"I remember distinctly when I first went to school"
Eliga Diggs talks about first going to school at age 10 with his younger brother Lester.
Theme: Education






Through his mother, Minnie Lee Young Diggs, Eliga Diggs is descended from Reuben and Susan Scott, enslaved foreman and domestic servant, brought to northern Alabama by Jefferson's great-grandson William Stuart Bankhead in 1846. From the age of eight Diggs had to work hard on the family tenant farm, on land rented from Bankhead’s descendants, the Hotchkiss family. He served two years in the U. S. Army, had various construction jobs, and was a control room operator at a paper mill when he retired. He has been active in local civic organizations and once ran for mayor of North Courtland.
Eliga and Doris Owens Diggs have four children, one of whom married professional baseball player Gary Redus. While he didn’t hear stories of the Scotts, he remembers hearing about his great-grandmother Mildred Scott Young, who loved roses: “The roses are still at the old home site there.”
7 July 2003, Courtland, AL
Interviewees: Eliga Diggs, Doris Diggs
Eliga Diggs talks about first going to school at age 10 with his younger brother Lester.
Theme: Education
Eliga Diggs describes the work he did in the cotton fields as a child before he started school.
Theme: Achievement
Eliga Diggs explains why he never wanted to move away from Courtland, AL and the importance of family roots.
Theme: Family
Eliga Diggs describes how racial discrimination affected him growing up.
Theme: Racial Prejudice
Eliga Diggs discusses the civil rights movement, Martin Luther King's dream, and running for mayor of North Courtland.
Eliga Diggs discusses the importance of knowing his family history.
Theme: Family
Eliga Diggs and his wife Doris describe their family and their pride in their family's success.
Theme: Family