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Della Coates interview, March 18, 1978: transcript

Date
1978-03-18
Description

On March 18, 1978, collector Bill Hitchcock interviewed Della Coates (b. June 17th, 1919 in Birmingham, Alabama) at her home in Las Vegas, Nevada. In the interview, Della Coates discusses her time working for the telephone company. She also speaks about the changes in education and about changes throughout Las Vegas.

Text

Transcript of an interview with Gertrude Toston by Claytee D. White on July 21, 2006

Date
2006-07-21
Description

Gertrude Toston moved to Las Vegas in 1960. She worked for Western Airlines for 27 years, then earned Masters in Education.

Text

Photograph of Dr. Kenny Guinn, circa late 1990s

Date
1996 to 1999
Description

A portrait Dr. Kenny Guinn at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV). He was interim president of UNLV for one year.

Image

Photograph of Jean Fayle, (Nev.), 1935-1950

Date
1935 to 1950
Archival Collection
Description
Jean Fayle poses while her photograph is being taken. She is estimated to be 50-55 years old in this photograph.

Image

Photograph of Anna and Frederick Trapnell, (Nev.), 1910

Date
1910
Archival Collection
Description
Anna Trapnell (Fayle), age two years old, sits next to her brother, Frederick Edward Trapnell, age 3.

Image

Photograph of Fayle's tire shop, Delano (Calif.), 1940

Date
1940
Archival Collection
Description

Fayle Tire Shop in Delano, California. Leonard Fayle opened this shop only ten years before the photo was taken

Image

Photograph of two shacks on 1st Street, Las Vegas (Nev.), December 28, 1964

Date
1964-12-28
Description
Shacks numbers 630 & 632 S. 1st Street. They were both burned the following year on January 26th.

Image

Transcript of interview with Gene Segerblom by Layne Karafantis, February 7, 2009

Date
2009-02-07
Description

Interviewed by Layne Karafantis; Genevieve "Gene" Segerblom contributed in a multitude of ways to her home of more than fifty years--Boulder City, Nevada. She is a third-generation Nevadan and was born in Ruby Valley, Nevada, in 1918. Gene and her future husband Clifford moved from Reno where they both had attended the University of Nevada, Reno to Boulder City in 1940. After they came back from Panama in 1948 where Clifford had a photographing assignment, she ran a day care center and did freelance writing of articles about the Nevada landscape with her husband providing the photographs. Gene taught high school in Boulder City. She was elected city councilwoman in Boulder City in 1979. Gene served four terms in the State Assembly from 1993 to 2000. Her grandfather was a state senator and her mother was an assemblywoman. Today her son Richard "Tick" Segerblom serves in the State Assembly, so they are the only family to have had four generations serve in the Nevada legislature. She was involved in the creation and restoration of the Boulder City Hotel and Museum and was involved in the American Association of University Women, the Boulder City Chamber of Commerce, and the Community Club. Gene did charity work for other groups. too. The theater in the Boulder Dam Museum was named the Segerblom Theatre in her honor. She passed away on January 4, 2013, at the age of 94.

Text

Claytee D. White oral history interview

Identifier
OH-03904
Abstract

Oral history interview with Claytee D. White conducted by Stefani Evans on November 2, 2023 for the African Americans in Las Vegas: a Collaborative Oral History Project. In this interview, Claytee D. White, founding directory of the Oral History Research Center at UNLV Libraries, celebrates the twentieth anniversary of the OHRC by contributing her oral history to the collection.

She begins by explaining how the system of sharecropping worked in her family near rural Ahoskie, North Carolina, and she talks about the field work involved in raising cotton, tobacco, corn, and peanuts. The fifth of eight children and the first daughter, she shares memories of going into town with her mother, of admiring her women teachers, and of attending North Carolina Central College (now University) for two years before moving to Washington, D.C., and working for the telephone company.

After recalling her two years in D.C. and 22 years in Los Angeles, California, she describes "running away" to Las Vegas, Nevada in the early 1990s. Here, at the History department at UNLV, she recalls learning to conduct oral histories. White shares memories of her first interviews with Hazel and Jimmy Gay and Lucille Bryant. She talks of matriculating to the College of William and Mary for her PhD and of returning to Bertie County to live with her mother and administer the office of The Shaw University Center for Alternative Programs in Education (CAPE). She describes how she was offered the position of OHRC founding director, why it matters that she was an "opportunity hire," and how it feels to be the only Black person in a room.

Archival Collection