http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment0
Partial Transcript: NANNY LEAH WASHBURN: My mother called me a feisty little helper.
ANN: (laughter)
(sound of an autoharp being strummed)
ANN: Alright, he's not gonna smoke that is he?
Segment Synopsis: Ann and Nanny Leah Washburn sing Cotton Mill Girls.
Keywords: union songs; women mill workers
Subjects: Working class women; Working class--Songs and music
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment140
Partial Transcript: ANN: Nanny?
NANNY LEAH WASHBURN: I've tried that.
ANN: Nanny, why don't you do your song about the hard times in this old mill? Hard times in this old mill, Brookside?
Segment Synopsis: Ann, Clara Smith, and Nanny Leah Washburn sing a song about the Brookside Mill and Solidarity Forever.
Keywords: union songs; women mill workers
Subjects: Working class women; Working class--Songs and music
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment415
Partial Transcript: ANN: Alright, you want to do the Amalgamated?
CLARA SMITH: Let's do that.
ANN: Alright and that will be (strums autoharp0?
Segment Synopsis: Nanny Leah Washburn, Clara Smith, and Ann sing The Amalgamated, a song about the Amalgamated Clothing Textile Worker Union (ACTWU).
Keywords: union songs; women mill workers
Subjects: Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union; Textile workers--Labor unions; Working class women; Working class--Songs and music
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment608
Partial Transcript: GEORGE STONEY: Oh that's excellent. Ok Clara.
CLARA SMITH: Ok Nanny, Nanny, how you doing? I want you to tell me, first of all I -- my family is textile, all of my family works in the mill today and under very modern technology and supervisors and everything. Why don't you tell me a little bit about the time you wiorked in the plant, in the mills?
Segment Synopsis: Nanny talks about her childhood as a textile worker and what little formal education she recivied.
Keywords: education; women mill workers
Subjects: Child labor; Women textile workers; Working class women; Working class--Education
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment988
Partial Transcript: CLARA SMITH: When you were a child Nanny, explain to me, or tell me about, did you ever get an oppotunity to go the mills and see what was happening or were people from off the street invited to come in? Its not like today were you can't go in unless you work there.
NANNY: Right
Keywords: Nanny Leah Washburn; women mill workers
Subjects: Women textile workers; Working class women
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment1172
Partial Transcript: NANNY: Well they's broke out that riot in Clark's Cove in East Point. Between East Point and where we lived, and they called every person on the village, cotton mill village to come, to have to come in to cotton mill that night.
Segment Synopsis: Nanny Leah Washburn recalls a race riot.
Keywords: racism
Subjects: Riots
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment1282
Partial Transcript: GEORGE STONEY: Now I wonder if you could ask Nanny how she got arrested in the strike of 1934?
CLARA SMITH: Ok.
GEORGE STONEY: Tell her that story.
Segment Synopsis: Nanny talks about how she got arrested during the textile workers' strike of 1934
Keywords: picket lines
Subjects: Labor unions and communism; New Deal (1933-1939); Textile Workers' Strike (Southern States : 1934); Textile workers--Labor unions; Women textile workers
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment1775
Partial Transcript: CLARA SMITH: So how did you come a part, how did you obtain the lawyers? Did someone, did they come in to represent you, or did someone in your family call these attorneys, these Afro- American attorneys? Explain that to me.
Segment Synopsis: Nanny discusses her lawyers and her trial.
Subjects: African American lawyers; Criminal defense lawyers
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment2059
Partial Transcript: GEORGE STONEY: Could you talk about music?
NANNY LEAH WASHBURN: Music?
STONEY: Yeah.
WASHBURN: Oh I love music.
Segment Synopsis: Nanny Leah Washburn discusses music, Pete Seeger and a trip to a meeting of the World Peace Council in Stockholm Sweden.
Keywords: union organizing; union songs
Subjects: Folk musicians; Working class--Songs and music
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0003.xml#segment2747
Partial Transcript: NANNY LEAH WASHBURN: I taught my children to not go-- you know my son John, the one that died? I told him to not be a fool and go and fight the capitalist war. If they come over here it might be different with people.
Segment Synopsis: Nanny discusses her views on America's overseas wars.
Subjects: Protest movements