
Black Foodways
In this video compiled from dozens of interviews from the Living Oral History Project and the There Went The Neighborhood Interview Archive, participants share their memories of food and food traditions in their families, including fishing on the Huron River, hosting Fourth of July barbecues, and even starting a restaurant.
The Living Oral History Project is a partnership between the African American Cultural & Historical Museum of Washtenaw County and the Ann Arbor District Library, providing a permanent home for 50+ interviews with Black community members collected over the past decade. The collection continues to grow with interviews added each year.
The There Went The Neighborhood Interview Archive contains 35 interviews that went into the research and making of a documentary film about the closing of Jones School, produced by the Ann Arbor District Library and 7 Cylinders Studio.

There Went The Neighborhood - Audio Interview: Fred Adams
Fred Adams attended Jones School from kindergarten through ninth grade, from 1937 to 1947. During junior high he played in the Intramural Football League against teams from Tappan and Slauson. He also recalls several Black-owned businesses on Ann Street, where his father worked.
More interviews are available in the There Went The Neighborhood Interview Archive.
There Went The Neighborhood - Studio Interview: Audrey Lucas
Audrey Lucas was a student at Jones School during the 1940s, from third to ninth grade. She recalls having white teachers and classmates of many ethnicities, primarily Black Americans and Greek Americans. At this time many Ann Arbor businesses were not welcoming to Black people.
This interview was filmed during the making of the documentary film There Went The Neighborhood: The Closing of Jones School, produced by the Ann Arbor District Library and 7 Cylinders Studio. More interviews are available in the There Went The Neighborhood Interview Archive.
Audrey Lucas Discusses Affirmative Action, October 1977 Photographer: Larry E. Wright

Year:
1977
On The Street: Affirmative Action

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Dunbar Community Center Trio Popular at Area Events, September 1954

Year:
1954
Ann Arbor News, September 29, 1954
Caption:
Something To Sing About: The Dunbar Community Center trio meets regularly at the center for informal singing about the piano. The trio also appears before local groups. It is one of several interest groups on the center's roster. Singers (left to right) are Audrey Sleet, Juanita Anderson and Delores Evans. Accompanying them at the piano is Mrs. Virginia Ellis, Center program director.
Learning About Copy Headlines And Deadlines - Junior Y-Teen Girls At Dunbar Center Publish Own Paper

Dunbar Community Center's Underlying Goal Is Bettering City's Human Relations
