Making a Homeplace: The Historically Black Neighborhood of Swarthmore

PODCAST · arts

Making a Homeplace: The Historically Black Neighborhood of Swarthmore

Over the last fifteen years, gentrification has brought about rapid cultural and social changes within the Historically Black Neighborhood of Swarthmore displacing Black people and Black memory. This podcast presents a collective oral history/telling practice to preserve alternative (AKA Black, AKA fuller) history, culture and practices necessary to Swarthmore / community well-being and justice. The HBNS: Making a Homeplace inaugural podcast features three community curated episodes from various HBNS ethnographic research in 2010, 2020, 2022. Our first episode starts with The Great Migration: The Rise of the Black Neighborhood.The second episode focuses on the role of the Black church, Swarthmore Wesley AME Church: Strategies for Thriving. The last episode, Growing up in Swarthmore A Black Child’s Perspective: School, Play, Love, rounds out the series with intergenerational childhood memories.

  1. 3

    Episode 3: Growing Up Black in HBNS: A Child’s Perspective (School, Play, Love)

    Welcome to episode 3, Growing up Black in Swarthmore a Child’s Perspective: School, Play, Love. In episode three, HBN family and community members talk about shared intergenerational experiences that shaped and defined us as children such as, family by choice, making a friend / keeping a friend, beatins, and school. What are the stories, practices, […]

  2. 2

    Episode 2: Wesley AME Church: Strategies for Thriving, The Role of the Black Church

    For 130+ years, the Historically Black Neighborhood of Swarthmore’s community members strategically pulled together within the larger white Borough. Folks brought along religious beliefs & practices rooted in traditions of the African Methodist Episcopalian (AME) Church. In 1921, a fledgling congregation worshiped in Jones Hall at 246 Bowdoin Ave. They then bought land at 232 […]

  3. 1

    Episode 1: The Great Migration & The Rise of Black Neighborhoods

    Greetings Friends, I’m Jeannine Osayande from the historically Black neighborhood of Swarthmore with family members seven generations strong. Have you ever heard of a Historically Black Neighborhood? Do you know how HBN’s were established? Did you grow up in a town with a Historically Black Neighborhood and didn’t know it? Welp, grab a hot cup […]

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Over the last fifteen years, gentrification has brought about rapid cultural and social changes within the Historically Black Neighborhood of Swarthmore displacing Black people and Black memory. This podcast presents a collective oral history/telling practice to preserve alternative (AKA Black, AKA fuller) history, culture and practices necessary to Swarthmore / community well-being and justice. The HBNS: Making a Homeplace inaugural podcast features three community curated episodes from various HBNS ethnographic research in 2010, 2020, 2022. Our first episode starts with The Great Migration: The Rise of the Black Neighborhood.The second episode focuses on the role of the Black church, Swarthmore Wesley AME Church: Strategies for Thriving. The last episode, Growing up in Swarthmore A Black Child’s Perspective: School, Play, Love, rounds out the series with intergenerational childhood memories.

HOSTED BY

Philadelphia Folklore Project

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!