Oral history interview with Mildred Price Coy, April 26, 1976

interview G-0020, Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)

Electronic ed.
Oral history interview with Mildred Price Coy ...
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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 28, 2022 | History

Oral history interview with Mildred Price Coy, April 26, 1976

interview G-0020, Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)

Electronic ed.

In 1976, historian Mary Frederickson interviewed white civil rights activist Mildred Price Coy about the development of her egalitarian ideals, her involvement in various justice movements during the twentieth century, and the societal changes she witnessed. At the time of the interview, Coy and her husband, Harold Coy, were living in Mexico with a group of expatriates who had fled McCarthyism and the Red Scare. Coy begins the interview with a history of the Price family. Though Coy had repudiated many of the social ideals she learned as a child, she still seems to feel great pride in the fact that she descends from several generations of southerners. She describes how her family dealt with the economic destruction following the Civil War and theorizes how that experience influenced how her grandmother raised her children. During Coy's childhood, her father moved the family back and forth between nearby towns and the family farm. Though they owned almost as little as their tenants, she remembers feeling superior to the children whose parents worked her father's land. Coy describes her father as a very lonely man who could not connect to his peers or his family. She did enjoy a warm relationship with her mother, however. Her parents shared a commitment to education for their children, and though both had been raised in religious families, faith played only a small role in Coy's childhood. Coy says that as she and her siblings grew older, the girls tended to become more racially liberal while the boys remained very conservative. Because there was no high school near their farm, Coy's parents sent her to live with her uncle in Miami, Florida. After graduation, she attended the North Carolina College for Women for three years, which she remembers as being very supportive and thought-provoking. She transferred to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, but she did not have the same connection to UNC that she had to the women's college. After graduating from UNC, Coy worked for several years in various rural school districts around North Carolina. Louise Leonard McLaren then recruited her to work as a secretary for the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA). Her first job for the YWCA was in Lynchburg, Virginia, where she worked with local female shoe workers who, while unwilling to join a union, seemed to appreciate her presence. Though she acknowledges that the YWCA did radically change southern society, she does not believe that it went as far as it could have. Coy went on to found the Southern Schools for Workers with Lois McDonald.

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English

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Edition Notes

Title from menu page (viewed on Dec. 19, 2008).

Interview participants: Mildred Price Coy, interviewee; Harold Coy, interviewee; Mary Frederickson, interviewer.

This electronic edition is part of the UNC-Chapel Hill digital library, Documenting the American South. It is a part of the collection Oral histories of the American South.

Text encoded by Kristin Shaffer. Sound recordings digitized by Aaron Smithers.

Text (HTML and XML/TEI source file); 1 files: ca. 228 kilobytes. Audio for this interview is not available.

Original version: Southern Oral History Program Collection, (#4007), Series G, Southern women, interview G-0020, Manuscripts Department, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Transcribed by Jean Houston. Original transcript: 62 p.

Funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services supported the electronic publication of this interview.

Mode of access: World Wide Web.

System requirements: Web browser with Javascript enabled.

Published in
[Chapel Hill, N.C.]
Other Titles
Interview G-0020, Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007), Interview with Mildred Price Coy, April 26, 1976, Oral histories of the American South.

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL44979089M
OCLC/WorldCat
289019478

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL33108251W

Source records

marc_columbia MARC record

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