00:00:00Chandler Smith: Thanks again for taking part in our oral history projects.
We appreciate that you would come in through the snow and take time to talk with
us about these things.
Phyllis Seabolt: I’m happy to do so
CS: Very good, very good. So first question, as you know. Would you please just
tell us your name and your address?
PS: My name is Phyllis Seabolt, and I live at Friendship Village, 1400 North
Drake, here in Kalamazoo.
CS: Very good. And Ms. Seabolt, people often have an interesting story relating
to their name or why they are named what they are. Do you have a story like that?
PS: Well my mother tells me that she was reading a book written by an
abolitionist who was, was friends with a family, the Wheatley family, that were
00:01:00very compassionate slave owners who took into their family a small girl child
that was born of one of their slaves, and she was kind of sickly and they kept
her inside the house and she was not assigned to the work crew in the fields,
and they taught this little girl to read and write and she became a playmate of
their own child. The family was named Wheatley and they named the little girl
Phillis and so mother named me Phyllis after Phillis Wheatley, this former slave
who became the first black woman to be a poet, published poet, in this country
00:02:00and the second woman to be published as a poet. And I’ve enjoyed looking up
her poems and I’m really proud to have been named after Phillis Wheatley,
although her mother spelled her name with an “I” and in the hospital they
didn’t get that spelling, so I am P-h-y-l-l-i-s. Phillis Wheatley was her name.
CS: Very good. Growing up, what-or who in your family was very important to you?
PS: Well, I find that hard to answer without giving what was important about
each member of the family because their feelings I reacted to and who I am today
is because of my family and their interests. First, my grandfather was a farmer,
00:03:00and when it was time for my mother to go to high school, there was no high
school in the area, and he lent the farm out on shares and moved in town so that
mother could go to high school and County Normal, which allowed her to teach in
the county schools - teach grades 1 through 8, after her graduation from Normal.
So that’s my grandfather who began all of this. My mother, of course, was as I
say a teacher, and her influence on the family in that when we would have dinner
00:04:00in the evening we all ate together, sat around the table. After we said grace
and passed the food, first question of the evening at the dinner table was,
“What did you do in school today?” And so education has always been a center
point of our family. And I think of my father as having helped develop some
attitudes of mine in the way he handled problems. When I grew up in the early
30s in Dowagiac, Michigan, where I was born, name-calling was common, and I was
often called the “N” word as I would go to school and come back. And then at
00:05:00dinnertime when mother said, “How did things go today?” when I reported that
there was one house I passed everyday going to school where the kids called me
names and made going to school unpleasant for me, my father said, “I’m
coming home early tomorrow and we’ll see about this.” So he came home from
work early, changed his clothes, took me by the arm, and we went to the
neighbor’s house where I was mistreated, and my father said, “This is not
acceptable. I will not have my daughter treated this way.” And he went on to
explain, in a very dignified way, who he was, what he stood for, what he
00:06:00expected of us, and what he expected of his neighbors. And he solved the problem
by discussion, having that person understand where he’s coming from,
understand where the other person developed their feelings, and eventually the
two families became friends. So grandparents, mother and father have all been
such an influence. I would have to say, family influences, not just one person.
CS: And you, you mentioned that your father would sit down and he would, he
would have a discussion with someone or with your neighbors in order to clarify
the problems that they were having. What in his life do you know would influence
00:07:00him to act that way? What, what kind of experiences did he - where, where is he
from, first of all, if you don’t mind me asking?
PS: I was born in Dowagiac. He lived also on a farm about ten miles outside of
Dowagiac going toward Niles, Michigan, called Sumnerville. And he was able to go
to school through the eighth grade before he had to drop out of school and help
his family economically. That was back in 1915 or so, back before he went into
World War II, I, excuse me - World War I. And he was stationed in France as
well as in this country. And when I see what experiences I had as a child, I can
00:08:00only imagine that he experienced the same thing, only more so, and it was just
his personality to talk things out with people. He was never aggressive to the
point that he would turn people off. He usually was able to talk them into
seeing his side. And he was a great talker and often addressed political days as
the main speaker at an occasion in our community.
CS: Well that answers our second question. What, so what besides education and,
00:09:00and a discussion, a neighborly discussion about things, what other values were
very important to your family when you were growing up?
PS: I think they all center around family togetherness, support, education being
primary to the aims and purposes of our family. Both mother and father were
united in their efforts to see that we had the most advantage that was possible
in a restricted society for us to grow to our full extent. For instance, we
could not join the Boy Scouts as a group of people, as a minority, so my dad
00:10:00started a Scout troupe. And it was of course made up of the, as in those days we
were referred to as Negros. It was ref-uh-a group of Negro boys who otherwise
would have had no access to school clubs or that sort of thing, and in later
years those young men would come back and thank my father for having provided
for them the opportunity to be Boy Scouts. My mother did the same with Campfire
Girls and Girl Scouts. And they both were interested in organizations that were
available to children our age, but not available to us as individuals solely on
the basis of race.
00:11:00
CS: Then do you know - do you have another specific childhood incident that you
can share with us that would, that would give us a sense of what it was like to
grow up just outside of Dowagiac in Michigan in the 1930s?
PS: I would say in high school when I did my first written exam in English class
our first assignment was to write a story about what you did over the summer and
00:12:00tell us about your family, how many children there are, what your mom and dad
do, and where you go to vacation and so forth. So I wrote a story, telling about
my family, that I had a younger brother at that time and how my mother was
interested in church work and how she was a secretary of the church convention
and that my father was a well-read man and he subscribed to five newspapers, and
I went on with the rest of the story, and when I got my paper back the teacher
had written on the back page above where I told about the newspapers, “Isn’t
this an exaggeration?” in red with a question mark. So at the dinner table
00:13:00that night when the family said, “What’s happening in school today,” I
told about the paper I got back with the low mark and “Wasn’t this an
exaggeration,” and my father said, “We’ll take care of this”. The next
day, again, came home from work --I was in ninth grade then -- changed clothes.
The two of us went back and had an interview with the teacher in her room. Under
his arm he took a copy of each of the five newspapers. They were the Dowagiac
News, The South Bend Tribune, The Cassopolis Vigilant, The Chicago Defender, and
The Detroit Tribune, and he explained that although he was unable to complete
high school, he had always been interested in current events and the situation
00:14:00in the world in which we lived, and he had developed an intense interest in
reading, and the papers of course had our address - they were delivered to our
home, so we had proof that he took five newspapers, read five newspapers, and he
did not appreciate the comment on the paper and he hoped that she understood the
situation now. That same attitude that he had all along in dealing with people
-- to tell the truth, to explain situations - and again, the teacher had
eventually all four of the Ash children in school and was a great friend.
CS: You mentioned that your mother was a secretary at the church.
00:15:00
PS: Uh-huh.
CS: Can you kind of explain to us what your family’s relationship to this
church was and what kind of church it was?
PS: It was Second Baptist Church of Dowagiac Michigan, which was a member of the
Chain Lake Association, which is part of the Baptist Convention. And Chain Lake
Church was settled by my forefathers both, on both sides of the family, and that
church was over 100 years old and it was significant that mother was the
secretary of the convention and also a descendant of the founders of the church,
which is still in existence.
00:16:00
CS: And so you went as a family, I’m sure, every Sunday.
PS: Uh, that church was in the country where we grew up. We attended Second
Baptist Church in the city of Dowagiac.
CS: Okay, okay. And then, moving on, what is, what is your relationship to
Kalamazoo then if you grew up in Dowagiac?
PS: Uh, when I was a junior in high school [clears throat] I elected to go to
Kalamazoo to school because it was in-state and I had a scholarship and could
major in the topic I was interested in, which was teaching, and Kalamazoo had
the most famous college for teachers in the country at Western. It was called
00:17:00Western State Teacher’s College. Long before it was a university, it was
internationally known as an outstanding teacher’s college. So I headed for Kalamazoo.
CS: And you’ve been here since then?
PS: And as it happened, I accepted a job here in town and I’ve been in
Kalamazoo ever since, except for a couple of years when we lived in Chicago as a
Seabolt family, while my husband was in Chiropody school in Chicago.
CS: Can you explain to us then what it was like being in Kalamazoo and what
years you were -- what year you came to Kalamazoo
PS: I came to Kalamazoo [cough] -- excuse me -- in 1943 to go to college, and as
00:18:00I say I was at Western. At that time, we could not live on the campus. When I
say we, I’m referring to minority students were not accepted on campus. So we
all had to live in the city and we solved the problem by the generosity of local
families of color. Negros, as we were called at that time, I say, who opened
their homes to us, allowed us to rent bedroom space, and to give us space in
their refrigerators so that we could keep food and eat at home because we were
00:19:00not allowed to live on the campus -- or at that time just eat at a sandwich shop
on the way to school.
CS: And how did that particular experience -- not being able to live on campus
at a school that you, you gained acceptance to, after having grown up and seeing
how your father treated all of the issues that came up -
PS: Well I solved the problem by working in “private family”, as did many of
us. And working in private family meant that instead of paying for board and
room, I worked for board and room. So I cleaned the homes, did the cooking-- for
that - and watched the children, and just became domestic help… with no pay in
00:20:00return, but for board and room. So that, for two years, that’s how I got
through school with my parents paying tuition and books and so forth, and I
worked for board and room. Back in those days that was so common for students to
work for part of their schooling that that was not unusual. What made it more
unusual for me was that I was considered domestic help and going to school on
the side, so I had a green and white uniform and a blue and white uniform. And
I ate in the kitchen and served my employers, so they were, in the dining room.
00:21:00On Sundays I ate at the dining room with them. During the week their young child
and I ate at the kitchen table.
CS: And so how did that - growing up and kind of understanding race relations -
how did that make you feel? How did not being able to eat at the same table
most of the days of the week, how did that make you feel?
PS: I had learned long before that things were not equal and not necessarily
fair between the races, but I also knew that if I wanted to progress beyond
doing dishes for someone else all my life that I had to get an education and
that was first in my mind. I could eat a peanut butter sandwich I had made that
00:22:00morning and taken to school if it meant that was lunch for me. That was okay
‘cause I was able to go to school and every year I was closer to that degree.
CS: And the fact that you weren’t allowed to live on campus, did that make you
feel like you weren’t part of the community?
PS: Yes, it did. But again, you set a goal, and you head toward that goal. I
knew that living on campus was not all there was to the college world and that
although I was not living on the campus, I was able to go to the class and when
I took notes in class and read the book I could get through the class, whether
00:23:00they called on me to recite or whatever the restriction was, it was to my
advantage to keep my ears open and to learn everything that was possible. They
could take away the right to live in a certain place or eat in a certain place,
but they could not restrict my mind, and so my learning was up to me.
CS: And how did your fellow students treat you? How did they treat you when you
were in school?
PS: Most of them were neutral. They had strange feelings about our society and
the unwritten restrictions that we lived by. There was not much difference
00:24:00between growing up black in the south and the north. The difference was that in
the south there were signs that said you cannot sit here or you cannot eat here.
Up north there were no signs. It was an understood fact which you lived with in
anger or you lived with saying it’s not always going to be like this. I’m
going to learn despite the inconvenience of discrimination and segregation. The
life on campus was interesting in that since I could not live in the dorm, I was
restricted in living in the home management house which was part of my teaching
block that I had to do in my junior year. And the head of the department
00:25:00suggested since my grades were so good, perhaps I would be willing to accept an
‘A’ in my home management and not stay in the house. And I was very upset at
that and when a friend who was also in the department heard the story, she said,
“Let’s go right back to her and tell her that I’ll be your roommate in the
house, and we did, and I did, and I earned my own ‘A.’
CS: Were there any very difficult times? It seems like you coped with this--with
00:26:00all the discrimination very well. But do you ever remember a moment when it was
too much for you, or people were too aggressive?
PS: I fought the discouragement that came. I think that was maybe my low moment.
When with outstanding grades and awards, they looked at me and said, “I’m
sorry we can’t place you because there are no Negro teachers teaching home
economics between here and Kalamazoo--uh, between Kalamazoo and Chicago one
direction and here and Detroit the other direction.” There are no black
teachers in high school. And then when one of the school board members said,
00:27:00“We’ll look into this,” and suggested my name, and Dr. Loy Norrix, whom
the school now is named after, said we’ll give it a try. If there are any
parents who object to their student having a black teacher, we’ll review it.
But otherwise let’s give it a try.” And they did, and I stayed for 21 years
before I moved on to teaching at the University, which had told me they
couldn’t help me.
CS: So what was it like teaching at Loy Norrix, then during -
PS: Oh, I taught in the junior high, at South Junior High.
00:28:00
CS: Oh.
PS: And, I will bring a picture that shows the ninth grade class at South Junior
High. There was one black student at the time at Vine School where I began, and
one teacher. That was me. And it stayed that way for about eight years before we
got another teacher of color.
CS: Did you ever feel like you didn’t have a voice teaching in that school
then? Or did you feel like--what was your relationship like with the other teachers?
PS: No problem whatsoever. I was teaching a subject. The color of my skin and
00:29:00what I taught had no relationship with each other, and the students seemed to
feel the same way. No problems. I made it all seem so unnecessary that we lived
through this period of discrimination and segregation in our society that did
not have to be there, that we were living in an atmosphere that we had created
ourselves. We, as a people, had decided to make a separation between the races
and in actuality it was something we created ourselves and made our own problems.
00:30:00
CS: When did you first become aware of your racial identity before you went to school?
PS: I just always knew that I was different. But at home I was told my
difference made no difference. The color of my skin did not limit my mind or my
aspirations or my hopes and I was a person with dignity and worth. And so I had
a good background for facing the inequalities I found. I put them behind me and
kept moving.
00:31:00
CS: And during the period of--I know there were various types of protests in
Kalamazoo during the Civil Rights Movement, especially the Van Avery Drug Store.
Do you remember--do you have any stories from that period of time? Or did you
take part in any of those protests?
PS: Yes, I did. And they were rightly organized, had foundation, had
credibility. They needed --the protests needed to be made, and we did whatever
we could to highlight the inequities that we were facing in
Kalamazoo--particularly in the, in employment and then housing, and it was a
00:32:00joyous participation that we had in highlighting for the community - Things are
unequal, unfair, unjust. This community must change. And it was done in a
peaceful way that highlighted the fact that equality and fairness can come about
if people attach, attack the problem with integrity.
CS: And did that seem to be the overall mindset of the entire community of
Kalamazoo, or was that just a specific mindset that was shared among the protesters?
PS: No, it did not come easy. There were people who were opposed, but once the
00:33:00law was passed in the mid-60s and made discrimination and segregation illegal,
that was the beginning of the change in the law and injustice was
served--justice was served by the law. However, change in people’s hearts is
still something, that is something we must work on. I fear daily for President
Obama’s safety. I think it’s remarkable that people could vote for him and
at the same time resent the fact that he is a black man, ruling this country and
00:34:00some people still make that color difference in their hearts, still.
CS: And you say that the protests in, in Kalamazoo during the 60s, I would
assume, they had, they were, they had a good foundation, they were stable. Who
organized the protests that, that occurred?
PS: A small people [sic] of good will of both races. And there were black
ministers involved. They had probably the most influence. The black churches
were able to get people of good will of both races to march and it was not just
00:35:00a protest of the black community. There were good people of good will on both sides.
CS: And what, what did it seem like the crowds were mostly made up of, of
African American members of the community or of white, or was it even, was it
split kind of?
PS: It was split.
CS: Split. And there was no tension ever within the group --
PS: Oh, I can’t say that. I don’t know what tensions might have been
underneath that were not visible. But it was viable and successful. And, we made
a point.
CS: What, what was your proudest moment from -- out of all of the protests you
went to? What was the most proud moment you felt?
00:36:00
PS: I don’t know that there was a single moment - all of these changes have
come slowly and sometimes begrudgingly. And we can just take joy in knowing that
legally this country has changed, that no longer can the single wish of a person
who is not -- broad-minded enough to see this country as an amalgamation of
people -- who is in charge anymore.
00:37:00
CS: And how far do you think our nation, as a whole, has come since being able
to witness this change throughout your life -- how far do you think we’ve come
since the Civil Rights Movement?
PS: Well, when you look at the situation in Kalamazoo, for instance, the
President of this university -- at Western has been over -- a person of color.
The president of Kalamazoo College is a person of color; the mayor of the city
is a person of color; the director of the Kalamazoo symphony orchestra is a
person of color. When you look at people who have accomplished despite of, in
00:38:00spite of, of problems - it looks as if we have come a long, long way. When you
look at the number of people who are unemployed, when you look at the number of
people who are -- of, wanting as far as our economy is concerned, who are in
jobs that are well paying, the number is skewed around again. And although there
are a few people who have accomplished a great deal, the highest number of our
children who have inadequate food, and who are hungry, are our children and
00:39:00three-quarters -- are -- of them are children of color. And so when you look at
pay for jobs, most of the low-paying jobs are among people of color. And we
still have a long way to go. And so, it’s kind of a dichotomy -- that we think
perhaps things have changed and life is different and there is no more
segregation. There is no more legal segregation and discrimination, but in
reality we are still facing some hurdles in finding justice and equality on all
00:40:00phases of American life. So we still have a ways to go.
CS: Then, if we still have a ways to go, what lessons do you think our
generation could learn from the civil rights struggle that you were involved in,
in order to advance it?
PS: A basic change in attitude and a realization of life’s realities and doing
exactly the kind of thing you’re doing here is looking at the problem,
dissecting it. That’s something we have been reluctant to do. And I think your
generation is going to be more open-minded to ideas and results and causes and
00:41:00-- finding a way to solve the problems that we have created for ourselves. So I
think, kind of, it’s, it’s up to you -- and up to us to look at problems and
ways to solve them together and a willingness to open up to facts.
CS: (Mm-kay?). Then you mentioned earlier that you went on to teach at a
university -- was this Western Michigan?
PS: Mm-hm.
CS: And what did you teach at Western Michigan?
PS: I taught in the home economics department in the public schools, and it has
00:42:00enlarged at the university level to include -- of -- concerns about consumers
and family life. So it is a combination of family and consumer sciences.
CS: And when you taught there was it still segregated -- was campus still
segregated so only white students could live on campus?
PS: No that was solved a little before the time of the Civil Rights Movement in
the United States. In the late 50s Western opened up to allowing students of
color on campus.
CS: And what year did you start working at Western Michigan?
PS: 1950.
00:43:00
CS: 1950 -- okay. And were you able to experience how sentiment between
students, minorities and white students -- were you able to -- what was it like
being able to, to watch that change.
PS: Excuse me I misspoke; I went to Western in 1970 --
CS: ‘70, oh okay, okay -- so after that.
PS: As a teacher--
CS: Okay, okay. And I’m sure by that point that lots of the tensions in
between the students were solved.
PS: Yes.
CS: Okay. So you never--you - how, how did facing all of this discrimination,
how did that not discourage you from wanting to -- from wanting to get an education?
PS: You keep your eye on the prize.
00:44:00
CS: Very good. Are there any other notable moments that you have from, from
your -- did, what did, what did teachers that you worked with think of you
taking part in, in the protests around, around Kalamazoo? Were you, were you
supported by your -- the teachers you worked with?
PS: Some. But no one ever became unhappy enough about the situation to contest
it or to make an issue of it with me. I think, perhaps, no one wants to be a
bigot. So people are, who are not too happy just don’t make an issue of it,
and I don’t make an issue of it. If they are not too happy with me, I ignore them.
00:45:00
CS: Very good. But you, you never witnessed any, any resistance to change, while
you were working at the school, being the only teacher that, that was not white?
PS: No, no one -- as I say -- made an issue of it.