Allegra Westbrooks oral history interview, 2007 March 12
Dates
- Creation: 2007-03-12
Summary
Allegra Westbrooks recounts her thirty-six year career as head of library services at the segregated Brevard Street Library, located in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Charlotte, North Carolina, also known as Second Ward, and later in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg public library. She describes library services and programs, including starting a discussion group centered around African American religion, serving neighborhoods without libraries with a bookmobile, and using clubs and churches to promote reading. Ms. Westbrooks discusses how the Brevard Street Library, a part of the Charlotte public library system, closed in 1961 as the libraries became integrated, and describes the community\u2019s reaction to the closing. She also describes urban renewal in Charlotte during the 1960s and 1970s, the reason why she believes Brooklyn was targeted for urban renewal, and the African American community's relationship with local government during that time.
Extent
73 Minutes
Language of Materials
English
Repository Details
Part of the Oral Histories, J. Murrey Atkins Library Special Collections and University Archives, UNC Charlotte Repository
Atkins Library, UNC Charlotte
9201 University City Blvd
Charlotte NC 28223 United States
spec-coll@uncc.edu