Lost Voice of Cincinnati - West End Film Short

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
  • On July 17th, the Urban Roots podcast participated in the ArtsWave Truth & Reconciliation Grantee Showcase at the Freedom Center. We featured a video comprised of a photograph slide show of the West End alongside the audio from a portion of our prelude episode titled “Cincinnati History is Black History.”
    The archival photos used in the Urban Roots prelude video were provided to us by the Robert O’Neal Multicultural Arts Center, an organization that is working to save the historic Regal Theatre in the West End by turning it into a community space.
    Visit www.urbanrootspodcast.com to learn more!

Комментарии • 63

  • @staceyhuckleby7058
    @staceyhuckleby7058 Год назад +19

    Omg that is my Great Uncle. His name is Robert Lee O’Neal. He was an artist who was also very active in our community. Actually my whole family is. He passed away most recently. It’s nice to see him in this light. Especially in the city’s history. Thank you!❤

    • @floydthompson8668
      @floydthompson8668 Год назад

      Is this the same family of gospel artist Todd O'Neal?

    • @staceyhuckleby7058
      @staceyhuckleby7058 Год назад

      @@floydthompson8668 yes that’s my Uncle too!

    • @floydthompson8668
      @floydthompson8668 Год назад

      @@staceyhuckleby7058 HI STACEY!!! I grew up in Bond Hill on Portman around the corner from where Todd grew up, I also went to Woodward. I remember after Todd graduated, I think in 1980, a year or two later he came back to lead Woodward's gospel chior a number of years. Long before that, when the brothers had their band, they would play in their garage. You could hear them play all over the north east side of Bond Hill in the summer, like a free concert! People would sit on their porch to listen. I have a lot of wonderful memories of the O'Neal family from my childhood and early adulthood. I think my fondest memory is of Mrs. O'Neal, Todd's mom. She used to walk almost everyday. When she would pass our house, she would always stop and talk with us for a while. I no longer live in Bond Hill. I miss seeing them. Todd knows me. He was good friends with my cousin when they attended Bond Hill Elementary School on California.

    • @urbanrootspodcast
      @urbanrootspodcast  11 месяцев назад +1

      OMG So you're cousins with Toilynn...she's a huge part of why this video was possible.

    • @cduett412
      @cduett412 7 месяцев назад

      My dad knew your Uncle they were good friends I also knew him.

  • @WenD1908
    @WenD1908 8 дней назад +1

    I grew up in the suburbs, my Dad spent his early years in the Lincoln Courts in West End. Now that I’m gone, I’m learning more about Cincinnati, particularly about our history there. I wish I had learned this much earlier.

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson8668 2 года назад +12

    As a Black person, we grow up learning history from our elders. This is why many of us are disgusted by they absence of it in school, and most documentaries about urban communities. Just because people are poor does not mean there was not HAPPINESS, PRIDE, AND COMMUNITY!

  • @jfdblues
    @jfdblues 4 месяца назад +3

    Thank you for this. Urban renewal broke up my family in the 70's. I am bi racial. My father is black. His family, all my grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, etc... lived on one street in Altoona, PA. In the late 70's, the city bought out all their homes and tore down everything. They built a highway over the place where they all lived. I now live in Cincinnati, have for the past 28 years. Breaks my heart. I am a blues and rock and roll guitar slinger. Don't know how i missed this project, but i am definitely about to start playing that "going to Cincinnati " song! Thank you!

  • @gendabing5417
    @gendabing5417 Год назад +8

    It's crazy how I never met my dad and he's always in these videos and I've heard soooooo many great things about him🥰🥰🥰🥰 I wish I could have met him..

  • @carolbray-johnson3702
    @carolbray-johnson3702 2 года назад +7

    It provided a history that is new to me and it brought back found memoires of living in the West End during the 1950s to the 2000s My heart belongs to the West End

  • @marklandwehr7604
    @marklandwehr7604 7 месяцев назад +2

    I'm from Cincinnati I really love this thanks❤

  • @ruthwoytsek7750
    @ruthwoytsek7750 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for this. I've lived in the tri-state area most of my life and didn't know a good portion of this! Such important history too!

  • @steveclark5357
    @steveclark5357 7 месяцев назад +2

    very well done, thank you for covering this subject,respect

  • @cduett412
    @cduett412 7 месяцев назад +2

    My dad played in the cotton club and playboy club his group was the Woody Evans Trio

  • @user-iy4zt6ov8n
    @user-iy4zt6ov8n 7 месяцев назад +3

    I been in cumminsville all my life ....

  • @MsJocelyn31
    @MsJocelyn31 21 день назад

    Omg… I really enjoyed this video! Thanks so much. A lot of my family migrated to Dayton. 😊🥰

  • @Babyface444
    @Babyface444 Год назад +6

    The fact that city council just apologized for that urban development plan is fascinating. Why now?

    • @lashunnalove8336
      @lashunnalove8336 Месяц назад +1

      However my grandmother is still alive and she wants payback for the property Cincinnati stole

    • @Leroy-tj9jg
      @Leroy-tj9jg Месяц назад

      Just read your comment. I visited the city three years ago. The people are very friendly and helpful. We visited some areas and was saddened by the levels of no growth in many of the black communities. Overall it's a nice city ​@@lashunnalove8336

  • @bcats1309
    @bcats1309 6 месяцев назад +2

    I lived in the Laurel Homes in 1940s and 1950s. I lived on the white side of Armory Ave. during segregation. I remember alot. I went to St. Josephs school. I was born in 1943. We were not segregated in Catholic school.

    • @theendseekers5497
      @theendseekers5497 Месяц назад

      Wow that's. Beautiful that u have all these memories ❤️. My dad and grandparents were from the courts. The Whiteheads

  • @ladyj199822
    @ladyj199822 2 года назад +3

    Rich information Urban Roots.
    Looking back so we can move forward.

  • @SaekredRebl
    @SaekredRebl Год назад +2

    This is so interesting and I'm glad I came across this video. Really wish local history was also taught in schools, not just the "general" history and/or Black history that's taught in all American schools

  • @jessicaj8083
    @jessicaj8083 2 года назад +4

    Great info. From Cincinnati and of course this stuff not taught in school

  • @ralph2108
    @ralph2108 2 года назад +4

    Great stuff I'll definitely be checking out the podcast

  • @bodainwonderland8917
    @bodainwonderland8917 7 месяцев назад +3

    Idgaf As long as I hear Cincinnati is where yur from I’ll be there 100😊

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson8668 2 года назад +2

    Just discovered your channel. THANK YOU.

  • @claudermiller
    @claudermiller Год назад +3

    I've talked about this for years. Is it any wonder there was so much discontent in the 60s after so many African American communities were destroyed? Connections that were formed over decades were wiped out overnight eliminating support systems that held community together.

    • @Leroy-tj9jg
      @Leroy-tj9jg Месяц назад +1

      @ claudermiller: I just read your comment. I visited there and learned so much about that city. I had no idea it used to be very vibrant and progressive. We spoke with some elders who gave us some important insight on how it all happened. We really appreciated the information they provided.

    • @claudermiller
      @claudermiller Месяц назад

      @Leroy-tj9jg Every time the city had a project, a highway, a stadium, a business park, it meant a well established black community would be bulldozed to make room for it. They even had the nerve to run a new major thoroughfare through the main black business district, forcing dozens of minority businesses to close, then naming it after Martin Luther King. Like it was a kind of cruel joke to name an ethnically cleansed neighborhood after him.

  • @Zazen777
    @Zazen777 2 года назад +2

    This is great. Where are the other ones that were supposed to be seen soonthereafter though?

  • @bodainwonderland8917
    @bodainwonderland8917 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing video I love if

  • @2Goiz_1ShanDA
    @2Goiz_1ShanDA 2 года назад +1

    😎I grew up here.. on those steps .in these alleys and tall buildings & meat shops off vine~ i live in s.florida now but im also over it and would like 2 buy an ol moneypit on the river back home 2 refurbish😉. Great job btw♥️

    • @Marvin.45
      @Marvin.45 8 месяцев назад +1

      I grew up in s.florida but live in Cincinnati. This town has grown on me, it wasn't so when I moved here.

  • @FredWilliamson-kt6xe
    @FredWilliamson-kt6xe 10 дней назад

    Media still stirs up trouble.

  • @2Goiz_1ShanDA
    @2Goiz_1ShanDA 2 года назад +1

    Aye that food stamp office was the Real Thing back n the day out there. smh .. was crazy in the 80s out there guys. 2worlds

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson8668 2 года назад +2

    PLEASE DO A VIDEO ON WEST COLLEGE HILL.

  • @sunofuniversedaud3561
    @sunofuniversedaud3561 11 месяцев назад +1

    The American Indian prosperous, and American because he created it off before he was ran off and label black or African-American

  • @fiddlemanextrordinaire
    @fiddlemanextrordinaire 5 месяцев назад

    gentrification everywhere is destroying the poor working class. count your blessings now because its all over soon. Lord Jesus Christ have mercy on us sinners and come now

  • @marthaball8029
    @marthaball8029 7 месяцев назад

    Black privledge????

  • @chrismathis9240
    @chrismathis9240 Год назад +2

    Ron DeSantis does not approve of thus video.

    • @jb-vb8un
      @jb-vb8un Год назад

      that DEMOCRAT KKK / CRT / 1619 project claim omits aoy facts - - thank you for declaring your support of the DEMOCRAT KKK

  • @BigElectricCat
    @BigElectricCat Год назад +1

    Oh stop the racist angle, it was geography that put the highway where it is .

    • @jb-vb8un
      @jb-vb8un Год назад

      note the CRT / 1619 omission of the anti-American DEMOCRAT KKK

    • @briangulley6027
      @briangulley6027 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not really the land was cheaper and the poor people Black and White didn't have the political power to fight it. With 20/20 hindsight they sould have bypassed the cities like what wound up happening with the circle freeways.

    • @marthaball8029
      @marthaball8029 7 месяцев назад

      Bull $hit...

    • @hjr228
      @hjr228 2 месяца назад +1

      I'm sure it was geography.... everytime... all throughout the country.... to the same group of people.

    • @BigElectricCat
      @BigElectricCat 2 месяца назад

      @@hjr228 yes sometimes, but do you really know the topography of the northern ky area, they would have to go at least 15 miles to either side to go around. And I don’t know about much but that seems unrealistic.I am sorry about people who happened to live in the way of the path of destruction but life sucks, wtf are you gonna do against the power of the state. They were dealt a shit hand in the game of life, many people are of all races. Life sucks