Brooklyn Oral History
Brooklyn Oral History
  • Savoy Theatre
    Savoy Theatre on S. McDowell St. Undated. Hank Daniel, Staff - The Charlotte Observer
  • Caldwell+Brevard-crop
    2nd St. between Caldwell & Brevard, Brooklyn neighborhood. Undated. Tom Walters, Staff - The Charlotte Observer
  • News
  • History of Brooklyn
    • Brooklyn Time Line
    • Bibliography for Brooklyn and Urban Renewal
    • External Oral History Sites
  • About this Project
    • Class Pictures
    • Note of Thanks
  • Interviews
    • Friendship Missionary Baptist Church
    • Second Ward Alumni
    • Olaf Abraham
    • Kelly Alexander
    • Margaret Alexander
    • James Black
    • Christine Bowser
    • Calvin Brown
    • Don Bryant
    • Charles Clyburn
    • Barbara Davis Crawford
    • Calvin C. Davis
    • Naomi A. Davis
    • Price Davis
    • Morgan Edwards
    • Thereasea Elder
    • Vermelle Diamond Ely
    • Rosena Gaines
    • Delores Giles
    • William Harris
    • Reginald Hawkins
    • Vernon Herron
    • Betty Golden Holloway
    • Johnny Holloway
    • Wright Hunter
    • Ida James
    • Charles Jones
    • Walter “Buck” Kennedy
    • Frances Leach
    • Doretha Leak
    • Lem Long
    • John McCarroll
    • Mary S. McGill
    • John Murphy
    • Mae Orr
    • Connie Patton
    • Richard Petersheim
    • Mary Poe
    • James Polk
    • James Ross II
    • Vernon Sawyer
    • Dorothy Shipman
    • H. Milton Short, Jr.
    • Curtina Simmons
    • Barbara C. Steele
    • James “Slack” Steele
    • Arthur Stinson
    • Daisy Stroud
    • John Thrower
    • Bill Veeder
    • Arthur Wallace, Sr.
    • George A. Wallace, Sr.
    • Alegra Westbrooks
    • Arthur Williams
    • Diane Wyche
    • James Yancey
    • Ozener Yancey
    • James and Ozener Yancey
    • Cleo A. Yongue
Associate Professor, Department of History
AUTHOR

Karen Flint

Vernon Herron

September 28, 2016 by Karen Flint
section: Interviews

Mr. Vernon Hernon was born in 1928 at 527 South Brevard Street and raised in the Brooklyn Community. His father died when he was one year of age, so his mother had to raise six children by herself. He and his family attended Ebenezer Baptist Church and he attended Myers Street Elementary School where his aunt was employed as a teacher. He progressed to Second Ward High School and became Student Body President in 1947. After his high school graduation he attended college at Shaw University and Johnson C. Smith University, and then moved to various other locations in the United States before coming back to Charlotte, North Carolina to retire.Read more…

Charles Jones

September 28, 2016 by Karen Flint
section: Interviews

Mr. Charles Jones was born in Chester, South Carolina in 1937. His family moved to the Biddleville neighborhood of Charlotte when he was young and he has remained in the area since. He received his Bachelors from Johnson C. Smith University in 1958 and his law degree from Howard University in 1966. During the sixties, Mr. Jones was involved with the NAACP, helping to orchestrate various sit ins at Charlotte lunch counters. He now practices law, an occupation he has held for thirty years. Mr. Jones recalls various times he spent as a young man in Brooklyn, visiting such places as the Lincoln Theatre and Second Ward High School. He also has many fond memories of various individuals and groups who lived in and around the old neighborhood.Read more…

Wright Hunter

September 28, 2016 by Karen Flint
section: Interviews

Mr. Wright Hunter lived in Brooklyn until the age of nine years old, but continued to attend the schools in the Brooklyn neighborhood. Mr. Hunter discussed many fond memories of the different areas around Brooklyn, such as the Cherry neighborhood and Third Ward. Most interesting is a story he tells about a tragedy in the Brooklyn neighborhood involving the drowning of several children. Mr. Hunter also talks extensively about losing his home to Urban Renewal and the settlement after the Federal Government became involved. Mr. Hunter participated in a group interview with other alumni of Second Ward.

Mr. Wright Hunter is included of the Second Ward Alumni Interview.

Johnny Holloway

September 28, 2016 by Karen Flint
section: Interviews

Johnny Holloway, born in Durham, NC, relocated to Charlotte, North Carolina after finishing both his time in the US Army and graduate school. He was instrumental in bringing both Jazz appreciation and marching band orchestration to West Charlotte High School. A thorough participant in the 1950’s Charlotte jazz scene, he brought that same appreciation to the High Schools in which he taught. Many of the Jazz instrumentalists that dealt with him on a professional basis agreed to perform in Charlotte area high Schools. This brought about an educated core of band members that marked superior performance in Charlotte area bands throughout Mr. Holloway’s tenure.Read more…

Betty Golden Holloway

September 28, 2016 by Karen Flint
section: Interviews

Ms. Bettye Golden Holloway was born in the Cherry neighborhood of Charlotte in 1933, and remained there for seven years before moving to the Brooklyn neighborhood in 1940. After a move to Maryland in the early forties, Mrs. Holloway’s family returned to Brooklyn, where she attended Second Ward High School and took part in several of the many extracurricular activities that the school offered to its students. Mrs. Holloway cites the close-knit community spirit of Brooklyn as its greatest strength as she remembers growing up in the neighborhood. This sense of community extended from the teachers and administrators at Second Ward High School to her neighbors and the families of her friends, and bound all of the residents together. This conversation with Mrs. Holloway also includes illuminating information about the Queen City Classic, the Brevard Street library and various businesses and personalities that survive in the memories of former Brooklyn residents. Read more…

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