10 Watts: Teaching on the Northwest Side of Chicago

Watts is moved to teach on the Northwest Side of as part of the desegregation of the teachers Chicago Public Schools. She encounters immigrant children, Italian and Greek, and faces new challenges.

Beverly Watts is the Executive Director of the Tennessee Commission on Human Rights. In her position as Director of the Kentucky Commission on Human Rights, she initiated the Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame.

This interview took place on September 11, 2014 as part of the Kentucky Civil Rights Hall of Fame Oral History Project, Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History and University of Kentucky Libraries.

To view the entire interview visit:

https://kentuckyoralhistory.org/ark:/16417/xt7rbn9x3k7v

Interviewer: Betty Baye
Videographer: Joanna Hay

Watts reflects on Kentucky's significant contribution to the Civil Rights Movement and speaks of the value of preserving this history of Kentucky's Civil Rights activists. Beverly Watts is the Execut
 
Watts recalls starting her work at the Kentucky Human Rights Commission and notes significant cases during her tenure. Beverly Watts is the Executive Director of the Tennessee Commission on Human Rig
 
Watts describes her work with the Civil Rights office in Chicago. She provided training on Civil Rights Policy in the 1970s, especially Title IX. Beverly Watts is the Executive Director of the Tennes
 
Watts recalls how lighter skin was judged to be more desireable within the black community itself. Beverly Watts is the Executive Director of the Tennessee Commission on Human Rights. In her position
 

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