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PVAMU Honors College: PV-Honors Research Project-Fall 2022: HistoryMakers Digital Archive: Library Database

The Honors Program concentrates on the development of intellectual curiosity and offers a comprehensive honors curriculum to cultivate critical thinking, active learning, and stellar leadership skills.

HistoryMakers Digital Archive: Library Database

HistoryMakers Digital Archive 

The Nation’s Largest African American Video Oral History Collection.

John B. Coleman Library 

Databases A to Z 

Database H (HistoryMakers Digital Archive) 

HistoryMakers Digital Archive (The Nation’s Largest African American Video Oral History Collection)

Help Page, The HistoryMakers Digital Archive

Example: Searching a HistoryMakers

Video transcript 

So, I worked in the Bursar's Office [at New York University] from nine to five, and went to school from six to ten. And I enjoyed it, it was fun. But I was deeply concerned, because I was separated from my son; he was at home with my family during that time. Fortunately, I lived at the Judson. The Judson was a residence hall for students at NYU, and it was right there at Washington Square. And one night when I came home from class, I had a telegram from an ex-classmate of mine at Howard University [Washington, D.C.] offering me a job as Dean of Women and teacher of Social Science. And I got in touch with my father [Robert James Jackson]. I didn't, I was just, you know, making enough money to keep myself going. And he sent me money to go from New York to Texas, to Butler College [Tyler, Texas]. And my aunt had a friend who worked at the airport, so I got a reduced ticket on his pass and flew out of New York on a night flight and got to Dallas, Texas early in the morning. And they met me in Dallas and drove me from Dallas to Tyler, Texas, where I was to teach.

Now, what year is this?

That's one of the things I was forgetting, the years. Butler, 1952.

Okay.

Because I stayed at Butler from 1952 to 1954. And then I resigned, because I was not in a situation there to which I could take my son, and I came home to get him. And I taught English a year at the Howard High School in Georgetown [South Carolina]. And then I got another telegram from Texas offering me a position at Jarvis Christian College in Hawkins, Texas as Director of Student Life and instructor in Social Science. And I took that, because instruction and Social Science would include the History. And I taught there on, let's see... I taught at Jarvis from 1955 to 1958. And the latter part of teaching at Jarvis Christian College, I had given up being Director of Student Life because I only really wanted to teach. And in 1958, I moved from Jarvis Christian College to Texas College in Tyler, to teach History. And I stayed there from '58' [1958] to 1963. And in 1963, I went to Prairie View A and M, that was at that time Prairie View A and M College [Prairie View Agricultural and Mechanical College in Prairie View, Texas], and later became Prairie View A and M University. But I stayed there until I retired in 1979. So, you see, I was really in Texas from 1952 until 1988. I retired from Prairie View in '79' [1979], but I stayed in Texas. And I taught for a time at the Houston Community College after retirement. And then in 1988, I came back to South Carolina.

Example: HistoryMakers Children's Book Notes

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List

Map

Biography

Genealogy Records: HeritageQuest and FamilySearch 

HeritageQuest Online

HeritageQuest Online is a comprehensive treasury of American genealogical sources—rich in unique primary sources, local and family histories, and finding aids. It delivers an essential collection of genealogical and historical sources—with coverage dating back to the 1700s—that can help people find their ancestors and discover a place’s past. The collection consists of six core data sets: U.S. Federal Censuses, Genealogy and local history books, Periodical Source Index (PERSI), Revolutionary War Records, Freedman’s Bank Records, The LexisNexis U.S. Serial Set

United States Census Reports 

John B. Coleman Library
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 519, MS 1040, Prairie View, Texas 77446
Physical Address: L.W. Minor St. / University Drive, Prairie View, Texas 77446
Reference: (936) 261-1535, Circulation: (936) 261-1542
Email: askalibrarian@pvamu.edu

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