Refine
Date Range Clear
Recorded by Clear
Keywords Clear
- history of medicine 683
- family in-jokes 683
- horse breeding 683
- Appearance 683
- Spouse 572
- school day memories 604
- memories of growing up 683
- personal experiences 681
- memories of former times 471
- anecdotes (humorous but true stories) 339
- social beliefs and practices 317
- college 299
- 6,943 more
Partnerships Clear
- WGBH Educational Foundation 3
- WVPE 3
- Community Voices of Lake Geneva 1
- Providence 1
- Providence Institute for Human Caring 1
- WERU 1
Organizations Clear
- Dougherty County Schools 8
- Gary District High School Alumni Association 5
- Salve Regina University 5
- Albany High School 3
- Albany Junior College 2
- 78 more
Places Clear
Languages Clear
Initiatives Clear
Shayne Thomas and her dad John Thomas share their joint birthday in the booth. They talk about their family.
Stephanie tells stories of her big and dramatic family.
Keith Hinton (21) is interviewed by his teacher Diane Raab (44). Keith shares the memories of his school days and the challenges and joys of growing up blind. He also discusses the trails and tribulations of his first love.
Stacey Rees (42) is interviewed by her partner Erik Huber (47). They discuss Stacey’s life and that of their child Huckleberry.
Jennifer Colleen Nuchia (33) and her husband Stephen Nuchia (47) sit to talk about the loss of Jennifer’s daughter India to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and its effect on her family and their marriage.
Woman talks about mixed feelings of getting in touch with biological family
1st in a series of interviews with my father, Leland L. Cross, M.D., recorded on 4/18/2010 in Portland, Oregon. Recorded by Andrew B. Cross.
William McAllister was interviewed by his daughters, Lisa McAllister and Amy Farges, as well as his grandson, Julien Farges. They talked about William’s life growing up, the Depression, WWII, William’s return to college after the war, his Masters and PhD,...
Nicole Dummitt (44) and her husband Robert (Bob) Dummitt (45) talk about their road to becoming parents.
Jack talks with his daughter about his small-town childhood, his work in finance, and his thoughts about his future.
Darlene Lodge, 80, talks with her daughter, Lynn Payne, 56, about growing up in Cedar Rapids, Iowa during the Depression and about her marriages to Lynn’s father and to Donald Lodge.
June Mullan Reeves (83) tells her daughter, Amy Spiker (42), of her childhood during the Great Depression and of her work in Akron, OH, during World War II.
Camille Gendell (67) interviews her mother Doris Chesson (92) about her life in Norfolk.
Earl S. Elliott, Jr., 84, talks to his grandson C. Nathan Elliott, 31, about his family history and his life.
Barry Benepe talks to his son Adrian Benepe about growing up with a love of nature, his process of learning about art, and the Greenmarket in New York that he founded
Richard Huff and his wife, Agnes Huff, remember her parents who were killed in a car accident 2 years ago.
daughter interviews her 80-yr-old dad about his childhood in Boyle Heights L.A., and his thoughts on the Japanese American internment, and on how his sense of justice has been an inspiration to her.
Lynette D. Bates (47) talks with her brother Larnell Bates, Jr. (51) about family, parenting and good teachers.
Shonnie Lavender, 37, is interviewed by her husband, Bruce Mulkey, 65, about her life and their life together.
A woman talks about growing up in South Dakota and her married life.
J Ernest Du Bois (82) talks with former student Maranne McDadeClay (43) about his childhood education, teaching at The School Without Walls and what he learned from his career.
Barbara Brown interviews her mother, Mathilda Tibby Brown, about her career in Suffolk County Family Court, and about being the mother of four children.
David Esrati, 42, interviews his father, Stephen Esrati, 83, about leaving Germany before WWII, travelling to Israel and eventually the United States.
Lusi Balzano talks to her old Navy supervisor and friend about her anger at the Navy in regards to domestic violence, and how they fail to take action.