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Arthur Williams oral history interview, 2007 March 30

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@ University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Description

Arthur Williams shares his memories of growing up in the Brooklyn neighborhood in Charlotte, North Carolina, also known as Second Ward. He discusses residents and small businesses in Brooklyn, including his uncle's barbershop, N.G. Edwards Barber, and the shoe shine business that he owned and operated as a boy during the Second World War. He talks in detail about the United House of Prayer for All People, including the founder of the church, Bishop Charles Manuel "Daddy" Grace, differences between the House of Prayer and Grace A.M.E. Zion, the church's impact on the Brooklyn community, and how other churches later copied the House of Prayer because of its success. He also briefly discusses urban renewal in Charlotte during the 1960s and 1970s and why the younger residents who had left Second Ward during that period did not want to return.
Type:
Sound
Format:
Spoken Word1 Audio File (59:23) : Digital, Mp3 + 1 Transcript (22 Pages : Pdf)Audio/Mpeg
Contributors:
Funk, Dawn (interviewer)
Rights:
This material is protected by copyright. Copyright is held by the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
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Record Contributed By

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Record Harvested From

North Carolina Digital Heritage Center