‘This is Still My Neighborhood’
In this Out of the Archives podcast episode, personal stories of living in the Jane Addams Homes offer insight on different periods of neighborhood change, redevelopment, and gentrification.
by Liú m.z.h. chen
Photo from an interactive oral history listening and mapping session.
Covering episodes 23–26, Season 4 was curated by Museum Registrar & Assistant Curator, jellystone robinson, with support from Senior Program Manager of Oral History, Liú Chen. As a former resident of the Ida B. Wells Homes Extension, a filmmaker and poet, and one of the first graduates of the Museum’s Beauty Turner Academy of Oral History, jellystone brings creativity and lived experience directly into the curatorial process, and complements Liú’s background in history and equity-focused archival practices. Together, jellystone and Liú curated, scripted, and co-hosted a 4-episode arc of some of our strongest episodes to date, and invited audiences into an aural journey centering public housing residents’ conversations about equity and displacement.

With particular emphasis on the national trend towards privatizing public housing, this season blends historical context with narrators’ reflections on their memories, hopes and dreams for public housing communities and lands. Across four episodes, we dig into crucial pieces of public housing history while also using sound design techniques to compliment our narrator’s storytelling with great care: integrating sound effects, news coverage, documentary excerpts, and ambient music to create a more textured soundscape for our listeners.
Learn more and listen to full episodes from Season 4 below:
In this Out of the Archives podcast episode, personal stories of living in the Jane Addams Homes offer insight on different periods of neighborhood change, redevelopment, and gentrification.
This Out of the Archives podcast episode honors the legacy of Ms. Beauty Turner, a mother, journalist, historian, and community activist who lived in Chicago’s Robert Taylor Homes.
Episode 23: “‘This is still my neighborhood’: Memories of Taylor Street and The Village” highlights cycles of demolition and displacement in Chicago’s Near West Side neighborhood—where the National Public Housing Museum is based. From before the city of Chicago existed, to the 1930s “slum clearance” that made space public housing, to the 1999 Plan for Transformation that included the demolition of over 18,000 public housing units in favor of a mixed-income, private ownership model, this land has seen many cycles of development, displacement, and redevelopment. Former ABLA residents Janetta Pegues and Allen Schwartz remember how their community has changed over time.
Episode 24: “‘Beauty is Remembered’: A Mother’s Fight for Public Housing” tells the story of Beauty Turner, the namesake of our oral history training program, pulling from interviews with her eldest son, other Robert Taylor Homes residents, and documentaries that featured the dearly departed resident advocate herself. As a journalist, poet, and founder/leader of the GHETTO Bus Tours, Ms. Beauty devoted much of her life to warning about the devastating impacts that the City of Chicago’s demolition-based Plan for Transformation would have on both the working and middle classes.
Episode 25: “‘We Ate Good!’: How U.S. Policy Shaped Sharing in Public Housing Communities” builds on the previous episodes about privatization policies by examining how other state and federal policies—from marriage requirements to so-called “Man in the House” policies to the Vietnam War—had devastating and disproportionate effects for Black communities. Narrators in Chicago and Miami illustrate how public housing communities always stepped up to help their neighbors and push for a more just world, even in the face of domineering policy decisions.
Episode 26: “‘How can we make it livable for all?’: Housing Justice is Environmental Justice” digs into how the privatization of public housing intersects with another vital social issue of our time: environmental justice. Narrators in New York City and Miami unpack how mixed income, privatized public housing is both fueled by climate change (a phenomenon dubbed “climate gentrification”) and perpetuates climate change because of its prioritization of demolition and redevelopment over rehabilitation of existing housing units.
With particular emphasis on the national trend towards privatizing public housing, this season blends historical context with narrators’ reflections on their memories, hopes and dreams for public housing communities and lands.
Don’t miss out on the forthcoming season 5—subscribe to Out of the Archives wherever you get your podcasts.
Follow our narrators across the season to hear familiar voices share different life experiences that connect into larger historical trends. For example, Dr. Richard Morgan and Ms. Betty Thompson are heard in both episodes 24 and 25, describing the ways policy changes impacted Robert Taylor Homes residents’ day-to-day lives. And Ms. Anna Williams, who first talks about her family’s generosity in feeding the Liberty Square community in episode 25, is central to episode 26 as she shares the broader story about how Liberty Square came to exist in the 20th century—and gentrified because of climate change in the 21st century. Listeners had the opportunity to learn more from Dr. Morgan, Ms. Betty, and Ms. Anna as the season went on, building a greater sense of intimacy with these beloved narrators.
Alongside the release of Season 4, we explored similar themes of education, culture, public policy, and narrative change through other museum programs and platforms, including:

We are grateful for our community of narrators, oral historians, educators, archivists, memory workers, and listeners! We encourage you to keep listening and sharing our oral history based work with the ones you love. We also welcome new narrators and ideas for activating the podcast via email at [email protected].
Stay tuned—after this tremendous season for the museum and Out of the Archives, we are excited to continue building off that momentum in season 5.
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