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Windlesoul 2 posts
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Peter99 1 post
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Wow Wee! Just look at that. I seem to recall that you were interested in Black American Civil Rights, something I share an interest in. (Personal Note) My memory is rubbish, but I know you had a
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Cheers, appreciated. You're probably referring to one of these https://a-nickel-and-a-nail.myshopify.com/search?q=new+windle
Aside from records, I'm a memorabilia collector of the music industry and US civil rights. A couple of NAACP membership cards I was talking about last week over on Facebook have just arrived via Hermes, with note from Nancy Compton, the lady who sent them. I'll precis things very briefly here, but her late husband's grandmother was quite a woman:
"Maggie Perry Shipman was born in 1903 in Ellaville, Georgia, before moving north to Johnstown, Pensylvania. Her grandparents were slaves in the South. I believe her activity with NAACP most likely began when the mayor attempted to banish all Blacks from Johnstown after a policeman was killed. Maggie refused to leave. She became a minister for the NAACP (the Johnstown Chapter opened in 1961), led very active life here and was well known and regarded. She was a member of Jobs Daughters, and loaned money to neighbours for those who couldn't afford to borrow from banks. She was a major role model for many in the community, but especially for my husband and her grandchildren. Maggie Shipman died May 14, 1989, age 85."
Edited by Windlesoul