CINCINNATI (WYSO) — After World War II, thousands of people moved north to cities like Cincinnati and Dayton from Appalachia, seeking work and new opportunities.

Evelyn Hurt Bolton, who moved from Hazard, Kentucky, recalled her first impressions of Cincinnati.
“I had just turned thirteen, I remember my first look of Cincinnati coming off that ramp into Lower Price Hill. It was January now, it was garbage day … you can imagine how absolutely nasty it was,” she said. “I sure never appreciated Hazard like we did after we moved up here.“
Hadley-Torres says oral histories not only help to account for people who might be overlooked by traditional record keeping, but they also gather what historical events meant to people.
“When I came here, I didn’t know that I was so different, “ June Smith Tyler said, “I didn’t know that I talked funny, I didn’t know that people thought I was ignorant because I was from the mountains.”
It’s been over thirty five years since Hadley-Torres conducted her oral history interviews and she looks back on the project fondly.
“I think over the course of the interviews, as I found out more and more about each of the women, I just felt so much respect for them. Almost all of them gave me information about being extremely motivated to support their families and their community,” she said.
Note: Archival audio provided by the Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, University of Kentucky Libraries from “Appalachia: Out-Migration Project: Urban Appalachian Women in Cincinnati, Ohio Oral History Project.”
This story was produced at the Eichelberger Center for Community Voices at WYSO.
