Refine
Date Range Clear
Recorded by Clear
Keywords Clear
- American history 18
- CCP 29
- African American History 29
- Black history 8
- Racism 5
- African American 4
- 295 more
Partnerships Clear
Organizations Clear
- Glenbrook South High School 1
- Living History Project 1
- Marsh & McLennan 1
- mercer 1
- New Chapel Church Trenton Mississippi 1
- 5 more
Places Clear
Languages Clear
Initiatives Clear
Friends Norman Hatter (79) and Steven McCutchan (80) discuss meeting civil rights leaders Martin Luther King Jr., and Stokely Carmichael. They talk about guiding their churches through racism and racial equity as they both have served different types of Christian...
Wayne Curtis (67) speaks with his wife, Joycelyn Curtis (66), about his business Mobile Alabama Africatown Drummers. They discuss how drumming can positively impact mental health, the importance of teaching music to young people, and the historical significance of African...
Kiplyn Primus (61) talks with her conversation partner Ralph Baker (71) about his ancestor Jesse Maxwell Barber and the 1906 Atlanta Race Massacre.
This is an Oral History Interview with my grandmother, Patricia Leonard. I interview her on her experiences living in Philadelphia and on her knowledge on the Colonial America period.
Hattie Soil ponders her faith and the Civil Rights movement from Mount Pleasant, Mississippi to Memphis, Tennessee; Chicago, Illinois to Las Vegas Nevada.
Oral history about attending the last segregated school, Hygienic School, in Steelton, Pennsylvania. Interview conducted on 13 November 2018.
As America's Covid-19 cases continue to multiply, the virus exposes inequity throughout our society and claims a disproportionate number of black lives. Citizen Advocate, Derona King is healing racial trauma by promoting good health and nutritional wellness with Zilphy's Garden...
2024 Black History Month project for my African American History class
Friends Carolyn Michael-Banks (66) and Menelik Fombi (68) speak about Fombi’s experiences as a member of the “Memphis Thirteen,” a group of Black students that integrated Memphis’s segregated school system at the elementary level.