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Phillis Wheatley Oral History Project

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: 2025-049

Content Description

This collection consists of recordings from the Phillis Wheatley Oral History Project, which was carried out at the Phillis Wheatley Branch of the Rochester Public Library between 1978 and 1980. This collection comprises 113 interviews on 115 audio cassette tapes (two interviews use two tapes each). All interviews in this collection exist in duplicate, bring the collection to a total of 230 audio cassette tapes. Also included are 6 Beta video cassette tapes with interviews. Finally, there is a carton of documents related to the project's history and recording information about the interviewees.

Dates

  • Creation: 1978-1981

Conditions Governing Access

There are no restrictions regarding access to or use of the collection.

Conditions Governing Use

Permission to publish, reproduce, distribute, or use in any current or future manifestations must be obtained in writing from the Rochester Public Library Local History and Genealogy Division.

Biographical / Historical

From Rochester Voices:

The roots of Rochester’s African American community run deep, with a small but vibrant population first emerging in the early to mid-19th century. Following the Second World War, many Blacks migrated to Rochester and other northern and western cities from the South, in search of jobs and other opportunities. This mass influx of people significantly altered the demographic composition of the city, a change that presented many challenges for new and existing residents alike.

As Rochester’s Black population grew, a national civil rights movement was sweeping the country, seeking to address racial inequality. Although we tend to think of the civil rights movement as playing out primarily in the South, northern cities like Rochester were also affected, as Blacks nearly everywhere faced problems with housing, jobs, education, and law enforcement. In Rochester, as elsewhere, leaders emerged to organize for change and try to improve the conditions of urban life.

Concerned that the recent history of Rochester’s Black citizens would be lost if it were not preserved, Dr. James Wright, manager of the Rochester Public Library’s Phillis Wheatley branch, commissioned a project to record the oral histories of African American Rochesterians in the 1970s and early 1980s. The project was designed to highlight the public contributions of African Americans in the greater Rochester area and to make that information available to the community. Several dozen oral interviews were conducted between 1978 and 1981 with Blacks who were either born in Rochester, or who were long-time residents. The interviewees represent a wide range of occupations, attitudes, and roles in the community, and they discuss a variety of topics from housing discrimination, segregation, and barriers to employment to the importance of community involvement and advances in civil rights.

Full Extent

2.75 Cubic Feet (8 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

This collection consists two series, totalling 8 boxes:



Series I: Audio-Visual Materials


Series II: Documents

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Transferred to the Rochester Public Library from the City of Rochester Historian Office, 2025.

Condition Description

Good physical condition; items have not been tested for playback.

Title
A Guide to the Phillis Wheatley Oral History Project
Status
Completed
Author
Brandon Fess, assisted by Sheila Pietrowski
Date
2025-11-03
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Local History & Genealogy Division Repository

Contact:
115 South Ave.
Rochester 14604 USA
585-428-8370
585-428-8353 (Fax)