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Katherine Council - On education, changes in the community, and racial discrimination
“I really think with children, it didn’t matter. It was the adults that were having problems.” (In reference to integration)
- Katherine "Mama Kat" Council
Ms. Council, fondly known as Mama Kat, grew up on a farm in Chapel Hill down Jones Ferry Road and has lived in various places in the area her…
Katherine Council - On education, changes in the community, and racial discrimination
Katherine Council - On food, cooking, and recipes
In this interview, Mama Kat, a cooking and baking extraordinaire, shares some of her kitchen expertise including tips and favorite recipes. Mama Kat learned how to cook from her parents and grandparents, and now writes down her recipes in cookbooks for others to follow. She discusses how products…
Katherine Council - On food, cooking, and recipes
Katherine Council - On growing up in Chapel Hill and changes in the neighborhood
In Molly Norwood’s interview of Katherine “Mama Kat” Council, Council begins by describing what life was like when she was growing up in Chapel Hill. She describes how open and geographically spread out the neighborhood was, how she was constantly playing with the other children in the neighborhood,…
Katherine Council - On growing up in Chapel Hill and changes in the neighborhood
Katherine Council - On her childhood, family, and changes in Northside
This interview provides an overview of the place and birth of Mama Kat. Her house burnt down in 1962. She notes the change in neighbors versus before. She had children graduating from college. Her 3 kids were in college at the same time. The last baby was born with down syndrome. She recounts the…
Katherine Council - On her childhood, family, and changes in Northside
Katherine Council - On her children and growing up outside of Carrboro
In this impromptu interview done at Heavenly Groceries Food Ministry, Katherine “Mama Kat” Council tells us what it was like growing up right outside of Carrboro back in the 1930’s. She recalls how for a while her family had to use a wagon to get to Hamlet’s Chapel CME on Sundays. She also discusses…
Katherine Council - On her children and growing up outside of Carrboro
Katherine Council - On her pound cake recipe
In this interview, Mama Kat gives us her coveted pound cake recipe, which she knows from memory because she makes it so often.
Katherine Council - On her pound cake recipe
Katherine Council - On home, family, and changes in Chapel Hill
In this interview, Katherine “Mama Kat” Council talks about home and family. She discusses her parents, including her father’s death and her mother’s garden, and she describes where she grew up in rural Chapel Hill. Growing up was very different when Mama Kat was a child; she went to work and…
Katherine Council - On home, family, and changes in Chapel Hill
Katherine Council and Lillian Alston - On Heavenly Groceries, St. Joseph's Church, and the importance of volunteering
This interview is a part of the Marian Cheek Jackson Center’s A Place at the Table series. Katherine Council and Lillian Alston talk about their time volunteering with Heavenly Groceries. Katherine describes the origin of the food ministry before both women discuss their ties to the community and…
Katherine Council and Lillian Alston - On Heavenly Groceries, St. Joseph's Church, and the importance of volunteering

Kathy Atwater
"There would not be a University if there had not been the Blacks in this community to help build the University."
- Kathy Atwater
Kathy Atwater is a native of Chapel Hill and has lived in the Northside Community all of her life. Having retired from the State of NC after 30 years of service, Kathy…
Kathy Atwater

Kathy Atwater
Kathy Atwater
Kathy Atwater - Everybody was just family (clip)
Kathy Atwater: Everybody was just family. I mean even in the neighborhood with the families that were in the neighborhood we all looked after one another- nobody was left to themselves. If I did something wrong, of course the neighbors would, you know, tell me “Kathy you shouldn’t do that,” and then…
Kathy Atwater - Everybody was just family (clip)
Kathy Atwater - On faith
Kathy Atwater - On faith
Kathy Atwater - On food
Ms. Atwater gives an overview of food access in the community when she was growing up and how her family’s attitudes toward food have developed over the course of her life. Starting with a discussion of her mother’s kitchen and garden, she describes the role of food in her family and in the…
Kathy Atwater - On food
Kathy Atwater - On gardens (clip)
Kathy Atwater - On gardens (clip)
Kathy Atwater - On home, community, and Northside
In the beginning of the interview, Ms. Atwater describes the history of her home, growing up in her neighborhood, and the significance of keeping her home in the family in order to continue an ongoing legacy. To Ms. Atwater, a home is more than a place of residence; it is a memorial, it is the…
Kathy Atwater - On home, community, and Northside
Kathy Atwater - On the kitchen (clip)
Kathy Atwater - On the kitchen (clip)
Kathy Atwater and Mae McLendon - On their school experiences
"...informed me to take this letter home to your mama ‘Cause you are going to Chapel High School next year.’ And I said, ‘No, I’m not’. And they said, ‘Yes you are.’ Cause they hand-picked the Blacks that they would send to Chapel Hill High School."
- Mae McLendon
In this oral history, Ms. Mae and…
Kathy Atwater and Mae McLendon - On their school experiences
Katie Byerly, Hannah Friedman, and Carolina Phillips - On Sustaining OurSelves and being student renters in Northside
“Something I’ve been thinking about lately is that I think of myself as a student that’s here for four years. I think of my contributions, both negative and positive to this area and people who live here, as a temporary thing. I think that’s really problematic, because I’m a temporary student, but…
Katie Byerly, Hannah Friedman, and Carolina Phillips - On Sustaining OurSelves and being student renters in Northside

Katie Mimmack’s visual interpretation of Keith Edward’s oral history.
Katie Mimmack’s visual interpretation of Keith Edward’s oral history.
Kay Gattis
Kay Gattis
Kay Gattis - On her life as a caregiver and her faith
And that’s my life, it's all about Ms. Kay, and I’m still going to help until the day I die. If they need help, I’m going to do it.
- Kay Gattis
Ms. Kay Gattis describes her upbringing in Chapel Hill, with her parents and eight siblings. She described how she took on the role of the caregiver after…
Kay Gattis - On her life as a caregiver and her faith
Keely Hargraves
Keely Hargraves
Keely Hargraves - On learning how to swim (clip)
Keely Hargraves recalls learning to swim at Hargraves when she was nine years old.
Keely Hargraves - On learning how to swim (clip)

Keith Edwards
"You can only hold stuff in for so long."
- Keith Edwards
Keith Edwards is a native of Chapel Hill and has been a leader in the community for decades. Keith was one of the first black students to integrate Chapel Hill Junior High School in seventh grade. Ms. Keith later went on to work as a police…
Keith Edwards