The Archive
50 Stories
My Parents Taught Me That Voting Wasn’t Optional
We Integrated an All-White School. Then We Were Evicted.
After Jim Crow, I Saw New Orleans’ Black Middle Class Thrive. Then Came ‘Jeff Crow.’
We Desegregated a New Orleans School Before Ruby Bridges. History Forgot Us.
Shoe Repairman in Gary Restores Community, One Sole at a Time
My Sit-Down With MLK’s Father in 1968 Sparked My Passion to Feed Atlanta’s Homeless
I Witnessed the ‘Whites Only’ Signs Come Down. Then I Saw What Replaced Them.
I Watched Atlanta Police Kill an Unarmed Black Man in 1966. It Changed My Life.
I Wish My Generation Had Our Own ‘A Different World’
We Used to Watch All the Neighbors’ Kids
A Customer Told Me She Picked Cotton. I Saw My Story, Too.
I Make Art in New Orleans, Knowing It Will Disappear
I Was the First Black Graduate of UGA, and I Was Treated Like a Trespasser
I Almost Lost My Arm After Katrina. But Nothing Could Make Me Leave Home.
My Cousin Emmett Till Was Bigger Than Life. I Was With Him the Night He Was Killed.
I’m From Little Haiti, the Part of Miami Tourists Never See
I’ve Been Shooting Polaroids of Black New Orleans Since 1984. There’s No Archive Like Mine.
The Women Who Raised Me Never Taught Me to Fear White People
I Never Tried to Stop Being Southern