University of Delaware. Library. Special Collections2018-12-172018-12-172018-11-10MSS 0858, Voices of 1968 oral history collection, Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, Newark, Delaware.http://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/24002E. Poppa Rogers, Sr., grew up in Wilmington. His mother was, the son of Ida Mae Rogers Kellerhan Stallings, a civil rights activist and one of the mothers of the welfare rights movement in Delaware. Rogers was a teenager in 1968 and, with his mother and siblings, was very active in the civil rights movement. Interview conducted by TAHIRA (interviewer) and David Kim (notetaker). Additional notes by Rebecca Johnson Melvin.en-USNewark (Del.)Wilmington (Del.)University of DelawareStudents for a Democratic Society (U.S.)Delaware National GuardDemocratic National Convention (1968 : Chicago, Ill.)Wilmington (Del.)--History--20th centuryDelaware--History--20th centuryNewark (Del.)--Race relations--History--20th centuryOral History--Delaware--20th centuryJournalism--Delaware--History--20th centuryStudent movementsReview (University of Delaware)Heterodoxical voiceInterview with E. Poppa Rogers, Sr, 2018 November 10MSS 08581050365803