Refine
Date Range Clear
Recorded by Clear
Keywords Clear
- Skiing 1204
- college 428
- personal experiences 1204
- anecdotes (humorous but true stories) 403
- Aesop’s Fables 1204
- favorite hangouts and haunts 1204
- memories of growing up 728
- memories of former times 520
- social beliefs and practices 448
- Spouse 430
- school day memories 357
- 8,896 more
Partnerships Clear
- 2023 Mobile Tour 13
- WVPE 9
- WTIP 7
- Innisfree Village 6
- KUOW 6
- El Paso, TX 5
- WERU 5
- WGBH Educational Foundation 5
- COVID-19 American History Project 4
- Voices of Freedom 4
- UT Austin: McCombs School of Business 4
- WUTC 4
- Community Voices of Lake Geneva 3
- KHOL 3
- KRCB 3
- Taos, NM 3
- Albuquerque, NM 2
- Native Bound Unbound 2
- American Pilgrimage Project 1
- Hauser & Wirth 1
- KUNR 1
- Marfa, TX 1
- Minot Sleeper Library 1
- VPR 1
Organizations Clear
- No matching terms.
Places Clear
Languages Clear
Initiatives Clear
Three friends talk about their passion for fishing and the all-woman fishing club to which they belong.
Sisters, Patricia Panatier (55) and Irene Gilmore (60), remember their brother, Chris Panatier, who worked for Cantor Fitzgerald, and was killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center.
Two women, Fannie and Ettalie, reflect on their lives, family was gathered in Montana for the 80th birthday of Ettalie.
Rebecca Salant, 16, and her brother Max Salant, 16, talk with their siblings, Ilana Salant, 16, and Jacob Salant, 17, about their trip to Mexico.
Siegfried Buss (78) talks with daughter Frieda Nossaman (?) about being a German missionary living in Japan.
Donna Lancaster, 78, is interviewed by friend Mindy Reed, 54. Dorothy was born without knee or hip joints and speaks about how her parents raised her to make her own choices and how she overcame the challenges she face in...
William ‘Bill’ Creasy (82) and his daughter Susan Creasy (51) talk about his childhood in Wilmington and Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina.
Jack Powell was a poor kid from literally the wrong side of the tracks who went to college on an athletic scholarship and became a rare-earth chemist who purified uranium for the Manhattan scholarship. He says, “losing my football scholarship...
Betty Standfill (65) and her daughter Tiffany Laposi (40) have a conversation about BS’s children, her mother, her husband Clyde, and the place she grew up, Amboy, WA.
Cherilyn Evans (63) tells facilitator Daniel Littlewood (32) about how she moved from Los Angeles to Ukiah, California.
Mutt Murray talks to his neighbor Sam Schropp about growing up with horses, farming with his family, and learning to fly small planes.
Kristin Ingersoll interviews her husband Joel Krause about his childhood moving from New Jersey to Indiana and back, art school, his first marriage, and his children and grandchildren.
Susan Di Christina (40) interviews her mother-in-law, Joan Di Christina (73) about Joan’s family ancestry and the history of the Erie Canal.
Michael Doyle, 39, tells StoryCorps facilitator Virginia Lora, 24, about his experience on September 11, 2001, the impact that the terrorists attacks on that day had on him, and his decision to leave his hometown of New York for Chicago.
Glen Waggoner (61) talks with his friend Daniel Okrent (61) about the death of his father, their love of baseball, and growing up in a small town.
Hazel Diaz (36) interviews her new friend Alexandria Suthard (51) about her extensive career working as an international pilot for the Air Force and for the State Department.
Courtney and Mary have been friends since the 1970s and they came in to memorialize the 2 men who they apprenticed with as carpenters.
A mother tells her son about growing up during the Depression and her experience as young adult.
Ann Akana (66) talks with her friend and former teacher Tricia L. Grant (29) about her family and what it means to be Hawaiian.
James Ritter, 85, tells his daughter Mary Wolfe, 49, about his work as a public school music education teacher.
Margot Moinester, 22, and Arielle Moinester, 30, ask their mother, Susan Moinester, 56, about her parents who survived the Holocaust.
Bill HInes, 66, interviews his mother-in-law Charlee Kambert, 87, about her life, writing and the plays she wrote and performed around the country.
Larry tells Martha about his family and the impact his father and uncle had on his life.