Sarasota artist celebrates history of Newtown with new quilt

Vickie Oldham initially learned about Peg Green’s new art quilt but only truly felt its emotional impact when she visited Green’s home to see it in person. The quilt, titled “Leadership: Vickie Oldham, Newtown Alive,” symbolized progress in Oldham’s work in preserving the history of Newtown, a predominantly Black community in Sarasota. Oldham, the president and CEO of the Sarasota African American Cultural Coalition and the leader of the Newtown Alive project, was deeply moved by the quilt’s depiction of various locations in Newtown and its central portrayal of herself.

Peg Green, an artist specializing in art quilts, found inspiration for the Newtown quilt after taking a trolley tour of Newtown with Newtown Alive. She was drawn to the neighborhood’s sense of community and its rich history within the Sarasota area. Green’s exhibition featuring the Newtown quilt, “Witness!” at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Sarasota, reflects her commitment to social justice and making untold stories public.

Green’s meticulous process involved extensive research, photography, and the use of thousands of different fabrics to bring the quilt to life. The quilt includes significant aspects of Newtown’s history, such as the desegregation of Sarasota’s beaches and important community landmarks. The creation of the quilt took approximately one-and-a-half months, and its future placement is still being determined.

Oldham expressed gratitude for Green’s contribution to telling the community’s story through her art, emphasizing the powerful impact of the quilt in sharing the history of Newtown. The quilt serves as a testament to the vision of engaging individuals like Green to use their talents to preserve and celebrate the community’s heritage.

Newtown Women Leaders in Community Engagement in Preservation and Heritage Tourism

Newtown Women Leaders: Community Engagement in Preservation and Heritage Tourism

The Community Foundation of Sarasota County recently published an insightful blog post titled “Women Leaders in Community Engagement in Preservation and Heritage Tourism.” The article highlights the significant contributions of women leaders in preserving and promoting heritage tourism within the Sarasota community.

The blog post delves into the pivotal role of women in driving community engagement and fostering a deep appreciation for local heritage. It emphasizes the diverse initiatives spearheaded by these women, ranging from historic preservation efforts to the development of heritage tourism experiences that showcase the rich cultural tapestry of Sarasota.

Readers will gain valuable insights into the innovative strategies employed by these women leaders to cultivate a sense of pride and connection to Sarasota’s heritage. The article also underscores the collaborative nature of these endeavors, emphasizing the importance of partnerships and community involvement in preserving and promoting the region’s cultural legacy.

With a focus on empowerment and inclusivity, the blog post celebrates the achievements of women leaders in heritage tourism and preservation, shedding light on their unwavering dedication to preserving Sarasota’s unique history and cultural heritage.

To read the full blog post and learn more about the impactful contributions of women leaders in community engagement in preservation and heritage tourism, visit https://www.cfsarasota.org/blog-post/Women-Leaders-Community-Engagement-in-Preservation-and-Heritage-Tourism

Ringling Museum celebrates Newtown Community Artist

The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art is hosting a new exhibition, “Glimpse of the Artist: A Community Celebration,” highlighting the cultural diversity and artistic output of Sarasota’s predominantly African American Newtown community.

The exhibition, on view at The Ringling’s Community Gallery, is presented by the Sarasota African American Cultural Coalition and is co-curated by La’Tiara Love and Lauren David. The artworks include QR-code interactive experiences that will immerse visitors in the lives of Sarasota artists. 

“We are thrilled to partner with the SAACC, not only on this exhibition but on their larger vision to create an arts and cultural center in the Newtown community as well,” Ringling’s executive director Steven High said. “Our Community Gallery is always free and open to the public and we hope that many members of our community will take the opportunity to visit this fantastic exhibition.”

The impetus for Glimpse of the Artist was to connect artists and art enthusiasts during a period of uncertainty during the pandemic. “Glimpse of the Artist is very special to me,” Love said. “I’m grateful for all the artist and community members that are a part of this project. They inspire me to do this work.”  

"Buck" by Clifford McDonald is part of a new exhibition at The Ringling’s Community Gallery highlighting the artistic output of Sarasota’s Newtown community.

The exhibition showcases works by multiple artists, including Sean Presley, Gregory Rumph, and Clifford McDonald.

“I’m grateful to be a part of this exhibit. I remember going on field trips to The Ringling and never imagined having my work displayed there,” McDonald said. “It’s amazing that The Ringling and SAACC came together to create an opportunity for local artists.”

Fox13:Home carrying legacy of Sarasota’s first Black community to be relocated, transformed for cultural center

SARASOTA, Fla. – A home in Sarasota‘s Rosemary District will soon carry the legacy of the city’s first Black community. Plans are in the works to transform it into an African American cultural arts center and history museum, but first the home has to be relocated.

“This house was the homestead of Mr. Leonard Reid who was a pioneer in the Sarasota Black community, and Sarasota in general,” explained Walter Gilbert, the senior director of diversity and inclusion at Selby Gardens.

Leonard Reid helped establish and settle the area, once called Overtown. His daughters would grow up, working to educate the children of the community.

As downtown Sarasota grew, developments pushed into Overtown, which pushed residents move north to Newtown.

“They need to know the history behind it. We have had to fight for everything that we have gotten,” said Odessa C. Butler, a Newtown resident.

The city will lease it to the African American Cultural Coalition for the Sarasota African American Art Center and History Museum.

“It’s important because of the activities we are going to have here. Many activities for the entire Sarasota community that celebrate African American history,” said Vickie Oldham, the CEO and president of Sarasota African American Cultural Coalition.

The coalition will continue to tell the history of those who formed Overtown and Newtown within the home’s walls. 
They have plans to expand into a larger facility.

Read More Here

SUNDAY ‘NOIRE: Black Historian Shares The Hidden History Of Newtown, A Historically Black Neighborhood In Florida

Deep within Sarasota, Florida lies the historic neighborhood of Newtown, a community where thousands of African American residents flocked in the early 1900s. The Black community built their own safe haven in the quaint seaside town after Jim Crow Laws enforced racial segregation throughout the South. Formed in 1914, the neighborhood was once home to a number of bustling Black entrepreneurs who unified to develop Newtown’s thriving business district, allowing the community to become self-sustaining. When segregation and racism posed a threat to the Black community’s education and their ability to receive crucial social services, Newtownites banded together to build their own schools, churches, grocery stores and social systems, boldly reclaiming their freedom. Resilience and faith were undoubtedly at the core of Newtown’s indomitable spirit.

While the legacy of Sarasota’s forgotten Black mecca has largely been hidden from history and textbooks, one cultural historian is on a mission to document Newtown’s rich past and uncover the neighborhood heroes who stood on the front lines of freedom to ensure a better future for the next generation.

The story of Newtown started with a segregated community called Overtown, Sarasota’s first Black hub filled with flourishing entrepreneurs, said the CEO and President of Sarasota’s African American Cultural Coalition, Vickie Oldham, who has been stitching together Newtown’s history piece by piece.

“It was located near the downtown area. Our people were the early pioneers who worked in the homes of the wealthy as domestics, as cooks, as gardeners, so there was already a self-sustaining community in Overtown,” she told MADAMENOIRE over zoom.

Located on Central Avenue and today’s Sixth Street, Overtown swelled with Black-owned markets, a busy movie theater, and merchandise stores that provided the community with everything they needed to survive. However, sadly, because of Jim Crow Laws, the residents of Overtown were pushed to the north side of Sarasota, but they used their skills as cooks, developers, and harvesters to build up the community of Newtown, and they worked tirelessly to keep the neighborhood thriving.

Read More Here

USAToday: Sun, sand and civil rights: Uncovering Black history at the beach and beyond

Sarasota, Florida’s white sand beaches and crystal-clear waters draw visitors from far and wide, but they weren’t always so welcoming.

“Few of our guests, our international and domestic tourists who come here, understand why these beaches are open to Black and brown people from everywhere in the world,” said Vickie Oldham, who chronicled 100 years of local Black history for her hometown.

Herald Tribune: “A coalition is teaching Sarasotans about African American history, as it waits to open a museum”

Vickie Oldham wants Sarasotans to understand the courage and dignity of the African American residents who built Sarasota’s infrastructure.

Black laborers built the railroad that ran through downtown Sarasota, Oldham noted. They helped clear snake-infested land on the barrier islands to ready it for development. And some worked for John Ringling’s circus.  

Such stories will be featured in the upcoming Sarasota African American Art Center and History Museum. 

“I feel that in sharing these stories, certainly through a museum, it boosts my pride level in my community,” said Oldham, who is leading the effort to build the museum. “It gives me a sense of pride and place. It lets me know what our ancestors and the pioneers did.”

Read More on Herald Tribune

Sarasota County Schools Unveils Statue of Groundbreaking Educator

Newtown Alive and Sarasota County Schools this weekend unveiled a bronze plaque cast in the likeness of Mrs. Dorothye Smith that will adorn the front of Southside Elementary School for generations to come. After completing her education at Bethune-Cookman University, Smith began her career in Sarasota teaching African-American fourth graders at Emma E. Booker Elementary School’s original campus in Overtown, the first enclave of the Newtown community. She taught there for 15 years before relocating to Venice Elementary School in the late 1960s during the integration of schools. Smith also spent time teaching at Phillippi Shores Elementary School before becoming the first Black principal hired within the integrated school system in Sarasota County when she assumed leadership of Southside Elementary School. She later served as a reading specialist for the district as well as an administrator at Venice Elementary School before retiring.

Read More:

https://www.sarasotamagazine.com/news-and-profiles/2021/02/sarasota-county-schools-unveils-statue-of-groundbreaking-educator

https://www.mysuncoast.com/2021/02/06/happening-saturday-sarasota-county-schools-honoring-counties-first-post-segregation-african-american-principal/

Back to Angola Festival to Celebrate Historic Ties Between The Bahamas and Bradenton, FL

“The Oak Tree Community Outreach, a local not-for-profit corporation, is hosting  an international event July 19-21 at The Curry House at Reflections of Manatee Inc., 1305 4th Ave East, with historical  significance to The Bahamas and Bradenton, Florida.

The Back to Angola Festival  will celebrate the blended history of Red Bays, Bahamas, and the early 1800s community known as Angola, located near the Manatee Mineral Spring in East Bradenton.”

Read more from the Bahamas Chronicle about the Back to Angola Festival this weekend:

https://bahamaschronicle.com/back-to-angola-festival-to-celebrate-historic-ties-between-the-bahamas-and-bradenton-florida/

Lost and found: A haven for former slaves

“After reading a short passage from Canter Brown Jr.’s book, “Florida’s Peace River Frontier,” Vickie Oldham was so startled she had to read the passage again. And then again. And again.

“I wanted to commit it to memory,” she says.

Oldham, who grew up in southwest Florida, had always been a student of the area’s African-American history, but Brown’s book, written in 1991, taught her something she didn’t know — that in 1812 escaped slaves and their descendants had founded a thriving settlement somewhere along the Manatee River near what’s now Bradenton.”

Read more about “Looking for Angola” in a 2016 article from Florida Trend:

https://www.floridatrend.com/article/19604/lost-and-found-a-haven-for-former-slaves

Oldham and Williams: Newtown needs an arts center and museum

“Cultural arts centers, museums and libraries situated in the heart of African American neighborhoods add texture, vibrancy and richness to a community. The facilities bring diverse people together and invite residents, visitors and guests to venture into underrepresented communities. Welcome doors swing open both ways for an understanding and exploration of the unknown and unfamiliar.

Beauty can be found in places considered dangerous and mysterious. Important connections can be made between institutions — arts, cultural, historical and educational — and students, researchers and residents.

So imagine if there were a place in Sarasota’s Newtown where our well-known institutions could make guest artists, collections, exhibitions and lecturers available to local audiences.”

Read more about the upcoming cultural center:

https://www.jacksonville.com/opinion/20180416/oldham-and-williams-newtown-needs-arts-center-and-museum?template=ampart

From a secret history to a tourist attraction

(Featured photo: Fred Barber at the Ace Theater. Courtesy Jetson Grimes Collection.)

“For many retirees new to Sarasota, local history is high on the list of topics to explore — from landmarks like The Ringling and Historic Spanish Point to written chronicles of the real estate fortunes made and lost here.

But in recent years, just in time for a fresh and more diverse generation of settlers and visitors, this region’s African-American history has been made more broadly accessible after decades of omission from the official record.

And the story of residents’ long pursuit of social justice stands poised to become a tourist attraction in its own right, largely thanks to the homegrown preservation alliance known as Newtown Alive.”

Read more from the Sarasota Herald Tribune:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20190207/from-secret-history-to-tourist-attraction

Learn More About the Integration of Sarasota Beaches

“Following the 1954 landmark decision Brown vs. The Board of Education of Topeka, which ruled “separate but equal” unconstitutional, one of the first goals of the Sarasota NAACP was the establishment of a Negro beach.

Because all north Sarasota beaches were for whites only, blacks had to go to an area adjacent to the Venice Airfield to swim. In 1955, the Sarasota Chapter of the NAACP was determined to correct this situation.

Sarasota voters approved a $250,000 bond issue to expand existing beach facilities, which included a Negro beach. Locations considered for locating the beach were the north end of Siesta Key at Big Pass, a strip of beach south of Siesta beach to Midnight Pass and an area on Longboat Key.”

Read more about the history of the integration of Sarasota’s beaches here:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/article/LK/20040301/News/605203432/SH/

Want To See Photos From Overtown Heritage Day?

Overtown Heritage Day, a re-dedication ceremony of the “First Black Community” historic marker, was held Sunday, May 19, 2019. Former Overtown residents returned to their community with Rosemary District and Sarasota Residents to honor the early African American pioneers who built the town’s infrastructure.

Want to see more great photos from Overtown Heritage Day? Visit INSTUDIO E PHOTO for the full gallery:

https://instudioe.smugmug.com/Events/Overtown-Heritage-Day/

(All photos courtesy INSTUDIO E PHOTO.)

Erased no more: In Sarasota’s Rosemary, a reminder of what came before

(Featured photo: Nighttime in the Rosemary District. Courtesy Vickie Oldham Collection.)

“Overtown was established in 1885, a year after the first African-American settler arrived in Sarasota. But it took 100 years for the site to be acknowledged with an official historical marker. This sign — removed for safekeeping during the feverish construction that has transformed the district — will be rededicated as part of Overtown Heritage Day on Sunday in the Rosemary Square courtyard.”

Read more in the Herald Tribune:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20190517/erased-no-more-in-sarasotas-rosemary-reminder-of-what-came-before?fbclid=IwAR0TIOPHkTNDjDyeioPKBjlnfm4FeIg3j_uxj4Dy9FSO8Fqld6SOhDVfT-w

Suncoast View Looks Back at Overtown’s Impact on Suncoast History

“The Rosemary District is exploding with new development, and the ribbon-cutting is scheduled this weekend for the new Rosemary Square. But as we look toward the future, it’s also important to remember this area’s rich and diverse past.”

Watch coverage from Suncoast View about Overtown, Sarasota’s first African American community:

https://www.mysuncoast.com/video/2019/05/17/we-look-back-overtown-impact-suncoast-history-suncoast-view/?fbclid=IwAR2dp1zysu7VcbgVWAZCeHrvkur__ngoC-fFe0zC7FPFObXEbt-rMqE28f0

SNN News: Rosemary Square celebrates Overtown Heritage Day

(Featured photo courtesy of INSTUDIO E PHOTO.)

“It has all the makings of a good old fashion block party complete with food, dancing, and face painting. The message behind the festivities digs deeper into Sarasota’s past, officially naming Sunday May 19th as ‘Overtown Heritage Day’.”

Read more from SNN News coverage about Overtown Heritage Day:

https://www.snntv.com/story/40499606/rosemary-square-celebrates-overtown-heritage-day

Herald Tribune: Overtown Heritage Day among “Top 10 Things To Do This Weekend”

(Featured photo courtesy of INSTUDIO E PHOTO.)

Overtown Heritage Day, celebrating the first African American community in Sarasota, was one of the “Top 10 Things To Do This Weekend” from May 17-19, according to the Sarasota Herald Tribune. The event was listed as number three on the list.

Read more:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20190517/top-10-things-to-do-this-weekend-in-sarasota-bradenton-venice-may-17-19?fbclid=IwAR3XQMs8nIPf8pJQq2xiovmfjSfoUJ2K7rZ8Mgzwq4SzHV7RZqDqb3bwWMQ

 

Sarasota’s First African-American Community Highlighted At ‘Newtown History Makers’

(Featured photo courtesy Vickie Oldham.)

“Sarasota’s first African-American community, Overtown, will be in the spotlight during a Newtown History Makers panel next week. Overtown, a segregated residential area of just 20 acres, was the first black community in Sarasota in the 1920s. While Newtown continues to operate as an historical landmark, Overtown was lost to downtown development during the 1960s.

The Newtown Alive initiative, which has launched heritage tourism in Newtown,  has also contributed to economic growth within the community. The program uses historic markers, a website, mobile app and trolley tours to promote awareness of the community.”

Read more from WUSF News:

https://wusfnews.wusf.usf.edu/post/sarasota-s-first-african-american-community-highlighted-newtown-history-makers

Event Commemorates Integration of Sarasota Beaches

(Featured photo courtesy of: YourObserver.com.)

“Newtown Alive! and Visit Sarasota County organized a re-enactment of the caravans and Lido Beach wade-ins that advocated for integration. The event, held on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, also commemorated the addition of Newtown’s African-American heritage trail to the U.S. Civil Rights Trail.”

Read more about the impactful and historic re-enactment:

https://www.yourobserver.com/photo-gallery/sarasota-lido-beach-integration-newtown-history-civil-rights-trail?amp

Proposals for Newtown Cultural Center in Students’ Hands

(Featured photo courtesy of: Herald-Tribune staff photo / Dan Wagner.)

“More than a dozen Gators sat in a circle at the Goodwill Selby Newtown Center on Friday morning to launch an academic project that the community hopes will have a concrete outcome. The University of Florida architecture and construction students had come from Gainesville on a mission to develop proposals for a new cultural arts center in the heart of the Newtown on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Way.”

Read more about the upcoming Newtown Cultural Arts Center in the Herald Tribune:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20180126/proposals-for-newtown-cultural-center-in-students-hands?template=ampart

Upcoming Newtown Cultural Arts Center Featured on ABC7 Sarasota

“Over the past few years, the Martin Luther King Way Corridor has made several strides towards redevelopment. Now the effort to revitalize the area is getting another push. In the past few years we’ve seen a new medical practice and even a few restaurants coming up on the MLK Corridor. But now, just recently, City Commissioners approved a new Cultural Arts Center right here in the heart of Newtown. Many folks are saying the project is well overdue.”

 

Learn more about the upcoming Newtown Cultural Arts Center and watch the news coverage from ABC7 Sarasota:

 

A Newly Excavated Settlement Highlights Florida’s History as a Haven for Escaped Slaves

“Called one of the most significant historical sites in Florida and perhaps the U.S. by Florida historian Canter Brown Jr., Angola is a story of struggle, tragedy and, ultimately, survival in the quest for freedom.”

Read more in Sarasota Magazine:

https://www.sarasotamagazine.com/articles/2018/6/27/a-newly-excavated-settlement-highlights-florida-s-history-as-a-haven-for-escaped-slaves

Seidman: An idea long overdue

“St. Petersburg has one. So does Fort Myers, Punta Gorda, Manatee County and (soon) Longboat Key. Tampa has two. And though it took decades to realize, one finally opened in the nation’s capital two years ago. But Sarasota, whose racial history is as rich and influential as what you’ll find in any of those places, does not have a center devoted to preserving the heritage of its longstanding and vibrant African American community. ”

Read more in the Herald Tribune:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20180617/seidman-idea-long-overdue?template=ampart

Sarasota County civil rights history comes alive for local youth

“Students ran barefoot onto Lido Beach and went ankle deep in the clear saltwater. It was a moment of reconciliation after they learned about the struggle that local civil rights activists faced to even step foot on the sand.

About 20 teenagers from the Roy McBean Boys & Girls Club went on a trolley tour around Newtown’s historic civil rights sites and heard from local activists such as Jetson Grimes, Pam Moreland, Fredd Atkins and Carolyn Mason. Throughout the ride, passengers sang freedom songs which civil rights activists sang.”

Read more from the Herald Tribune:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20180609/sarasota-county-civil-rights-history-comes-alive-for-local-youth

 

Sarasota fourth-graders will learn history of Newtown

“Beginning the day after Martin Luther King Jr. Day and continuing until the start of Black History Month in February, Sarasota County School District fourth-grade students will have the opportunity to embark on a field trip touring 15 historical markers around Newtown and taking in a Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe play. District administrators hope the program, partially sponsored by Embracing Our Differences, will expose students to local civil rights history, especially combined with Black History Month curriculum and the Florida history that fourth graders learn.”

Read more on Herald Tribune

Vickie Oldham Wants to Preserve the History of Newtown- 2018 Unity Awards

“One of Vickie Oldham’s earliest memories is watching her grandmother don her white dress and purple-tasseled fez for her lodge meeting at the Evening Star, a black social and benevolent organization that helped fill a gap in social services. It’s a memory that Oldham fully appreciates now that she has led the initiative Newtown Alive to compile, organize and package the history of Newtown, the historically black neighborhood of Sarasota in which she grew up.”

Read more from this Sarasota Magazine article about the 2018 Unity Awards:

https://www.sarasotamagazine.com/articles/2018/1/23/vickie-oldham-newtown-alive

Civil Rights: In 1950s Sarasota, Shiela Sanders found her voice

In 1950s Sarasota, Shiela Sanders found her voice.

She sat in the back of the library.

Amid stacks of papers and books, Sheila Sanders sat separated from other patrons of the Sarasota County Public Library.

She was smart, competitive and stubborn. At age 5 she could read, write and tell time.

Sanders was black. In 1950s Sarasota, that meant many things.

It meant she went to an all-black school in Newtown. Sarasota wouldn’t integrate its public schools until 1962 — eight years after the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision.

It meant she lived five miles from Sarasota’s white, sandy beaches but would not be allowed to visit until 1964.

And it meant that when Sanders went to the library, she sat in the back. To check out a book from a Sarasota Public Library, Sarasota’s black residents had to prove they owned land.

“My family did own property in Sarasota. We had lived here since the ’20s, but they wanted my parents to have to sign an order to check books out of the library,” Sanders said. “What they did is they let me sit in the stacks and read … The librarians were very, very kind. It wasn’t their rule. It was the rule.”

Despite the treatment she experienced there compared to her white counterparts, the library was her oasis. It afforded her the knowledge to dispel the stereotypes associated with her age, her gender and her race.

“People used to just assume that because you’re small, you’re younger, you don’t know anything,” Sanders said.

The injustice was clear.

“What bothered me about it is that tourists, who did not own property in Sarasota, were allowed to check out books,” Sanders said. “And I thought that was grossly unfair.”

Sanders was never one to rest on her age as an excuse. At the library, her presence was her protest. As she got older she found that her voice had power.

“I think it’s important that you’re always aware of what it is you stand for and that you’re willing to communicate that to somebody else,” Sanders said. “If it’s not worth standing up for, it’s not worth being part of you.”

In third grade, Sanders and her classmates learned finances by bringing change to school each week to deposit into accounts the school had opened at a Sarasota bank. However, Sanders and her classmates were not allowed to tour the bank.

Not only did she organize a tour of Palmer Bank, then located at Five Points, she also persuaded her classmates to withhold their funds. If Sarasota Federal didn’t want them in the bank, it was not going to get their money.

“It wasn’t a protest. It was an act of fairness.” Sanders said.

The teacher asked why there were no nickels and dimes to deposit. All eyes were on Sanders.

“The teacher … said everybody had to save something,” Sanders said. “So we had a roll of pennies and everybody put in a penny. My thinking was that if we would just put in a penny it would cost them more to process.”

Although she concedes some might have viewed her actions as disrespectful, she doesn’t see it that way. For her, age is no excuse.

That’s why at the age of 12 and standing below 5 feet tall, she took over leadership of the youth branch of the Sarasota NAACP.

“I was the youngest one there, but I have always felt that opportunities should not be based just on numbers,” Sanders said. “A number of people thought I was just petite. They didn’t know I was that young.”

It has been decades since Sarasota abandoned legal segregation, but Sanders’ sense of justice has not waned. She wields her wallet and her words with power.

When her words won’t do, she allows her actions to speak.

She signed her name to a lawsuit in the 1970s against the city  in an effort to install single voter districts. She refused to buy diamonds during apartheid. She’s been an advocate for victims of domestic violence and teaches Sunday school at New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church.

She knows the world isn’t fair, and may never be, but her convictions prohibit her from resting.

“I think it’s important that you don’t have to clean the whole world, but you clean the area that you are,” Sanders said. “And you keep it clean … I think it’s important that you act like you care all the time if you care.”

by: Anna Brugmann

Newtown Alive book available for purchase from Barnes and Noble

The book “Newtown Alive: Courage, Dignity, Determination” by Rosalyn Howard Ph.D. and Vickie Oldham M.F.A. is available for purchase from Barnes and Noble.

Find out why early settlers came to the tiny fishing village, how they made a living, and why they organized a self-sustaining neighborhood. The book also describes their religious and social traditions, medical and military history and their emphasis on education. Whether you are new to Sarasota, a frequent visitor, an educator, historian or a longtime resident trying to connect the dots in your family tree, we believe the personal stories of courage, dignity and determination of Newtown and Overtown residents will be enlightening and inspiring.

Purchase it here: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/newtown-alive-rosalyn-howard-phd/1126058211

Saving and celebrating Newtown’s stories

A new project will offer a picture of the community’s history from 1914-2014.

There was a time when home remedies made from cobwebs, cotton balls and turpentine cured everything in Newtown. Back then, hospitals would turn their heads at black residents, but that didn’t stop the community from thriving.

Nearly 100 African American-owned businesses dotted Martin Luther King Jr. Way. And when some construction companies refused to build homes in Newtown, residents took matters into their own hands. Literally. They built their own homes, some of which still stand tall today.

Stories such as these are being compiled in the recently launched Newtown Conservation Historic District project. The city-funded initiative aims to piece together a picture of the community’s history from 1914-2014.

As Project Director Vickie Oldham puts it, the project looks at how Newtown residents worked, played and prayed.

The project received $50,000 from the City of Sarasota’s demolition fund, which goes toward projects that support historic preservation.

A team of volunteer researchers, ranging from ethnographers to anthropologists to architects, has partnered with local college students to complete the first phase of the project.

At its completion, there will be dozens of video-recorded oral histories and a historic map documenting historically significant properties in Newtown. Along with an interactive website, a walking tour and historic markers will guide people through the community.

It’s been a long time coming for the historically African-American community of Newtown. In the 1980s, former Sarasota mayor and City Commission member Fredd Atkins started playing with the idea of a project that would celebrate Newtown.

“The community will not only learn more about their history and their forefather’s history, they’ll also learn to respect the struggle and respect the opportunities they have now,” Atkins said. “A lot of the things going on today go contrary to this struggle. I think the project will help young people, and new people coming here, celebrate our history and our community.”

There’s also a sense of urgency. Young people are leaving Newtown for the same reason their ancestors first came: jobs.

“The community is consistently dying,” said Jetson Grimes, owner of Jetson’s Unisex Salon — don’t call it a barbershop — on North Osprey.

Grimes hopes the project will remind the greater community that Newton is also a part of Sarasota.

Oldham points to the Rosemary District, the city’s first documented black community.

Today, a plaque commemorates the area’s history, but development and outside investors have slowly pushed out the descendants of those first families.

“I hope that this project will reveal the past so that it can improve the quality of life for African-American residents as we move into the future,” Oldham said.

By Yadira Lopez

Local community leaders want to make Newtown a destination

Local community leaders want to make Newtown a destination

When exploring Sarasota, there are a few iconic spots that come to mind, like Siesta Key, St. Armands and the long stretch of island that is Longboat.

But there’s one place that’s missing, according to a contingent of community leaders from the city’s historically black neighborhood. They want to add Newtown to that list.

“We can compete with anybody,” said Lou Murray, vice president of the grassroots organization Newtown Nation and head of the area’s farmers market. “We have out-of-sight music and the food is unbelievable and nobody can touch us. This is what we do.”

In the last year, the neighborhood has seen an increase in community outreach and programming intended to both serve residents and to attract people from around the city. Newtown now has a farmers market selling fresh produce the first and third Friday and Saturday of every month, and that same market has hosted popular gatherings like the Big Mama’s Collard Greens Fest in October and the recent Reggae Bash.

These initiatives were spawned in large part thanks to Newtown Nation, which was formed in November 2014 by local residents hoping to improve Newtown

By Elizabeth Djinis

Newtown Alive Gives Residents a Taste of Newtown

The Newtown Alive project put on a block party to dedicate Newtown’s newly installed historic markers.

Newtown Alive lead consultant Vickie Oldham had a lot to dance about at the Newtown Redevelopment Office on April 8.

Residents, local officials and Newtown Alive volunteers gathered in the parking lot for the Taste of Newtown block party to dedicate Newtown’s newly installed historical markers.

Eventgoers mingled as trollies took guests on a tour of the 15 markers that commemorate the neighborhood’s history.

In between tours children played games as adults mingled and listened to live music.

“It’s a family affair,” Oldham said.

by: Anna Brugmann

Newtown Honors its History

The Newtown Alive project revealed 15 markers that will mark historic locations throughout Newtown.

Vickie Oldham said she was grateful to find tissues tucked inside the podium at the Robert L. Taylor Community Complex Feb. 18 during the unveiling of 15 historic markers that will be placed throughout Newtown as part of the Newtown Alive project.

Oldham, the project’s lead consultant, said she had a lot of people to thank for the progress of Newtown Alive, a project which has documented this history of Sarasota’s historically African American neighborhoods.

She thanked former Sarasota Mayor Fredd Atkins for beginning discussions about documenting the history of Sarasota’s African American community in 1985 a city commissioner. She thanked her team of researchers, the community for participating in the project and the city of Sarasota for funding its primary phases.

All in all, the event was characterized by gratitude. Speakers applauded the work of community members that came before them — activists, entrepreneurs and educators — who paved the way for a better future.

The contributions of those community members were honored as current members of the Newtown community pulled off thin pieces of cloth that covered reproductions of the plagues.

But even as Newtown celebrated its history, many community members looked to the future.

“(Our history) can’t just stay here,” former president of the Manasota branch of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History Mark Jackson said. “It has to go to the young people … This is a living history.”

Vickie Oldham said she was grateful to find tissues tucked inside the podium at the Robert L. Taylor Community Complex Feb. 18 during the unveiling of 15 historic markers that will be placed throughout Newtown as part of the Newtown Alive project.

Oldham, the project’s lead consultant, said she had a lot of people to thank for the progress of Newtown Alive, a project which has documented this history of Sarasota’s historically African American neighborhoods.

She thanked former Sarasota Mayor Fredd Atkins for beginning discussions about documenting the history of Sarasota’s African American community in 1985 a city commissioner. She thanked her team of researchers, the community for participating in the project and the city of Sarasota for funding its primary phases.

All in all, the event was characterized by gratitude. Speakers applauded the work of community members that came before them — activists, entrepreneurs and educators — who paved the way for a better future.

The contributions of those community members were honored as current members of the Newtown community pulled off thin pieces of cloth that covered reproductions of the plagues.

But even as Newtown celebrated its history, many community members looked to the future.

“(Our history) can’t just stay here,” former president of the Manasota branch of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History Mark Jackson said. “It has to go to the young people … This is a living history.”

by: Anna Brugmann

Historic markers will tell the story of Newtown community

15 markers will note Newtown’s development, schools and legacy of activism.

NEWTOWN — Vickie Oldham feels like something is missing when she walks the streets where she grew up.

She felt it when she strolled communities like St. Petersburg or Fort Pierce that honored the history of their black communities through legacy trails and monuments. The self-proclaimed history buff wanted the same thing for her hometown, to tell the story of the neighborhood where she was born and raised. “On Orange Avenue and 35th Street,” she’ll tell you, smiling.

By Elizabeth Djinis

Newtown community celebrates history, leaders

Historic markers celebrate the men and women who championed community’s residents, schools and businesses

SARASOTA — One by one, Vickie Oldham called up members of the Newtown community from the crowd in the Robert L. Taylor Community Complex on Saturday morning, urging them to stand by the historical marker commemorating their impact.

Here were members of the community who had provided some of the area’s first medical services, served in the first education institutions, worked on celery farms or as domestics to make a living. They stood by their markers, the bright orange edges of the poster reproductions peeking out from the plastic wrap. And then, Oldham said the magic phrase: it was time to unveil them.

The rectangular markers were revealed, emblazoned with titles such as “Segregation, Desegregation and Integration” and “Military Service of Newtown Men and Women.” More than 200 people lingered around the markers, looking at their archival photography and detailed descriptions of the community’s history.

“If we’re going to have an unveiling, this is the way to do it,” said Trevor Harvey, president of the Sarasota County NAACP.

by: Elizabeth Djinis

 

Newtown Alive project wins statewide historic preservation award

“A local project to compile and commemorate the history of Newtown, Sarasota’s historically black community, won a statewide historic preservation award over the weekend.”

Read more about the award in this article from the Sarasota Herald Tribune:

https://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20170522/newtown-alive-project-wins-statewide-historic-preservation-award

Newtown Alive earns state recognition

“Vickie Oldham and the rest of the team behind Newtown Alive began researching and consolidating the history of Newtown in 2015 with a simple directive.They created a 365-page research report using 22 oral history interviews from Newtown residents, collected primary and secondary source historical documents and created an inventory of Newtown’s historic structures.

Since then, Oldham and her team have added historic markers, organized a trolley tour of the neighborhood and written a book, “Newtown Alive: Courage, Dignity, Determination,” based off the original report. Their efforts have not gone unnoticed.

Newtown Alive received a Historic Preservation Award on March 19 from the Florida Trust for Historic Preservation in the preservation education and media category.”

Read more about the Historic Preservation Award in Observer:

https://www.yourobserver.com/article/newtown-alive-earns-state-recognition

Newtown Alive comes to New College

“The living history of a community once segregated from Sarasota. That’s what Newtown Alive has preserved – in all its success and struggle – and that’s what the project’s director Vickie Oldham shared with guests from New College and wider Sarasota last week as part of the New Topics series held in the Mildred Sainer Pavilion.”

Read more from the NCF Catalyst:

A Place We Call Home: Historic Markers Tell Story of Newtown History

By 

Posted by abc7 MySuncoast

A project called “Newtown Alive” is now being put in place throughout Newtown. It guides you through Newtown’s history and introduces you to the trail blazers, the men and women who make Newtown a great place to call home.

Fifteen large colorful signs with pictures are being installed in Newtown marking a historic trail around the community. Its an important project in Sarasota’s African-American community. .

“It is important because we as African Americans in Sarasota and this region need to be recognized for our contributions,” says Fredd Atkins, Sarasota’s first African-American mayor. “But also to give our young people the drive and the ability to seek out greater opportunities for themselves. ”

” The markers are being placed at strategic historic locations,” says Atkins. “They will be marked at a church , Booker High School, Robert L. Taylor Community Center, businesses and historical homes.”

They will tell how Newtown moved from segregation to integration and they will tell about the people and places important to that journey.

Ninety-nine year-old Glossie Atkins witnessed it. She moved here in the 1940s and wants people to know what it was like in those days.

“I would love for them to know that Newtown has changed a lot .It’s better than it was when I came here because when I came here we had to ride in the back of the bus, now we can ride anywhere we want to.”

But after all these years, the disrespect still hurts. “We couldn’t go in the cafes we had to go in the back of the cafes, but now we can go in the front.”

 

Organizers are hoping not only Newtown residents, but people from all over Sarasota will read the markers and follow the trail.

“We hope the young people in our community will cherish the opportunity to remember and learn and see some of the pictures of their parents in their period and time,” says Atkins.

And they’re hoping the trail will draw business to Newtown.

Historic Markers Tell Story of Newtown History

By Linda Carson

Posted by abc7 MySuncoast

A project called “Newtown Alive” is now being put in place It guides you thru Newtown’s history and introduces you to the trail blazers, the men and women who make Newtown “a great place to call home”.

15 large colorful signs with pictures are being installed in Newtown, marking a historic trail around the community.

An important project in Sarasota’s African American community. .

Fredd Atkins, Sarasota’s first African American Mayor says, “It is important because we as African Americans in Sarasota and this region need to be recognized for our contributions but also to give our young people the drive and the ability to seek out greater opportunities for themselves. ”

Atkins says, ” The markers are being placed at strategic historic locations. They will be marked at a church , Booker High School, Robert L. Taylor Community Center, businesses and history homes.”

They’ll tell how Newtown moved from segregation to integration, and they’ll tell about the people and places important to that journey.

99 year old Glossie Atkins witnessed it. She moved here in the 1940s. She wants people to know what it was like in those days..

“I would love for them to know that Newtown has changed a lot .It’s better than it was when I came here because when I came here we had to ride in the back of the bus, now we can ride anywhere we want to.”

But after all these years, the disrespect still hurts. “We couldn’t go in the cafes we had to go in the back of the cafes, but now we can go in the front.”

Organizers are hoping not only Newtown residents, but people from all over Sarasota will read the markers and follow the trail.

Fredd Atkins says, “But first, we hope the young people in our community will cherish the opportunity to remember and learn and see some of the pictures of their parents in their period and time ”

And they’re hoping the trail will draw business to Newtown.

Historic markers celebrate the men and women who championed community’s residents, schools and businesses

By Elizabeth Djinis

Posted by the Heraldtribune

SARASOTA — One by one, Vickie Oldham called up members of the Newtown community from the crowd in the Robert L. Taylor Community Complex on Saturday morning, urging them to stand by the historical marker commemorating their impact.

Here were members of the community who had provided some of the area’s first medical services, served in the first education institutions, worked on celery farms or as domestics to make a living. They stood by their markers, the bright orange edges of the poster reproductions peeking out from the plastic wrap. And then, Oldham said the magic phrase: it was time to unveil them.

The rectangular markers were revealed, emblazoned with titles such as “Segregation, Desegregation and Integration” and “Military Service of Newtown Men and Women.” More than 200 people lingered around the markers, looking at their archival photography and detailed descriptions of the community’s history.

“If we’re going to have an unveiling, this is the way to do it,” said Trevor Harvey, president of the Sarasota County NAACP.

The 15 markers will be installed in Newtown from late this month to early March, and will be placed outside prominent community locations such as Booker High School and the city’s Newtown-North Sarasota Redevelopment Office. In March, Oldham hopes to have a one-day event with trolley tours of the markers; a date has not been announced.

City and Sarasota County officials dotted the audience and Mayor Willie Shaw introduced each of the speakers as master of ceremonies. When former mayor Fredd Atkins, running for City Commission, took the podium, he noted that the markers were a long time coming.

“Over these last 35 years, our community has pulled this off, moment by moment, day by day, struggle through struggle,” Atkins said. “…We are sitting in front of those visions from the Saturday morning meetings. This historic trail is here.”

Almost all of the speakers urged the young people in the audience to remember and listen to the history being told, because it is their legacy to repeat it.

“If we don’t engage young people, then the history will die with the people in this room,” Harvey said.

Before the unveiling, 53-year-old Elizabeth Rivers Williams said just how much the markers had taught her about her own family members. Her grandfather, John Henry Rivers, had a history of activism in the Newtown community and paved the way for black elected officials like Shaw and Atkins. But talking with Oldham made her realize that Rivers had also been involved with the NAACP cars bringing blacks to the then-segregated Lido Beach in the 1950s.

“It makes me feel proud,” Rivers Williams said. “He was a very special man.”

When she saw the markers, she paused, saying Oldham “needs to pat herself on the back.”

How Newtown youths shaped the community’s legacy

Picture above: John Rivers in his 20s. He was assistant to Neil Humphrey Sr., the first Sarasota NAACP president, then succeeded Humphrey as leader of the organization.

Posted Jun 27, 2016 at 12:01 AM By Vickie Oldham, Guest Columnist

The recently completed “Newtown Alive” history report is filled with examples of the courage, dignity and determination of African-American residents and newcomers who arrived in Sarasota, saw work to be done, rolled up their sleeves and began leading community transformation. The document captures their recollections and testimonies.

Over the last eight months, a gold mine of surprising finds surfaced during research of the City of Sarasota’s Newtown Conservation Historic District project. Watercolor images of Newtown and Overtown, family photographs, maps, memorabilia and audio recordings – rarely seen or heard – were found in private collections. The final report reveals a robust, rich history informed by over 200 primary and secondary source documents, 46 oral history interviews, and the identification of 151 historic structures as well as a set of potential historic districts.

For me, one of the most interesting themes that emerged from the research was the youthful age of Newtown’s leaders who upended Jim Crow laws that blocked equal access to Sarasota banks, restaurants, downtown shops, the hospital, libraries, and schools. The creative, bold actions and persistence of residents such as Neil Humphrey, Jack and Mary Emma Jones, John Rivers, Fannie McDugle, Dr. Edward James, II, William Jackson, James Logan, Bud Thomas, Fredd Atkins, Walter Gilbert, Betty Johnson, Sheila Sanders and many others were extraordinary.

These leaders are now considered community pioneers and trailblazers, but it was as young people that they began shaping Newtown’s future, and inspiring others to move the needle of community progress.

Retired educator Dorothye Smith recalls Edward James asking many questions in second grade. “He always asked ‘why’ about everything,” she said. So as a Florida A&M University college freshman home on Christmas break in 1957, the first question he asked was “why?” when a librarian denied him and three classmates the right to check out books. Undeterred, James kept asking until a meeting was arranged on the spot with Sarasota City Manager Ken Thompson.

FACTS

Newtown Conservation Historic District community presentation
6 p.m., Thursday, June 30
Sarasota City Hall
Sarasota Media Center
1565 First Street
Free to the public;
no reservation required

The college student’s tenacity opened library services to Newtown residents and students. Today, Dr. Edward James II continues to stand in the gap, insisting on positive change and resisting the status quo.

As a 26-year-old on staff at the library, Betty Johnson advanced James’ efforts by working behind the scenes, persuading her bosses at the main library to open a reading room in Newtown. Her idea morphed into a library outreach program that eventually led to the construction of the North Sarasota Public library.

As a 12-year old, Walter Gilbert attended NAACP meetings with his mother and was inspired by local NAACP president Neil Humphrey. “I thought he was a meek man. But his persona changed in my face. I wanted to be a leader like him,” said Gilbert, who at 25 became an NAACP member. Gilbert was mentored by NAACP president Rivers and board member Edward James, then later became the NAACP’s president from 1981 to 1985.

In third grade, Sheila Sanders and her classmates saved pennies, nickels and dimes to learn about money management. They deposited the coins in passbook savings accounts. When Sarasota Federal Bank would not allow African-American students to tour the facility and vault like other district students, Sanders persuaded her 8- and 9-year-old classmates to close their accounts and open up new ones at the Palmer Bank.

As a teen, she routinely studied the agenda of the Sarasota County School Board and rode a city bus to attend the meetings. Years later, Sanders became Gilbert’s campaign manager during his first bid for city commissioner. The team of James, Jackson, Sanders, Gilbert and Atkins made sure that Newtown in District 1 would have representation on the City Commission through a federal lawsuit that they filed and won.

Growing up in Newtown, I knew about the community leaders’ work, but realized during this project the youthful age in which they changed community history. The stories of Newtown residents, told in their own words coupled with documents and photos, paint a complete picture of how young people shaped one of Sarasota’s oldest communities.

Education, exposure, civic engagement and mentoring prepared the young adults for leadership. The same components can transform, inspire and energize today’s millennials to lead.

Vickie Oldham is the Newtown Conservation Historic District consultant and a higher education marketing and communications strategist.

Keeping Newtown Alive

Pictured above: Fannie McDugle after her oral history interview with Vickie Oldham. Newtown Conservation Historic District Project strives to preserve and celebrate legendary African-American community in Sarasota.

By Amanda Smith

 

Black History Month is, above all, a celebration of the massive achievements by African Americans – and a recognition of the central role they played in U.S. history. The only catch with history is, if you don’t preserve it, there’s no celebrating it – or learning from its perils and successes.

That was exactly the pitch passionate Sarasota residents made to their local government, leading to a $50,000 city-funded initiative – The Newtown Conservation Historic District Project – dedicated to highlighting the history of an African- American enclave in Sarasota with beginnings dating back an entire century.

Newtown’s beginnings can be traced back to 1914, when it evolved out of the growth of Sarasota’s oldest African-American community, the Rosemary District. From the early years through the 1940s, the street now known as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Way was the flourishing heart of the then segregated Newtown, but decades of disinvestment and capital flight – along with a concentration of government subsidized housing – have devastated the area, causing the slow, painful demise of the once-thriving Newtown community.

Rather than watching its memories disappear right along with it, a team of mostly volunteers re executing a protective homage, conducting intricate research and personal interviews to piece together a comprehensive account of Newtown’s rich history. Members of the research team include an architectural historian, an ethno-historian, retired professor and cultural anthropologist Rosalind Howard, as well as Sarasota native, historian and project manager Vickie Oldham. The completed project will produce a report documenting Newtown’s 100 years of history and culture, oral history recordings from residents, a map of district boundaries and a walking tour of Newtown.

The passionate leader who many believe has been the project’s visionary and its fire, Oldham says next to mentoring young people, this is the most important work of her career. “This is truly my legacy,” she says. “Up until now, Newtown’s history has only been available in fragments – a local art gallery had some history, you could learn a little at a cultural resource center – there’s really no single repository of primary and secondary source accounts in one cohesive document – until now. It’s huge and it’s history in the making. I’m a native and a lover of history, and now I get to use every communications tool available to share the history of Newtown in a project that will long outlive me.” With big plans to create monuments, a website and a mobile app that can be used to hear oral accounts of Newtown seniors Oldham interviewed, she says the ultimate goal of the The Newtown Conservation Historic District Project is to share the strong values of courage, determination, self-sufficiency and commitment to community demonstrated by the residents of a segregated section of Sarasota without access to most of the resources of the larger city. “I interviewed about 40 Newtown residents and pioneers, and it was transformative to see how close-knit they all were,” Oldham reveals. “I had long-known Newtown operated under a village concept in order to make the best use of the limited resource access they had, but I never fully understood the potency of their treasured values. Experiencing the histor ymyself, sitting within inches of
the people who lived it, taught me the unrivaled power of individual personal stories to demonstrate the sacrifice, strength and spirit required to live for something greater than oneself. Honestly, it made me want to be a better person.” Retired University of Central Florida professor and cultural anthropologist Rosalind Howard explains that the pride Newtown’s older generation feels in sharing their stories stems from how demonstrative they are in revealing Newtown’s strong moral values and ethics to present-day Americans. “As I compile the interviews collected by Vickie, the common theme is the pride interviewees feel in sharing their stories of enduring the struggles of segregation, courageously starting their own businesses to build a self-sufficient community, and fearlessly fighting for civil rights,” Howard says.

“Many of them actually admit to desiring a return of those village values of community cohesion, strong religious values, shared ideologies and a work ethic and motivation sourced from an emotional desire to honor the unity of Newtown.” From former community hairdressers, to Newtown migrants like the ever-outspoken Jesse Johnson who, at his mother’s insistence, left Georgia for Sarasota to avoid being lynched, citizens of Newtown remember feeling a strong sense of unified identity and the power to move mountains together.

“It was definitely an ‘us against the world’ mentality – and that’s because it was,” Howard states. “They were fighting for their rights, they were fighting just to survive. Banding together like that has a powerful effect on the psyche and allows for people to do tremendous things.” That hard work and dedication – and its resulting accomplishments – are exactly what Howard sees as the greater message the Newtown Conservation Historic Project has a chance to impart. “Overwhelmingly, my assessment of the interviews is that participants want to convey the presence and the power of communal values and morality,” Howard says. “In contemporary society, there is a very prevalent conception of African-Americans as lazy, jobless welfare abusers with no work ethic or motivation. By documenting the ingenuity and achievements of enclaves like Newtown – feats accomplished by intrinsic motivation, pride and political involvement – we as a country are forced to rewrite the story.” Howard doesn’t expect a Newtown revival, but rather a reconstruction of the perception. “This idea that there is a history that has been untold may help facilitate a subtle shift in the perceived values of African Americans as a whole,” Howard hopes. “It will not only change how others see us, and how the history books see us, but perhaps it will change how we see ourselves.”

Sarasota’s Newtown Conservation Historic Project should be completed by Summer 2016. Find them on Facebook at Newtown Conservation Historic District and follow them on Twitter @newtown_dream.

ASALH: THE NEWTOWN CONSERVATION HISTORIC DISTRICT PROJECT

“Manasota ASALH in partnership with historian Ms. Vickie Oldham – ASALH member –was awarded a grant to map and document the 100-year history of the Newtown Community located within Sarasota, Florida.

As Newtown commemorates its 100th anniversary, attention is focused on its past, present, and future. It is important because the hard work, sacrifice, and dedication of Sarasota’s African American residents helped in Sarasota’s development. Blacks cleared snake-infested wooded land for real estate developers, laid railroad ties, planted citrus and celery fields, helped plat golf courses, and labored in the homes of the town’s most influential power brokers – cooking, cleaning, ironing, and rearing children.”

http://www.asalh-manasotafl.org/the-newtown-conservation-historic-district-project/