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Newspaper article, Night for youths, All-Day workshop head many events, Las Vegas Sun, February 9, 1965

Date
1965-02-09
Description

Newspaper article featuring information about the Negro National History Week events taking place in schools and churches in February 1965.

Text

Transcript of interview with Samuel and Sherrill Coleman by Claytee White, February 12, 2016 and February 22, 2016

Date
2016-02-12
2016-02-22
Description

Sherrill and Samuel Coleman moved to Las Vegas during the 1990s after both enjoying a full life and numerous careers in other parts of the United States. They met each other through church in 1998 and married each other in April 1999. Now retired, both Samuel and Sherrill remain active in their church community. Samuel Coleman was born in Durant, Mississippi in 1928 to a sharecropping family. His father died when he was 13 months old, leaving his mother to raise seven children by herself. Over time, his family slowly migrated to Chicago and he joined them when he was 15. For eight months, Samuel worked a number of different jobs until he began to work for Burlington Railroad as a four cook. The United States Army drafted him in 1951 and sent him overseas to work in a motor pool for a military hospital in Korea, despite his status as a conscientious objector. At war’s end, he returned to work for Burlington. During his last 17 years with the railroad, Samuel successfully petitioned to join the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the union for railroad cooks, porters, and waiters, to improve the working and sleeping conditions at Burlington Railroad. He retired from the railroads in the 1970s and chose to pursue other careers. Until his official retirement in 1993, Samuel worked in real estate, as the owner of a liquor store, a firefighter, a restaurant inspector, and a deacon for his church. His daughter from his first wife moved to Vegas to pursue a career as a teacher and after a number of visits, Samuel decided to follow her in 1999. Sherrill Coleman was born in Newton, Kansas in 1941. Like many other African American women in her community, she worked as a housekeeper for a number of years. She and her first husband moved to Los Angeles County in 1964 where she took a temporary job in the elections department of the local government. In 1967, Sherrill became a file clerk for Los Angeles County’s Department of Public Social Services. By the time she left the department, she was middle management in the auditing department. She moved to Vegas in 1993.

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Las Vegas African American Community Conversations, Part 2: Education, Economy and Integration: video

Date
2012
Description

The Las Vegas African American Community Conversations is a four part, one hour round table conversation with local Las Vegans. They share their powerful stories and great history, with topics ranging from “Migration, Civil Rights, Education, Church, Entertainment and the Early Legal Community”. Part Two: A conversation about “Education, Economy and Integration” MODERATOR- Sonya Horsford Ed.D. PANELISTS- Dr. Esther Langston (Professor UNLV) Verlia Davis-Hoggard (Director of Clark County Social Services-Retired) Idan M. Gaines (Regional Representative for Senator Harry Reid) Dr. Linda Young (President-CCSD Board of Trustees)

Moving Image

Set of photographs including Victory Baptist Choir, Love's Cocktail Lounge, Easter Program at Upperoom, and basketball tournament at Doolittle

Date
1970
Description

Photographer's notations: April 70, victory Baptist Choir, Love's Cocktail Lounge, Easter Program at Upper Room Church of God in Christ, Basketball tournament at Doolittle. Some photos from this set were previously online with the digital ID pho022104.
Doolittle Community Center (Las Vegas, Nev.); Victory Baptist Church (Las Vegas, Nevada); Upper Room Church of God in Christ (Las Vegas, Nev.)

Image

Transcript of interview with Irene Sprague Black by Chari Horne, March 16, 1978

Date
1978-03-16
Description
Chari Horne interviews hairdresser Irene Sprague Black at a beauty salon in Las Vegas. Born in 1919 in Delta, Utah, Black moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1924. During this interview Black discusses early Las Vegas, local schools, homes, friends, family life, the Mormon Church, Mesquite, Indian Reservation, Downtown, Hoover Dam, and Bunkerville, Nevada.

Text

Transcript of interview with Charlotte Brascia by Joe Mascellino, February 24, 1977

Date
1977-02-24
Description
Joe Mascellino interviews Charlotte Brascia in his home about the history of Nevada. Mascellino asks Brascia about social and cultural changes, the growth of different religions, Brascia’s brief presence in the airline industry, political presence in Las Vegas, and rising crime rates. Brascia also specifically discusses her experience in the gaming and hospitality industry and how gaming operations have changed over time, particularly comparing gaming and hiring practices in the 1950s with those in the 1970s.

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Transcript of interview with Georgia Adras by Robin L. Hayes, March 02, 1977

Date
1977-03-02
Description
Robin L. Hayes interviews her Greek-American grandmother Georgia Adras, born 1916, in Farmington, Utah. Adras relocated to Las Vegas, Nevada, in 1936. This interview covers education, religion, ad raising a family in Nevada. During the interview Adras also discusses the building of the Boulder Dam, road conditions, grocery shopping in the early days, and the Strip.

Text

Sister Rosemary Lynch and an unidentified person pose on stairs: photographic print

Date
1984
Description
Sister Rosemary Lynch walking up steps to a church in Assisi, Italy 1984.

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Photograph of Debbie Conway with First Lady Edwina Richardson, 2012

Date
2012
Description

Color photograph of Debbie Conway with First Lady Edwina Richardson at the Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church Food Bank discussing supplementary items needed.

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