Title/storyteller
|
Quote or paraphrase
|
The work of the storyteller
|
Hilltop Builders by Linda Phillips |
I'm a Hilltop girl, Linda Phillips, the great granddaughter
of four generations of builders of houses on the Hilltop
|
- Archiving the family history for relatives and others in
the Hilltop
- Providing a small piece of history for historical
societies and academics
|
'Just Say No' Drug March by Danny Wade |
In . . . '88, '89 it was a big drug problem in the area . . . and . . . um
it was really, really bad. So I just wanted to say, I was the first
person in the Hilltop to do a drug march against the drug problem
around here.
|
- Acknowledging an on-going problem
- Acknowledging his own part and the J. Ashburn Jr. Youth
Center's role in addressing the drug problem.
|
Changing Lives by Anonymous (audio only) |
[About the Hilltop Branch of the Columbus Metropolitan
Libraries] I feel we had an impact on the community here. You consider the
socio-economic make up of the Hilltop, where it is basically
blue-collar or no-collar, and we are lifting peoples' standards of life.
|
- Making a case for the library's importance to upper
administrators and state budget planners.
- Announcing valuable services to the Hilltop community, and
more.
|
Coming to Columbus by Janine Bourdo |
We had moved quite a lot...I think we ate at Howard
Johnson's. I was sitting on a stool saying, "Man, Columbus Ohio. I wish
I could be in Wyoming." I wanted to be a cowgirl because I was like 7
years old.
|
- Documenting family history and the dreams of a young girl.
|
Teaching at the Buckeye Youth Center by Janine Bourdo |
[Claustrophobic in Wyoming] My friend from Columbus came to
get me in a U-haul truck. We drove back to Ohio and when I crossed that
border . . . "Oh my god, I am never leaving Ohio again." It was just so
good to be home (1977).
|
- Documenting a personal history with Ohio and the Hilltop
and the reality of a young woman in the 1970s.
|
My Time in the Hilltop by Daniel Stanley |
I still hold the records for most tackles and stuff like
that. Just regular football records, nothing amazing. Well the numbers
are amazing . . . [laughs]. But then that all went down hill when I got
into a couple of wrecks.
|
- Documenting the good times in high school and foreshadowing
the hard times ahead.
|
The Ballfield and Renting Radios by Earl "Whimpy" Potts |
I lived on Wheatland Avenue. Whenever Jesse Owens would come
down the street, he would gather up the kids and say, "Let's go over to
the ball field."
|
- Documenting local legends and what racial discrimination
was like for his mother and the community.
|
Greenlawn Cemetery by Janine Bourdo |
Greenlawn was a little scary. It was very, very quiet there,
and if you walked far enough there was a pond, and I remember that they
had a sign that said, "Don't abuse the ducks!" And I was always worried
about duck abusers being in the cemetery.
|
- Describing personal involvement with an important landmark in
the Hilltop.
|
Kingdom of God Revival by Angelina |
What we are doing. We are doing a community outreach, and
it's called a backyard revival.
|
- Documenting an informal spiritual community open to all, but
primarily for those with past drug problems.
|
Memories of Summers and Christmas on the Hilltop by Brandy Biegler (audio only) |
I work here at the Hilltop library. I'm the coordinator of
the Homework Help Center.
|
- Documenting memories that make the Hilltop their home.
|
Wide Vistas by Laverne Guyton |
The Hilltop drew me here in 2001. Yes, drew me. I had
recently sold my house on the south side of Columbus. And through the
twisting of life and people, found myself with no place to live. Well
people this in not the way I roll . . .
|
- Relating an unusually positive attitude and approach to the
Hilltop's abundant and abandoned giant parking lots and big-box stores.
|
1913 Flood Part I by Cindy Anderson |
The 1913 flood was important. People moved up here [to Hilltop]
to get away from the low lands and the possibility of having to live
through another flood.
|
- Documenting an important moment in the Hilltop's early
history, a moment that helped determine it's relationship to the city of
Columbus.
|
1913 Flood Part II by Cindy Anderson |
It took almost a year before they connected the bridges.
There were, I forget, five or six bridges downtown. They had condemned
this one. It was the only one that made it through the flood.
|
- Documenting important events that shaped the relationship
between Columbus and the Hilltop.
|
Segregation by Clenzo Fox |
[Hilltop leaders] were so concerned about the community,
that they would not allow the establishment of anything on a segregated basis.
|
- Documenting the efforts of a black community to get out of the
segregation era.
|
The Brakes by Maurice Bell |
The moral of the story is this. Now that I work at the
Center [J. Ashburn Jr. Youth Center], there are some kids going the
wrong way. So I do everything I know to stop them from going the wrong
way. I try everything I know (though some go wrong anyway).
|
- A heart-breaking story that illustrates the struggles in
the Hilltop today.
|
The Importance of Local History by Reita Smith |
It was a community within a community on one street. It was
a village. And so often we forget that our communities were really
villages that raised its children.
|
- Documenting that in difficult times, the work of the local
community is essential to raising its young people.
|
Starting to School in 1934 by Ray Pendall |
[At 5 years old] they shipped me off to my grandmother's
house in Waverly, Ohio, and there was a one-room school house about 150
yards from where they lived. It was a township school and at that time
every township was responsible for K-8 schools.
|
- Documenting a devotion to education after the depression.
|
Recollections of Mound St. Area by Nancy L. Cornell |
I have an older brother. We lived in the neighborhood as
children with the combination of a lot of boys. I was the only girl for
many, many years. And so, I was the tag-along. But it was beautiful,
very beautiful.
|
- Archiving family histories and why there is such a
commitment to the Hilltop.
|
Hilltop Bean Dinner by Pam Weaver |
Some people say the Hilltop is feisty, too many bosses and
not enough workers. That is why I chose the Bean Dinner, because it
represents unity.
|
- Documenting the best of a local community spirit.
- Keeping civil war history alive.
|
Kiwanis National Anthem |
Listen, appreciate, and smile
|
- Documenting community organizations
|
Apprentice by Pam Weaver |
I like it here. I like the Hilltop. I'm happy here. It reminds me of a suburb of London.
|
- Illustrating the diverse backgrounds of Hilltop residents.
|
The Rev Part I by Maurice Bell |
I was just another kid with no place to go. We heard that
you could use the gym. So a bunch of kids went up on Wednesdays when
they had bible study. My life started, uh, I started hanging with the
wrong crowd.
|
- Documenting the importance of "The Rev," churches, and
youth centers to youth who have lost their way.
|
The Rev Part II by Maurice Bell |
That Sunday the Rev [Reverend J. Ashburn Jr.] asked me to
stand up. He knew I needed some money and a job. The Rev introduced me
as a friend . . . "If anyone in the congregation has some work, this man
will do it for next to nothing" . . . He instilled in me, for the first time
in my life at 21, a work ethic.
|
- Documenting how "The Rev" helped shape lives.
|
Why I Love the Hilltop by Laverne Guyton |
I come into the world struggling to breath. So lets talk
about the Hilltop . . . It's been hard for a lot of people here on the
Hilltop. I have found my niche. This place just called to me. God
wanted me to have this beautiful home.
|
- Illustrating how faith and a government policy helped
benefit a Hilltop resident.
|