Tuesday, September 15, 2009
CWCW, Pt. 3: Looking the Great Depression in the Mirror
A new audio feature from the project aired this morning on NCPR's morning news program The Eight O'Clock Hour.
Labels: audio features, chelsea, Elders, geofeed, Great Depression
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Drafted to Serve: Bill Cullen's Stories From the War
Labels: Billcullen, chelsea, cwcw, geofeed
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
"These hands have..."
Bill Cullen's hands have conducted a speech choir, Ann Huntley's have nursed a baby calf, and Jenn Sibert's have laced figure skates. As we went around the room, talking about what our hands had done, the conversation turned nostalgic. Ann Huntley pulled out a black and white photograph of her large family standing in front of a house. She remembered daring her little brothers to stick their tongues against a cold pipe in winter, and I felt a strong sense of family. Even as she talked about dark periods of her life, about death and hard times, I felt at ease and happy to just be in the room with them. Listening to Roger recounting snowball fights at school and walking seven miles into town to see a movie, I felt a sense of peace. It felt like the natural order of things for us to be listening as he relived his childhood. And I felt sad in a way too, that in our society, it took a paid internship to bring us here, listening to our elders at last.
As our discussion ended, the Huntleys' packed away their memories in a small, white envelope. I didn't have time to feel longing to look at them further; the whole group was ushered into a circle, hands in the middle. Young and old laughed and talked, our hands touching. The camera flashed. I laughed as Ruth started singing the hokey pokey. Our group broke up as arrangements were made to meet again. Already, I couldn't wait to hear more stories.
Labels: Billcullen, chelsea, hands, Roger Huntley
Monday, July 20, 2009
The end of an auction era
The first audio feature from the project aired this morning on NCPR's morning news program The Eight O'Clock Hour. The piece featured CWCW elder Roger Huntley, presiding over his last public auction.
Labels: audio features, Brenna, chelsea, geofeed, Jennifer, Roger Huntley
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Zelda at 95
Zelda Thomas sat looking expectantly at me, her large glasses magnifying the wrinkles on her face. I thanked her for letting me talk to her as I squeezed a grey, rusted folding chair onto a section of hard concrete floor between the aging card table and another group of elders whose canes stuck out dangerously into aisles.
Zelda Thomas was born in 1914 and raised by her grandparents on their farm. She became a teacher at a one-room schoolhouse in Russell. "We made soup at school," she remembered. Students would have potatoes for lunch and then bring soup home for their families. For Zelda, the Depression happened so slowly she hardly noticed it. Living on a farm, her family was more self-sufficient than others who lived in town. "We had cows, pigs, chickens. That's what we must have eaten" she said.
Zelda is 95 years old and doesn't hear so well. Each time I asked her a question, she would lean in closer to me with her eyes closed, then lean back and open them as she answered. But not hearing well also has its advantages. Zelda's friends always want her to drive them around, because she never gets distracted by their talking.
Zelda Thomas was born in 1914 and raised by her grandparents on their farm. She became a teacher at a one-room schoolhouse in Russell. "We made soup at school," she remembered. Students would have potatoes for lunch and then bring soup home for their families. For Zelda, the Depression happened so slowly she hardly noticed it. Living on a farm, her family was more self-sufficient than others who lived in town. "We had cows, pigs, chickens. That's what we must have eaten" she said.
Zelda is 95 years old and doesn't hear so well. Each time I asked her a question, she would lean in closer to me with her eyes closed, then lean back and open them as she answered. But not hearing well also has its advantages. Zelda's friends always want her to drive them around, because she never gets distracted by their talking.
Labels: chelsea, Depression, geofeed, Norfolk, Observation, Picnic, Russell
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