East Bay Yesterday Por: East Bay Yesterday East Bay history podcast that gathers, shares & celebrate stories from Oakland, Berkeley, Richmond and other towns throughout Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. 139 episodios disponibles Latest episodes of the podcast East Bay Yesterday Mostrando página 4 de 7 “It was my whole universe”: William Gee Wong on growing up in Oakland’s Chinatown 08/09/2021 “Dear Brown Eyes”: How a stash of old letters helped heal a family 28/07/2021 “Who ordered the hit?” Investigating Mac Dre’s tragic murder 16/07/2021 Hoover-Foster Stories, Vol. 2: “You become an art anthropologist” 16/06/2021 Hoover-Foster Stories, Vol. 1: BBQ, books, and big banks 04/05/2021 “We’re no longer afraid to be Black”: Before the Panthers, this group was the vanguard 07/04/2021 “We’re uncovering a lost civilization”: A look at the New Deal’s local legacy 27/02/2021 BART, bathhouses, and beyond: The friendship behind “The Cruising Diaries” 11/02/2021 “We were here before California was a state”: Talking Latino history with Jose Rivera 15/01/2021 “It was like a carnival”: The betrayal of Oakland’s 1946 General Strike 29/12/2020 Goodbye, Telegraph Avenue: An audio time capsule of the past decade 04/12/2020 “We’re not selling a neighborhood”: A new guidebook spotlights landmarks of conflict and resilience 06/11/2020 “A home burned every 11 seconds”: A deadly tragedy that could happen again 08/10/2020 “They insist on being here”: Oakland’s official bird refuses to be moved 17/09/2020 Why Dorothea Lange still matters: Q&A with Oakland Museum's Drew Johnson 18/08/2020 “How you organize that rage”: Challenging the police before Black Lives Matter 24/07/2020 EBY Q&A Live: Opening up about oysters 28/06/2020 A town within The Town: Oakland Army Base workers on its rise and fall 19/05/2020 From war to love: My grandma remembers the Oakland Army Base 24/04/2020 “We were being erased”: The woman who saved California’s Black history 06/04/2020 « Primera ‹ Anterior 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Siguiente › Última » Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn