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Starting from scratch and some points to note. A guide for new beginners.
The second part of a compilation of audio recorded interviews with former slaves which were mostly taken in the 1930s and 1940s.
0:00 Video Beginning
00:06 Aunt Harriett Smith, Texas (1941) (Good Audio Quality)
34:23 Celia Black, Texas (1974) (Good Audio Quality - Watch Out for Squeaky Door Near the Beginning)
55:37 Laura Smalley, Texas (1941) (Good Audio Quality)
1:45:05 Uncle Billy McCrea, Texas (1940) - (Good Audio Quality)
2:06:04 Annie Williams, Virginia (circa 1937) (Poor Audio Quality)
2:10:19 Aunt Phoebe Boyd, Virginia (1935) (Medium Audio Quality)
2:49:31 Mrs. Williams, Virginia (circa 1937) (Medium Audio Quality - Quite Fuzzy in Parts)
2:54:59 Sarah Ashton Brooks (Daughter of Sally Ashton), Virginia (1934) (Good Audio Quality)
2:58:01 Sally Ashton, Virginia (1934) (Good Audio Quality)
3:01:59 Sarah Garner, Virginia (1935) (Medium Audio Quality - Quite Fuzzy)
3:21:21 Susanna Rebecca Wright Thompson, Virginia (1935) (Medium Audio Quality - Quite Fuzzy)
3:50:16 Unidentified Former Slaves, Virginia (Circa 1937) (Medium Audio Quality)
Digitized Collections of the Transcripts of Around 2,300 Interviews With Former Slaves:
https://www.loc.gov/collection....s/slave-narratives-f
Aunt Harriett Smith - Hempstead, Texas (1941):
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1941016_afs05499a
Celia Black - Tyler, Texas (1974)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1975009_afs17476/
Laura Smalley - Hempstead, Texas (1941)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1941016_afs05496a/
Uncle Billy McCrea - Jasper, Texas (1940)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1940003_afs03974a/
Annie Williams - Petersburg, Virginia (1937-40)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1948015_afs08256a/
Aunt Phoebe Boyde - Dunnsville, Virginia (1935):
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25749a
Mrs. Williams - Norfolk, Virginia Circa (1937)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1948015_afs08245b/
Sally Ashton, Albemarle Co., Virginia (1934)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25465b/
Sarah Ashton Brooks - Albemarle Co., Virginia (1934)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25465a
Sarah Garner - Virginia (1935)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25745a
Susanna Rebecca Wright Thompson - Oldhams, Virginia (1935)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1984011_afs25734a
Unidentified Ex-Slaves - Petersburg, Virginia (Circa 1937)
Recording Part 1: (you can get the transcript by clicking on the link and clicking ‘PDF’ next to where it says ‘transcript’ just underneath the audio player): https://www.loc.gov/item/afc1948015_afs08301b/
Cultural beliefs in some communities have always been a barrier especially when it comes to the issue of women owning land specifically through inheritance which hampers their capacity to be economically active. However, this has not been a hinderance for Martha Otieno from Homabay County who is reaping big from farming by working around that CULTURAL norm to acquire land of her own. But how is it possible for a woman in her twenties and from a community not known for farming earn so much millions in a short period and more so through agriculture?
She calls them #BrownLiveGold !! meet Roseanne Mwangi, a serial agri-preneur catching the early worms with her Black soldier fly venture. She believes in creating a sustainable and circular economy.
Here is how she does it..….She processes cut potatoes’ for the hotel industry -- The peelings are used as feed for the black soldier fly--- The fly larvae are rich in protein which she uses to feed her pigs and can feed poultry and fish---The waste from the larvae feed becomes organic manure for our farms. ... and how could I forget. The Pork, Fish, and poultry land on your plate!!!
How more circular can one get? Bravo!
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Bringing people to Africa is one of the most rewarding things I’ve ever done. For me, it has everything to do with exposure. Whether someone descends from Africa or not, the exposure to the continent makes all of the difference. The first hand experience with the cultures, the people and the history enlightens in a way a book or video can’t do.
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Unreported World is in Chiapas, Mexico, the town that drinks the most sugary drinks in the world.
Subscribe to our channel for more Unreported World episodes https://www.youtube.com/unreportedworld.
Here in Chiapas, one of the poorest states in Mexico, people drink two litres of sugary drinks a day, and Coca-Cola is king. As health officials declare a diabetes emergency, we meet the families in the thick of a diabetes crisis, a deadly mix of Covid and sugar sending people to early graves.
Reporter: Guillermo Galdos
Director: Nick Blakemore
Series Producer: Andy Lee
Executive Producer: Ed Fraser
Production Company: Channel 4 News