http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment0
Partial Transcript: GEORGE STONEY: So could you tell me what it sounds like?
F1: If you were in the mill?
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified people watch newsreels of the textile mills and discuss working conditions in the mill and how they changed over time.
Keywords: African-American mill workers; brown lung; lintheads; mill buildings; mill villages; newsreels; spinning
Subjects: Child labor--Law and legislation; Industrial accidents; Rural-urban migration; Textile workers
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment904
Partial Transcript: F1: I told Judy that story you told me the other night about the man you said, who walked up to West Point to buy thread for his mom.
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified interviewees discuss being identified as lintheads, what their communities were like, and relationships between textile workers and mill management.
Keywords: baseball team; lintheads; mill managers; mill villages; paternalism
Subjects: Textile workers; Working class; Working class--Education
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment1727
Partial Transcript: GEORGE STONEY: What kind of pension did you get?
F1: They used wasn't many benefits.
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified interviewees discuss how they gained benefits over time, why that happened and their views on unions.
Keywords: anti-union sentiment in the South
Subjects: Retirement
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment2351
Partial Transcript: GEORGE STONEY: Now back to when you first came into the mill, the machinery was running lets say at a certain speed, do you ever recall when the machinery got more effiecent or when they wanted more production out of you?
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified narrators discuss their opinions on unions and why they feel unions have not succeeded in their particular area in the South.
Keywords: anti-union sentiment in the South; mill buildings; union organizing
Subjects: Textile workers--Labor unions
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment2812
Partial Transcript: F1: Did the company help him become mayor? Did they endorse his campagin?
M1: Reed was the mayor.
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified interviewees discuss how the local mill company took care of its managerial employees during a round of downsizing.
Keywords: paternalism
Subjects: Textile workers
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment3155
Partial Transcript: JUDITH HELFAND: Have you ever heard, one of the things that we've been focusing on, all across the South, is uh, (inaudible), is the 1934 strike.
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified interviewees discuss Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Social Security.
Keywords: eight hour workday
Subjects: New Deal (1933-1939); Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano), 1882-1945; Social security beneficiaries; Textile Workers' Strike (Southern States : 1934)
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment3438
Partial Transcript: JUDITH HELFAND: Um do you work with young people now in the mills?
F1: Yes, uh-huh.
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified interviewees discuss working at a local textile plant, the benefits they have received over the years, and how there are many families with multiple generations of textile workers.
Keywords: domestic workers; eight hour workday
Subjects: Women textile workers
http://webapps.library.gsu.edu%2Fohms-viewer%2Fviewer.php%3Fcachefile%3DL1995-13_AV0018.xml#segment4318
Partial Transcript: JUDITH HELFAND: Do you think there's any chance you might be able to introduce us to a generation of mill workers?
Segment Synopsis: Several unidentified interviewees discusses wages at the textile mill and the integration of African Americans in the textile mills.
Keywords: African-American mill workers; weavers
Subjects: Textile workers; Wages; Working class African Americans; Working class--Education