Refine
Date Range Clear
Recorded by Clear
Keywords Clear
- Black 18
- children 18
- Lawyer 18
- African-american 18
- Marriage 10
- Childhood memories 5
- Family 5
- 1940s, Forties 2
- adoption 2
- 126 more
Partnerships Clear
- No matching terms.
Organizations Clear
Places Clear
Languages Clear
Initiatives Clear
- No matching terms.
Grandmother Betty Hansel discusses her life growing up on a farm in rural Virginia before tragically losing her parents and beginning life on her own. She discusses the evolution of her faith in God and the role that Christianity has...
[Recorded January 31, 2021] Tim Towslee, 44, and Allison Swingle, 31, participate in a One Small Step conversation via Zoom. They talk about their work in outdoor education, the impact of having a parent pass away, how their political views...
We talked about who my father is and the things and people in his life that are significant to him.
[Recorded: Friday, September 2nd, 2022] Lillian (20) and Donna (68) have a One Small Step conversation in Charlottesville, Virginia. Lillian is a Third Year student at the University of Virginia studying public policy, leadership, and religious studies. Donna is the...
Anojewel Broadnax, my aunt, discusses her childhood, regrets, experiences and how they shaped her into the person she is today. My aunt also provides a little background of her identity.
Interview with my little sister about her perspective of our relationship as sisters with a large age gap, different fathers, and different personalities.
Julia Torres: 2020-04-23 00:35:37 Married for 26 years, John and Julia are navigating their long-distance marriage impacted by the Coronavirus Pandemic. They share their emotions, logistical challenges, teachable moments and hopes for surviving this crisis.
"And he did have beautiful auburn hair" Recorded in December 2017: Granddaughter Aislinn (25) asks her grandparents, Pat and Owen Wright (both 84), about their decision to adopt five children between the 1960-70s.
Second part of talking to Grandpa Skip after microphone cut out
A Nana tells her grandson what it was like growing up in the country and city during the Second World War, being Black in segregated America, and other challenges she faced later in life.