Newtown Alive

著者: Vickie Oldham Newtown Alive
  • サマリー

  • Newtown Alive is a podcast dedicated to the lives, memories and stories of the people of Newtown, Florida. Honoring the work that our predecessors did, while acknowledging the work left to do. For more information and all episodes visit our site: http://www.newtownalive.org/
    Copyright 2023 Vickie Oldham, Newtown Alive
    続きを読む 一部表示
activate_samplebutton_t1
エピソード
  • Sheila Sanders Talks About Her Drive From An Early Age to Fight For A Better Tomorrow
    2022/07/29

    Sheila Sanders has a sweet smile but

    don’t mistake it for weakness. She organized a boycott of the Sarasota Federal

    Bank as a third grader at Booker Elementary School. At that time, her class

    learned money management by filling out savings deposit slips for their

    pennies, dimes and nickels, but the students could not take tours of the bank

    as children from other schools did. Sanders persuaded her classmates to send

    deposits to Palmer Bank where they could tour.  Her actions foreshadowed

    future activism. The teenager proactively participated in the NAACP

    accompanying leaders John Rivers and Maxine Mays to local and state meetings. In

    high school, Sanders learned about the political process by reviewing the agenda

    of school board meetings and attended the meetings by taking the city bus.

    “Some things won’t be said just because you’re sitting there.” 

    Sanders, William “Flick” Jackson and

    John Rivers joined Dr. Edward E. James II as plaintiffs in a lawsuit against

    the City of Sarasota. They successfully pushed for single member district

    voting that opened the way for African American representation on the Sarasota

    City Commission.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    37 分
  • Willie Charles Shaw on How Booker High Made Him Into a Community Leader
    2022/07/29

    The memory of Sarasota Mayor Willie

    Charles Shaw is razor sharp.

     He was reared in “Black

    Bottom,” a swampy land in Newtown near Maple, Palmadelia and Goodrich Avenues.

    There were no streetlights or curbside mail delivery. Overtown had its own

    neighborhood with the same name because of its rich black soil. Shaw can

    quickly rattle off the locations of community landmarks, dirt paths, swimming

    holes, citrus trees and bus routes; and the names of neighbors. Newtown’s dusty

    roads were paved in 1968, but the first paved streets followed the route of the

    city transit bus. His grandmother and family members owned land along Orange

    Avenue and 31st Street. When there was a death in the neighborhood, Mrs.

    Herring, Fannie McDugle, and Mrs. James formed an unofficial neighborhood

    association with Mrs. Viola Sanders at the helm. The women collected food and

    flowers for grieving families. Shaw’s mother sewed a heart or a ribbon on the

    right sleeve of the bereaved.

     

    The retired letter carrier attended

    the Booker schools with teachers Barbara Wiggins, Mrs. McGreen, Prevell Carner

    Barber, Aravia Bennet Johnson, Foster Paulk, Esther Dailey, Coach Dailey, Janie

    Poe, and Turner Covington. “I would have to say that the entire learning

    experience at Booker groomed me into a leader. We were taught that you always

    had to be better, do better. You had to.”  

     

    Shaw was among the African American

    students who traveled on a bus across the Skyway Bridge to attend Gibbs Junior

    College. He served in the U.S. Air Force, then became a letter carrier

    following in the footsteps of Jerome Stephens, the first African American in

    Sarasota hired by the postal service.   

    続きを読む 一部表示
    54 分
  • Vickie Speaks with Mary Alice Simmons and Sheila Sanders About Their Lifelong Activism
    2022/07/29

    At age eight, Mary’s family moved to

    unit #10 in a public housing complex in Newtown. The differences between

    conditions in Overtown where they lived before, and the new complex were like

    night and day.

     The new apartment had a

    bathroom, electricity, a yard with grass, and sidewalks. Before that, their

    shotgun house had no running water. They pumped water for bathing, washing

    dishes and laundry.  There were three tubs to wash, rinse garments, and

    rinse again. Before Clorox, a boil pot whitened clothes. An outhouse 15 feet

    from the house was used. A portable oil stove was the major kitchen appliance

    and kerosene lamps provided light.  An imaginary boundary line kept

    community children from veering past 10th Street. Simmons only ventured across

    the line to grocery shop with her grandmother. “We would walk down Main Street

    and smell peanuts in the five-and-dime store. I remember asking, ‘Granny can I

    have an ice cream cone.’ She said, ‘sit here.’ I sat on the curb. I never

    forgot the place, Oleander’s. Granny went in, got it, and brought it outside. I

    looked at her, looked at the cone, looked at the people sitting inside. But you

    didn’t ask adults questions. You just did as you were told.”

    Sheila Sanders has a sweet smile but

    don’t mistake it for weakness. She organized a boycott of the Sarasota Federal

    Bank as a third grader at Booker Elementary School. At that time, her class

    learned money management by filling out savings deposit slips for their

    pennies, dimes and nickels, but the students could not take tours of the bank

    as children from other schools did. Sanders persuaded her classmates to send

    deposits to Palmer Bank where they could tour.  Her actions foreshadowed

    future activism. The teenager proactively participated in the NAACP

    accompanying leaders John Rivers and Maxine Mays to local and state meetings. In

    high school, Sanders learned about the political process by reviewing the agenda

    of school board meetings and attended the meetings by taking the city bus.

    “Some things won’t be said just because you’re sitting there.” 

    Sanders, William “Flick” Jackson and

    John Rivers joined Dr. Edward E. James II as plaintiffs in a lawsuit against

    the City of Sarasota. They successfully pushed for single member district

    voting that opened the way for African American representation on the Sarasota

    City Commission.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    33 分

あらすじ・解説

Newtown Alive is a podcast dedicated to the lives, memories and stories of the people of Newtown, Florida. Honoring the work that our predecessors did, while acknowledging the work left to do. For more information and all episodes visit our site: http://www.newtownalive.org/
Copyright 2023 Vickie Oldham, Newtown Alive

Newtown Aliveに寄せられたリスナーの声

カスタマーレビュー:以下のタブを選択することで、他のサイトのレビューをご覧になれます。