Skip to main content

Oral history of Louetta Freeman, 2002 September 7, 2006 March

 Item
Identifier: MSAoh-f877a

Abstract

Freeman tells the story of her families move to Arizona in 1927 in a covered wagon. She talks about her father's experience as a school bus driver driving relatively long distances to pick up kids for school and mentions the homes where her family lived. She recalls that her family had one of the first phones in Mesa and that many people stopped in to borrow it. Freeman describes downtown Mesa and mentions several business including Molly's, J.C.... Penney's, Woolworth's, and Everybody's Drugstore. Freeman married James Freeman, had two children, attended Mt. Calvary Baptist Church, and worked as a clerk at Diamond's department store at Tri-City Mall. She discusses race relations in Mesa, where she attended Mesa High School, and recalls that before desegregation students had to go to Phoenix and attend Carver High School or not attend at all. Freeman was the only African American in the school band. She describes an incident where her bandmates walked out of a Phoenix restaurant because she was refused service. She also talks about not being able to swim at the Rendezvous Pool or eat at the counter at Everybody's Drugstore. Freeman concludes by stating her hope that people could love each other more and get along.

See more

Dates

  • 2002 September 7
  • Digitization: 2006 March

Creator

Digital Repository

Oral history of Louetta Freeman

Language of Materials

From the Collection:

Materials in English, Spanish, and other languages.

Conditions Governing Access

Use or distribution of these materials must be approved by the Mesa Historical Society. All rights reserved.

Extent

1 Items ; 47 minutes, 28 seconds

Expand All