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Renee Flood Wright Spanish transcript, 2022-07-11

 Item
Identifier: dcpl_dcohc044_04_tra_spa.pdf

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

D.C. Oral History Collaborative (DCOHC) is a citywide initiative to train community members in oral history skills, fund new and ongoing oral history projects, connect volunteers with oral history projects, and publicize existing oral history collections. DCOHC is a project of DC Public Library, HumanitiesDC, and the Historical Society of Washington, D.C. This collection contains oral history interviews, transcripts, and indexes produced by DCOHC grantees.

Dates

  • Creation: 2022-07-11

Language of Materials

Spanish

Biographical / Historical

Renee Flood Wright is a 51 year-old Black woman born and raised in D.C. She is a visual artist, teacher, mother of two, and longtime affordable housing community activist at Urban Village on Newton Street. She has been a tireless community leader who has stayed the course of her values and convictions, to finally achieve what seemed impossible for her family and her building: A unique affordable housing partnership where longtime residents will share in the ownership and in the cashflow profits of the building where they have spent most of their lives and raised their families. Her long-term wish is for D.C. to find balance, so that the current disparities and social unrest may stop and give rise to the great livable city that people from all walks of life, but especially longtime Black residents, should be able to enjoy living in.

Extent

From the Collection: 1.13 Terabytes

Abstract

Renee Flood Wright recounts her experiences as a Black woman born and raised in D.C. who transitioned from living in a house in Mount Pleasant to living in an apartment building on Newton Street. She shares her struggles and lessons learned from twenty years of serving as a leading force at Urban Village and never quitting. She discusses how she finally saw her perseverance and dedication come to fruition by raising activist kids and building generational wealth in an unusual affordable housing partnership by sharing cashflow profits with longtime residents.

Repository Details

Part of the The People's Archive, Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library Repository

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