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Johnson, Mamie, undated

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Scope and Contents

Mamie Johnson recalls living and working in the South until the mid-1950s, when she moved to Waterloo, Iowa, with her husband and family. When she was a child, Johnson’s family lived and worked on white-owned land as sharecroppers. She had five siblings. Johnson worked in the field and for the white household, doing dishes, cleaning, and yard work beginning at the age of seven or eight. Johnson recalls the unspoken rules of racial etiquette that she and others lived by, such as being prohibited from using the front door or the outhouse at a white person’s home and being expected to address even children as “mister” or “miss.” Johnson speaks about the real and threatened violence that she and other African Americans lived under, including her own experience being harassed by white men and her vivid memories of Emmett Till’s murder and the subsequent trial.

Dates

  • Creation: undated

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research. Audio recordings of three oral history interviews are closed, but the associated transcripts are open.

Biographical / Historical

Mamie Johnson was born in Holmes County, Mississippi, in 1922 to Rubin and Debbie Epps Hunter (Head). Mamie Hunter married Shep Johnson Jr. In the mid-1950s, Mamie Johnson moved to Waterloo, Iowa, with her husband and family. She raised ten children and had 23 grandchildren. Mamie Johnson died in 2016 at the age of 94. [Biographical information found in Johnson’s obituary as published in the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier]

Extent

From the Collection: 5 linear inches

From the Collection: 19 audiocassettes

From the Collection: 31.5 Gigabytes

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Repository Details

Part of the Iowa Women's Archives Repository

Contact:
100 Main Library
University of Iowa Libraries
Iowa City IA 52242 IaU
319-335-5068
319-335-5900 (Fax)