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Journal of e-Media Studies, Volume 7 Issue 2: Accessible Civil Rights Heritage

Donaldson Abstract

The Center for Civil Rights History and Research at the University of South Carolina works to uncover the grassroots history of the African American freedom struggle in South Carolina then creates programs and exhibitions to share that history. From its inception in 2015, the Center has been a collaborative effort with the university’s libraries. The author and his research colleagues have found vital history unidentified in the libraries’ existing collections. One of the most revelatory and important collections at the university is the local television newsfilm of the Columbia NBC affiliate: the WIS-TV News Collection. In an example of the “virtuous cycle” of archival research that Dartmouth’s Mark Williams describes, the Center has raised from archival obscurity newsfilm footage of nationally important moments in the Civil Rights Era. Coupling that footage with contemporary news photographs and newspaper articles, Center researchers have created displays of the photos and footage available at many dozens of public events to solicit memories and identifications of people and events shown. Those identifications and memories have been documented through oral history interviews and corrections or expansions of the archival records, adding dates, locations, and names where there were descriptions of unidentified “Negroes” protesting. Those archival expansions have informed scholarship, which has then been presented again in public forums with civil rights veterans on the program to add a first-person account. The article examines newsfilm of three historically important civil rights demonstrations in South Carolina to show how researchers collaborated with archivists, civil rights veterans, and African American and White journalists of the era to identify, correct, and expand the archival record.

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