Pleasant Hill neighborhood oral history sample. Macon, Georgia
These oral histories are part of the history mitigation initiative for the historic Pleasant Hill neighborhood in Macon, Georgia. The community was cut in two with the construction of I-75 in the 1960s. The interviews will be archived, including at the Macon Public Library and the Harriet Tubman Museum, in Macon, GA, for future residents and researchers. Produced by GDOT, New South Associates, the Pleasant Hill Neighborhood Improvement Group, and the Federal Highway Administration.

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Pleasant Hill Macon: Doctor Thomas Duval

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Macon in the 1930s Special (1995)

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96-year-old Granddaughter of Plantation Owner Oral History

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Strange experience: history tour of slave quarters in Savannah, Georgia

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Top 18 Things to Visit in MACON, GA! (Full Adventure)

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1960: "Harvest of Shame"

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Willie Cook oral interview, Darien, GA, 2012, Gullah Geechee

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St. Helena Island, SC. A Better Place.

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Inside South Carolina's Forgotten River Towns

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Inside America's Poorest County

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Black Health Disparities Go Back To Slavery | Discovered Truth: Full Documentary

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Bibb County slave records to be digitized

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Why So Few Americans Live In Southern Georgia

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The Shocking Emptiness Of Rural GEORGIA: Forsaken Towns Time Has Left Behind

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Former Green Book location in Macon seeks to revive history

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Fayard Nicholas and Harold Nicholas interview for That's Dancing! (1985)

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Afro-Mexicans: One of the world’s most forgotten Black communities

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C-SPAN Cities Tour: Macon - "Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom"

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Laurel Valley Slave Plantation: Inside Actual Slave Quarters, Slave Fields, and General Store

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