Home > Items Browse Items (2170 total) Sort by: Title Subject Date Added Keith Edwards Keith Edwards Keith Edwards - On Carrboro, gentrification, and white students' involvement in the Civil Rights Movement "You couldn't have the expression of anger because you knew what this person was doing. Because your actions would not have come back on you, it would have come back on your parents." - Keith Edwards Edwards discusses her life in Carrboro and how she felt safe within the Black community but unsafe… Keith Edwards - On Carrboro, gentrification, and white students' involvement in the Civil Rights Movement Keith Edwards - On growing up in Carrboro and the role of teachers “The thing I remember the most coming up in the Black community, the Black community supported the schools, not only financially, but they also supported the schools by parents having involvement in the children’s schooling.” - Keith Edwards Keith Edwards was born in 1950 and grew up in Carrboro and… Keith Edwards - On growing up in Carrboro and the role of teachers Keith Edwards - On housing and gentrification in Northside Keith Edwards has lived at the same address on McDade St. in Northside since she was born but now resides in a different house, built with support from a development grant that Chapel Hill received in the early 1970s. She became the first black female police officer at UNC in 1974 and later won a… Keith Edwards - On housing and gentrification in Northside Keith Edwards - On race in Chapel Hill compared to Carrboro This interview is part of an oral history project called Southern Communities: Listening for a Change: Mighty Tigers--Oral HIstories of Chapel Hill's Lincoln High School. The interviewes were conducted from 2000-2001, by Bob Gilgor, with former teachers, staff, and students from Chapel Hill, N.C.'s… Keith Edwards - On race in Chapel Hill compared to Carrboro Keith Edwards - On school integration and civil rights This interview is part of an oral history project called Southern Communities: Listening for a Change: Mighty Tigers--Oral HIstories of Chapel Hill's Lincoln High School. The interviewes were conducted from 2000-2001, by Bob Gilgor, with former teachers, staff, and students from Chapel Hill, N.C.'s… Keith Edwards - On school integration and civil rights Keith Edwards - On the future of Northside and the impact of the Jackson Center "After a while the only Blacks you will see in this community will be those going to the churches but not living here." - Keith Edwards Keith Edwards discusses the impact the Jackson Center and student organizations on the Northside community as well as the challenges posed by ongoing gentrification… Keith Edwards - On the future of Northside and the impact of the Jackson Center Keith Edwards - On the importance of food “Sundays were always a special day. That whole day was made into just like a holiday. - Keith Edwards This interview includes Keith Edwards’s viewpoint on the importance of food in the home and in the community. She recalls specific recipes in the interview. Edwards was born and raised in Carrboro… Keith Edwards - On the importance of food Keith Edwards and Barbara Ross This interview is part of a group of interviews conducted by Susan Simone exploring the lives and struggle of various members of the Northside community: a historically black and primarily residential neighborhood located immediately northwest of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and… Keith Edwards and Barbara Ross Keith, Student Renter on Sunset Drive Keith, Student Renter on Sunset Drive Kelven Hargraves Kelven Hargraves Kelven Hargraves - On memories and changes at Hargraves (clip) Kelven Hargraves remembers attending nursery school and playing sports at Hargraves and the changes he has seen at the Center since the days when it had an orange dirt path instead of a sidewalk. He talks about the Center giving young people in the Black community a safe place to go to play and… Kelven Hargraves - On memories and changes at Hargraves (clip) Kenneth Mann Kenneth Mann Kennon Cheek/Rebecca Clark Building The Kennon Cheek/Rebecca Clark building was built in the 1920s to house the university laundry. It was renamed in 1998 to honor Kennon Cheek, a former janitor in Venable Hall and first president of the university janitor's association, and Rebecca Clark, who worked as a housekeeper at the Carolina… Kennon Cheek/Rebecca Clark Building Kevin, Student Renter on Sunset Drive Kevin, Student Renter on Sunset Drive Kids at Frangelism 2007 Kids at Frangelism 2007 Kling Stubbons Consultant Kling Stubbons Consultant Knotts Funeral Home "My uncle ran a funeral home here. Bynum Weaver Funeral Home (Chapel Hill Funeral Home), which is now on Graham Street. Actually, the original funeral home is still on Graham Street but is Knotts Funeral Home now. But that was my uncle’s funeral home." - Kathy Atwater Located at 113 N. Graham… Knotts Funeral Home Lampstand Lampstand Laura Reeves Laura Reeves Lavisha Williams Lavisha Williams Lavisha Williams - On food, cooking, and eating Lavisha Williams grew up with her maternal grandparents as part of the household, and learned to cook watching them and her parents. Most of the foods and meals she grew up with had been passed down from her great-grandparents without cookbooks or precise recipes. Most of what she ate with her… Lavisha Williams - On food, cooking, and eating Learning Economic Vocabulary through Businesses in Our Community Using case studies of local Black-owned businesses, students will learn key economic vocabulary terms and be able to explain how those terms apply to real world situations in their own community. NC Standard Course of Study: 2.E.1.1 Give examples of ways in which businesses in the community meet… Learning Economic Vocabulary through Businesses in Our Community Leaving Saving OurSelves Leaving Saving OurSelves Previous Page ... 47 48 49 50 51 ... Next Page