Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title: | History Makers video oral history with Aaron Dixon Aaron Dixon
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Other authors / contributors: | Dixon, Aaron Floyd, interviewee.
Crowe, Larry F., interviewer.
Stearns, Scott, director of photography.
HistoryMakers (Video oral history collection), production company.
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Sound characteristics: | digital
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Digital file characteristics: | video file
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Notes: | Videographer, Scott Stearns. Larry Crowe, interviewer. Recorded Seattle, Washington 2007 October 24. Recorded Seattle, Washington 2008 June 6. Vendor-supplied metadata.
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Summary: | Community activist Aaron Floyd Dixon was born on January 2, 1949, in Chicago, Illinois. Dixon became one of the first African Americans to integrate the Seattle school system when he attended Queen Anne High School in 1963. In 1967, Dixon enrolled in Washington University where he was involved with the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and was a founding member of the Seattle Area Black Student Union. He helped to establish the Seattle chapter of the Black Panther Party in 1968. Dixon moved to Oakland, California, in 1972 where he served as a bodyguard for the Black Panther Party's chairperson Elaine Brown. Dixon worked on the campaign of Oakland mayor Lionel Wilson in 1978. He founded the non-profit Central House in 2002. In 2006, Dixon was nominated by the Green Party for U.S. Senate. In 2012, Dixon published a memoir, My People Are Rising: Memoir of a Black Panther Party Captain.
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