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Learn more about the Vancouver
African American History Project
Read the students' presentations
and exhibit text excerpts
Browse transcripts from the interviews with the project's narrators:
(PDF Files - requires Adobe Acrobat Reader software. Adobe provides
downloading instructions
for the free Acrobat Reader for Macintosh and Windows)
FannieChatman
FlorineDufresne
Jean Griffin
Val Joshua
Williard Nettles
Jr.
View some of the historical doucments the students located
Want to see what the students read to
help them research their topics?
Interested in viewing or obtaining a videotape of Lift Every Voice?
E-mail the project director
or call (360) 992-1821
Want to view a program from Lift Every
Voice?
Questions or comments about the project? E-mail
the project director or call (360) 992-1821
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The project coordinators and students - l-r: McQueen
Basil
Duncantell, Melissa Williams, Christal Jenkins, Mary Byrd,
Keri Conway, Carlos Delcid. |
In June, the high-school students in the
innovative Vancouver
African American History Project presented a program based
on their research of the history of African Americans in Vancouver from
1941 to 1948.
Lift Every Voice included posterboard exhibits and presentations
by the students, and a roundtable discussion involving students, coordinators,
advisory board members and oral history narrators. The students also received
post-secondary scholarships they earned by participating in and completing
the project.
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After the students presented the results of their research, a lively
question and answer and session ensued. The discussion included
topics such as the the students' and coordinators'
experiences in the project, community
members' reactions to the program, the importance of oral
histories, and future phases of the project.
Excerpts and pictures from Lift Every Voice are below.
Co-sponsors for the Vancouver African
American History Project were the Center for Columbia River History’s
James B. Castles Endowment, the Vancouver National Historic Reserve
Trust, Portland State University, SWIFT, Clark College, Gifford
Pinchot National Forest, Vancouver Branch NAACP 1139, McLoughlin
Heights Church of God and the Vancouver Community Library.
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Doreen Turpen, Associate Director of Vancouver
Community Library, welcomes the audience.
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Project Experiences

Elson Strahan, President of the
Clark College Foundation, presents a scholarship to Keri Conway.
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"Communication was a big thing for us - we had to learn first
how to communicate with people and then how to communicate with
strangers and then how to communicate with people who were a lot
older and who lived there during those times...whoever is going
to do oral history, you guys are really going to have to practice..."
- Mary Byrd, Project Participant
"I think, for me, the whole project was [surprising], because
I didn't even know there was a lot of black people that lived here..."
- Christal Jenkins, Project Participant
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"What I found interesting was how many African Americans came
to Vancouver just to work in the shipyards..." - Carlos
Delcid, Project Participant
"Vancouver thought of the Colored Cotton Club? You know, Cotton
Club is something you found down in the South or something like
that."
- Mary Byrd
"What I found most interesting was that although there [were]
problems with all these new people of all races moving to Vancouver....people
were able to adapt fairly well...."
- Keri Conway, Project Participant
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Earl Ford, Gifford Pinchot National Forest, presents
a scholarship to Carlos Delcid.
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"Even through a whole year of a lot of stuff and being a rookie
at this ...I would do it all over again, because it was definitely worth
it."
- McQueen Basil Duncantell, Project Coordinator

Elson Strahan, President of the Clark College Foundation,
presents a scholarship to Mary Byrd. |
"We're like a family...You all want to join our family? Come
on. We can adopt." - Mary Byrd
"Actually, our project coordinators....they had to do some
work too."- Mary Byrd
"...For me, this project has allowed me to take a lot of pride
in who I am as an African American, especially in Vancouver, because
you always hear about things in Portland, but you never hear about
the African Americans in Vancouver. So I'm so glad to go tell all
my friends now that we had something here in Vancouver and that
I have pride in being a Washingtonian and a person from Vancouver."
- Christal Jenkins
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Community Reactions
to the Project
"You are planting a powerful seed
here with the start of your research."
- Earl Ford, President NAACP Vancouver Branch 1139 |
The audience listens to one of the presentations.
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"I would just like to congratulate the students on all of their
work and I was there so I know that you worked really, really hard and
the obstacles that you overcame..." - Angela Guess-Westbrook,
Project Advisory Board Member

Coordinator McQueen
Basil Duncantell explains the goals of the project. |
"I am so pleased and proud of you guys....you've done a very
good job. I congratulate you because one of the strongest things
we have going for us - and these words are from Martin King to me
a year, two years, before he died - is that the oral history of
our people, it must be resurrected, preserved, by our young. Our
young. And you guys have done that and I am so proud of you, I want
to hug and kiss all of you. Keep on, keep on...we still have to
fight to go on, and I am so proud of what you've done. Ask questions,
answer the questions - if you don't find it, dig again."
- Dr. Samuel Kelly, Project Advisory Board Member
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"I hope this project will be a catalyst - I have no doubt it is
a catalyst for these students - but a catalyst for the rest of the community
to take a serious look at African American history." - Da Verne
Bell, Project Advisory Board Member
"I would really like to praise the young people who have put this
program on tonight and who have done their research. You persevered and
you have brought to our attention where we've come from and where we need
to go. I just want you to keep on. But one thing, there are more parents
in the audience than there are young people - you have a responsibility
too, and that is to see that your children address these issues in the
way that they should be, because we are all human and we want to be respected
for that." - Val Joshua, Project Advisory Board Member
Members of the program panel, l-r: Jean Griffin,
narrator;
Val Joshua, narrator and advisory board member;
Angela Guess-Westbrook and Da Verne Bell,
advisory board members.
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"I would like to thank Melissa and Christal for asking me to be
interviewed. They were very professional and they gave me a professional-type
booklet of what the interview was and also a cassette and I will treasure
it so my grandchildren and great-grandchildren will know what it was about."
- Jean Griffin, Project Narrator
Oral History
"Oral histories are not easy - its not like doing a normal interview
because you don't get to talk...while the tape is going you get to hear
their stories...and I was so glad we had such excellent narrators because
once you would give them a couple of questions they would be gone...it
was awesome just to be one of the people given the opportunity to get
this [project] uplifted off the ground...but yes, oral histories are very,
very, very difficult." - Christal Jenkins, Project Participant

Coordinator Melissa Williams introduces the students.
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"I would like to see more oral history done. It is the best
way to get social history - the history you're not going to read
in textbooks because...it is about regular people, living their
everyday lives. And oral history is a really important aspect of
putting a history together - a complete picture, something that
is three-dimensional - something that gets to the deeper layers
of a community. And if we can get more oral histories and get more
firsthand accounts of just the lives of anyone, I think that is
really crucial to putting anything together, that is the key..."
- Melissa Williams, Project Coordinator
"It was hard work in the beginning, just learning how to do
it and stuff, but..once you do it the first time, then you'll want
to do it again and again." - Mary Byrd, Project Participant
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"Oral histories actually [are] real in-depth to understand them,
but when you do them, there will never be an experience like that in your
life. To sit there and hear somebody give a firsthand account to you about
history...I would encourage you - young or old, it doesn't matter...just
to try it and get a firsthand feel about somebody else's history, about
your own history. It's really good. So I would encourage all of you to
do that." - Christal Jenkins
Future Phases of
the Project
"Well, I've already got plans...I continue to find more research
about the topics...I hope to talk to some youth, go to the schools, let
them know that this information is out here...we didn't know at first
- my peers at high school didn't know...I have plans to go home and call
some people and maybe do another oral history or two." - Mary
Byrd, Project Participant
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"I really hope that there is a phase two to this project.
I'd like the Center to be involved, but I'd like lots of other folks
to be involved as well. I think this should be a great community
effort." - Andrea Reidell, Project Director
I'm willing to get involved in any project that is available...as
long as y'all got funds." - Mary Byrd
"The Vancouver branch [of the NAACP] is looking to sponsor
this group to do oral history on the Vancouver branch...we have
over a dozen of the founding members in 1945 still a part and active
in our chapter. So we want to capture that history while we can,
and this is an excellent opportunity for us to do that." -
Earl Ford, President NAACP Vancouver Branch 1139
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Project Director
Andrea Reidell shares a light moment with the panel.
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"We would love to do more projects. I mean, this project was tough
and it's always hard when you're picking different individuals - it's
kind of like Survivor...you pick different individuals, you put
them in a group together for a whole year, and you see who finishes -
who finishes strong. The four of us up here are the ones that have finished
strong...because we've come this far, we don't want to stop...We'll go
recruit more kids from high school - start a whole another project...
Don't let this fire die - we get all excited now and then two months down
the road there ain't nobody that wants to fund our project. It is important
that there is a commitment that goes along with it, because we've all...toiled
- a year-long commitment to get this done. Sometimes we wanted to give
up, but we knew we had to keep going, because it was important that our
community know about this. So if you're going to get involved, stick with
it. If you don't think you can handle it, then back off and encourage
somebody else to do it, because it is a really committed project."
- Christal Jenkins, Project Participant
| "I would just like to
see it [the project's research results] in the schools just because
you learn about Lewis and Clark, learn about all of the European history
in the United States...you very rarely hear positive things about
the black community...especially since [this history] was so rich
and vibrant and we had things going on here. I would love to see it
put into a curriculum - even if it was in a handbook and [students]
were made known of that ahead of time...I think it is important not
just for African Americans but for all people of all cultures to understand
just what was actually happening, what was actually going on..."
- Christal Jenkins |
Brenda Simmons, Youth Coordinator, Vancouver Branch
NAACP 1139, presents a scholarship to Christal Jenkins.
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"I think I hear a challenge out here to the people in the audience
and to the community. You know we talk about young people not being committed,
we talk about young people not doing something positive. These young people
have more than amply exhibited they can do something positive and I think
I hear a challenge, that 'we want to do more - step up to the plate and
do us some funding." - Da Verne Bell, Project Advisory Board Member
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