East Bay Yesterday
En podkast av East Bay Yesterday
136 Episoder
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“Get to know us first”: Longtime residents reflect on Oakland’s transformation
Publisert: 19.6.2018 -
“This strange monument”: The story behind one of Oakland’s most prominent abandoned buildings
Publisert: 31.5.2018 -
Long Lost Oakland, chapter 5: Overcoming racism, Lew Hing became king of Oakland’s canning industry
Publisert: 8.5.2018 -
Long Lost Oakland, chapter 4: Balloons, booms & busts
Publisert: 7.4.2018 -
Long Lost Oakland, chapter 3: How battles over sacred sites have revived Ohlone culture
Publisert: 22.3.2018 -
Long Lost Oakland, chapter 2: “When the shipyard closed, my dad came home and cried”
Publisert: 15.3.2018 -
“I’ll die if I let go”: After the earthquake, West Oakland came to the rescue
Publisert: 15.2.2018 -
Long Lost Oakland, chapter 1: Grizzly bears & redwood trees
Publisert: 24.1.2018 -
“They can’t believe he lived here”: Why John Muir settled down in the East Bay
Publisert: 21.12.2017 -
Lenn Keller and the roots of the East Bay’s lesbian of color community
Publisert: 22.11.2017 -
“You can’t replace that with photos”: Why so many buildings in Oakland have been picked up and moved
Publisert: 11.10.2017 -
True shorties, vol. 1: Horse heads & bullet holes
Publisert: 6.9.2017 -
“The freest time of my life”: Richard Pryor’s transformative East Bay experience
Publisert: 15.8.2017 -
“The queen of the West Coast blues”: Sugar Pie DeSanto serves up sweet & spicy stories
Publisert: 27.6.2017 -
“I believe in the elders”: Pendarvis Harshaw on gathering OG wisdom
Publisert: 7.6.2017 -
“Monsters rising out of the mud”: From industrial wasteland to renegade art gallery
Publisert: 24.5.2017 -
“What about the underdog?”: Dorothea Lange never stopped fighting for freedom
Publisert: 11.5.2017 -
Before the A’s: The East Bay’s earliest baseball teams
Publisert: 19.4.2017 -
“They knew it was a lie”: Exposing the cover-up behind Japanese-American mass incarceration
Publisert: 3.4.2017 -
“Where are those ancestors now?”: How battles over sacred sites have revived Ohlone culture
Publisert: 23.3.2017
East Bay history podcast that gathers, shares & celebrate stories from Oakland, Berkeley, Richmond and other towns throughout Alameda and Contra Costa Counties.
