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There Went The Neighborhood: Old Neighborhood Walking Tour

This filmed walking tour was created during production of There Went The Neighborhood: The Closing of Jones School by the Ann Arbor District Library and 7 Cylinders Studio (7CS). Led by three former Jones School students–Roger Brown, Cheryl (Jewett) O’Neal, and Omer Jean (Dixon) Winborn–the tour describes changes that have taken place in the neighborhood surrounding the school over the past several decades. Key stops in order of appearance include the former Jones School, Ann Street Black Business District, Dunbar Center, Bethel AME Church, Wheeler Park, and Second Baptist Church.

The route (although filmed in a different order) was inspired by the Living Oral History Project’s Walking Tour of a Historically Black Neighborhood in Ann Arbor, which was created in partnership between the African American Cultural and Historical Museum of Washtenaw County (AACHM) and the Ann Arbor District Library. Check out that tour to view these locations in person alongside historical photographs and interview excerpts!
 

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Sesquicentennial Interview: Letty Wickliffe

This interview was conducted in 1974 as part of the I Remember When television series produced by the Ann Arbor Public Library.

Jesse Hill and Letty Wickliffe Study Housing Map, August 1972 Photographer: Cecil Lockard

Jesse Hill and Letty Wickliffe Study Housing Map, August 1972 image
Year:
1972
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, August 20, 1972
Caption:
Jesse Hill and Letty Wickliffe Review City Needs At CCE Office

Letty Wickliffe Wins Liberty Bell Award, May 1973 Photographer: Cecil Lockard

Letty Wickliffe Wins Liberty Bell Award, May 1973 image
Year:
1973
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, May 2, 1973
Caption:
Letty Wickliffe Accepts Award From Jack Dobson
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AADL Productions Podcast: Lola Jones and Carol Gibson

Lola Jones and Carol Gibson are well-known to anyone familiar with Ann Arbor history. Over the past 30 years they have sought out and documented the history of the African American experience in Ann Arbor through a series of projects under the moniker Another Ann Arbor; it is largely through their work that the Ann Arbor African American story is a part of our shared community identity. Lola and Carol stopped by the library to talk with us one day about the work they have done over the years and where they are headed next. They shared with us some of the interesting people and events they have learned about and brought to the community in their television program, their documentaries, and their book. You can now watch one of their documentaries online at aadl.org in our video collection. A Woman's Town was produced in 1991 and tells the story of Ann Arbor through the voices of prominent African American women.