Columbia Center for Oral History Portal > Oral history interview with Betty Rosemond, 2000
Creator: | Rosemond, Betty | Project: | Sheila Michaels civil rights organization oral history collection (see all project interviews) | Phys. Desc. : | Transcript: 55 pages Sound recording: 2 sound cassettes | Location: | Columbia Center for Oral History | Full CLIO record >> |
Biographical NoteBetty Rosemond is a former Freedom Rider from New Orleans, Louisiana. Rosemond was born in New Orleans in 1939. She participated in demonstrations against Woolworth's as a student at Joseph S. Clark High School. Later, while a student at Louisiana State University, she joined the second Freedom Ride to Birmingham and Mobile, Alabama. She joined the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and attended the organization's 1962 conference in Washington, D.C. and Alexandria, Virginia, where she was part of a mass arrest. Following her time in CORE, Rosemond relocated to Cincinnati, Ohio, where she raised three children. She appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show, was inducted into Ohio's Civil Rights Hall of Fame, and was honored for her activism by President Barack Obama
Scope and ContentsBetty Rosemond begins the interview discussing the Woolworth's lunch counter protests in New Orleans. Rosemond describes her time on the Woolworth's picket lines, segregation of the New Orleans bus system, and her introduction to the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) at Louisiana State University. She names Jean and Alice Thompson, Patricia Smith, and Oretha Castle Haley as members of New Orleans CORE. She describes their meetings and the tactics of their Woolworth's campaign. She recalls the emotions felt on a trip to a desegregated Woolworth's with her mother. Rosemond discusses her experience on multiple the Freedom Rides: from Lousiana to Beaumont, Texas and Louisiana to Alabama. Rosemond recalls Freedom Riders being attacked by a white mob in November 1961 in Poplarville, Mississippi, where Mack Charles Parker was lynched two years prior. She describes her escape from the mob by hiding in a phone booth and being smuggled out by a local Black man who drove her ninety miles back to New Orleans. She summarizes the Patricia Smith's and Frank Nelson's trials in Poplarville, and how the Poplarville story circulated. She also discusses her family and her brothers' deployment to Vietnam. Rosemond recalls the Washington, DC National CORE conference in 1962 and a protest in Alexandria, Virginia. She describes the atmosphere of Alexandria and the role of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in supporting CORE action. Rosemond met her husband at the CORE conference and they subsequently moved to Cincinnati, Ohio. Rosemond compares the South with her experiences in Cincinnati. Rosemond concludes the interview reflecting on her life as an activist, writer, mother, and grandmother
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