Skylar Church, Salt Lake City, Utah: an interview by Michael McLane, 4 November 2011

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Title Skylar Church, Salt Lake City, Utah: an interview by Michael McLane, 4 November 2011
Alternative Title No. 695 Skylar Church
Creator Church, Skylar
Contributor McLane, Michael
Publisher Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah
Date 2011-11-04
Access Rights I acknowledge and agree that all information I obtain as a result of accessing any oral history provided by the University of Utah's Marriott Library shall be used only for historical or scholarly or academic research purposes, and not for commercial purposes. I understand that any other use of the materials is not authorized by the University of Utah and may exceed the scope of permission granted to the University of Utah by the interviewer or interviewee. I may request permission for other uses, in writing to Special Collections at the Marriott Library, which the University of Utah may choose grant, in its sole discretion. I agree to defend, indemnify and hold the University of Utah and its Marriott Library harmless for and against any actions or claims that relate to my improper use of materials provided by the University of Utah.
Date Digital 2015-07-08
Spatial Coverage Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/5780993/
Subject Church, Skylar--Interviews; Occupy movement--Utah--Salt Lake City; Political activists--Utah--Salt Lake City--Biography
Description Transcript (xx pages) of an interview by Michael McLane with Skylar Church on 4 November 2011. Part of the Occupy Salt Lake City Oral History Project, Everett Cooley Collection tape no. U-3107
Abstract Skylar Church, activist son of an understanding but hardly radical family, discusses the Occupy Salt Lake City movement. He recalls that the movement grew enormously following the creation of an Occupy Salt Lake Facebook forum, reporting that the movement grew by five thousand people in one day. His interview especially stresses the harmonious aspect of the movement, and he discusses the Occupiers´ democratic organizational structure, equating Occupiers with LDS missionaries, as ambassadors of their movement. He talks about the Occupiers´ attempts to educate themselves and the homeless people they shared Pioneer Park with, down to having an "Ask an Occupier" booth for the public. As a self-described public relations man, his attention is very much on the way the community interacted with the Occupiers, and he mentions Seth Walker and Seth Neeley as key public relations men for the movement. Mr. Church´s view of the Occupy movement´s roots and growth in Utah is closely tied to Utah history - he asserts that Utah was, in a sense, founded by activists, and believes its squatter´s rights provision protected the occupiers, though he expresses hopes that the LDS Church might play a major supporting role in the future. He touches briefly on education and immigration as national themes as well, and mentions the movement´s cross-state nature as some Salt Lake City Occupiers came from Portland and other cities. Project: Occupy Salt Lake. Interviewer: Michael McLane
Type Text
Genre oral histories (literary works)
Format application/pdf
Language eng
Rights Digital Image © 2015 Utah State Historical Society. All Rights Reserved.
Is Part of Occupy Salt Lake City Oral History Project
Scanning Technician Niko Amaya; Halima Noor
Conversion Specifications Original scanned with Kirtas 2400 and saved as 400 ppi uncompressed TIFF. PDF generated by Adobe Acrobat Pro X for CONTENTdm display.
ARK ark:/87278/s6x0831m
Topic Occupy movement; Political activists
Setname uum_elc
ID 836946
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6x0831m
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