INDIANAPOLIS — On Friday, Feb. 4 join the Harrison Center for a discussion of the importance of oral history in Black family genealogy in Indiana with historian and author of Black in Indiana, Eunice Trotter.
Three sessions will be offered: 6:30 pm, 7:30 pm, and 8:30 pm in the Underground Gallery at the Harrison Center. The event is free of charge, and registration is not required.
Trotter will speak on her personal story of researching black family history in Indiana, discuss how to collect oral histories in your own family and community, and provide a free handout to help attendees collect oral histories.
Eunice came from a pioneer Black family with roots in Indiana dating back to the 1790s. She began working at The Indianapolis Recorder during her high school years and in 1987 purchased controlling interest in that newspaper (one of the oldest African-American newspapers in the country). She was the first African-American editor at The Indianapolis Star and held editing and reporting positions at several other newspapers, including The New York Post, Florida Today, the Palm Beach Post, and the Lafayette Journal and Courier.