SOHP Home > Interview of the Month

Interview of the Month

In this dynamic interview, Mr. Angus Thompson recalls decades of civil rights activism, from pushing school integration to opposing segregated public facilities. Thompson inherited a legacy of activism from his father and became a forceful leader in the African American community in Lumberton, NC, forging voting alliances with local Indians and opposing other black politicians' accomodationist impulses. Thompson's story is one of undiluted support for integration, which he sees as the cornerstone of racial progress in the second half of the twentieth century. This interview will prove useful for researchers looking for on-the-ground narratives of civil rights activism and an impassioned defense of the progress of the past fifty years.

The interview was conducted by Malinda Maynor for the SOHP "Long Civil Rights Movement" series.


Key Name Date Length
  =  Audio file,
wav format
  =  Audio file,
mp3 format
  =  Transcript,
Word format
  =  Transcript,
PDF format
  =  Related Images,
gif and jpg
Thompson, Angus  
10/21/2003
75 min.
Stuck in the Middle of the Civil Rights Struggle: Fighting for Equality against White Obstruction and Black Accomodation














The Southern Oral History Program
Center for the Study of the American South
Love House and Hutchins Forum
410 East Franklin St., CB# 9127, UNC-CH
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-9127
(919) 962-0455
info@sohp.org