Beckett, Goldie

Date:
1978-09-12
Length:
90 minutes
Interviewer:
Chumbley, Kenneth
Transcription available:
yes
Series:
African American Community Interviews
Series ID:
9999_001
Interview Number(s):
__635
__636
Summary:
Goldie Beckett discusses her life as well as her husband's experiences as alderman in the city of Louisville in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Mrs. Beckett briefly describes her early life and education, including her graduation from Kentucky State College. Mrs. Beckett had a career in education, but also worked with her husband, and for her brother, in the undertaking business in Louisville. She speaks of the Walnut Street area before Urban Renewal. Mrs. Beckett's husband, William Washington Beckett, was elected alderman in 1951 and served until 1961. In this time, he played a role in the integration of the fire and police departments, the parks, and public accommodations, and in developing a Human Relations Commission. Mrs. Beckett discusses her husband's contributions and the civil rights movement in general (both in Louisville and more generally) and gives her opinion on the roles of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the African American church.
Topic(s):
African Americans--Kentucky--Louisville, Undertakers and undertaking, African American businesspeople, Businesspeople, Politicians, African American politicians, Discrimination in public accommodations, Segregation--Law and legislation, Discrimination in employment, African Americans--Employment, Civil rights, Race relations, Kentucky State Industrial College for Colored Persons, Louisville (Ky.)--Politics and government