Richardson, Richard
Found in 21 Collections and/or Records:
Louis Goldstein, 1976 August 13
Louis Lazerus Goldstein (1913-1998) served as comptroller of Maryland for ten terms, from 1959 to 1998. In this oral history interview, Goldstein discusses his involvement with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and Theodore R. McKeldin's achievements and fight for civil rights in the Maryland State Senate.
Luther Stuckey, 1976 August 12
Marshall Bright, 1976 June 8
Mayor Thomas J. D’Alesandro, III, 1976 June 17
Mildred Momberger, 1976 August 3
From 1937 to 1974, Mildred Kemp Momberger (1912-2005) was the personal secretary and administrative assistant to Theodore R. McKeldin, who was Mayor of Baltimore and Governor of Maryland. In this oral history interview, Momberger discusses McKeldin's life and career, especially his early years and involvement with civil rights as the mayor of Baltimore; the Herring Run Housing Project; McKeldin's campaigns for mayor and governor; and the 1952 Republican Convention.
Paul Bailey, 1976 August 9
Paul Jacob Bailey (1905-1994) served as the Republican State Senator from St. Mary's County, Maryland from 1946 to 1954. In this oral history interview, Bailey discusses Theodore R. McKeldin speaking in Saint Mary's County in the late 1920s; and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in Southern Maryland.
Reverend Marion Bascom, 1976 June 18
Silas Craft, 1976 July 8
Solomon Liss, 1976 July 13
Solomon Liss (1915-1988) served on the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City, Maryland beginning in 1968 and was an advisor on metropolitan affairs to Mayor Theodore R. McKeldin in 1963. In this oral history interview, Liss discusses the Public Accommodations Bill and Equal Employment Act; his opinions of McKeldin; the influence of Judge Simon Sobeloff; the leadership and courage of freedom fighter Lillie May Carroll Jackson; and McKeldin and Jackson as compatriots.
Vernon Naimaster, 1976 August 18
Vernon John Naimaster (1929-1992) was a Great Titan of the Maryland Ku Klux Klan. In this oral history interview, Naimaster discusses the lawsuit he brought against Lillie May Carroll Jackson, Juanita Jackson Mitchell, and the Baltimore branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) over the loss of his job; and provides his opinions on the general effects of integration on white Americans.