841

 

 

Slave receipt 1845

 

 

Slave receipt 1865

 

 

See images that Robyn Hollis is pulling for me.

 

Fickr:

Child with plow

 

 

Image of slave

 

 

 

Torso of worker

 

 

 

 

 

Look for quote from Richard Wright here.

 

 

I found them in photos of Cane Press Workers.

 

 

Flickr:

Cane press workers

 

Workers carrying hoes

 

 

Cotton pickers dragging the sack

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

They were in records of cafeteria workers in the 1930’s.

 

 

Flickr:

Use images as before including:

 

 

African American Cafeteria Workers

 

 

Woman washing stairs

 

 Black woman feeding white child

This image is on the mac in the Clic office – I can’t find it again online. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1937, they were captured in photos of sewing room employees.

 

 

From Flickr

Sewing Room Employees