Allen, Elmer Lucille
Interviewer:
Bullock, Angelica
Transcription available:
no
Series:
Parkland Oral History Project
Interview Number(s):
2015_20_
Summary:
Elmer Lucille Allen discusses general information about her life, including her educational and working career. She received degrees from University of Louisville and Spalding University. Her early childhood education was during segregation. Her working career included time at Brown Forman, where she was the first African American Chemist. Allen explains how her teachers shaped her adulthood. She discuses general information about her adult life, including her husband and children. She provides her and her children's experiences in school and the discrimination they faced. Allen discuses what she believes the boundaries of the Parkland neighborhood include. She discusses the riot of 1968 (she notes people destroying the neighborhood) and compares it to the riots in Ferguson Missouri. Allen describes the Parkland neighborhood after the riot, and notes the persisting negative stereotypes of the West End. Allen describes past segregation in Louisville, including parks and funeral homes, and the discrimination of African American's by businesses. She notes the progression of Louisville in general. (Interview index available.)
Topic(s):
Segregation--Kentucky--Louisville, Parkland (Louisville, Ky.), African Americans--Kentucky--Louisville, 1968 Parkland Uprising, Chemists, African American chemists