Established 1987 · Chicago, Illinois

#OurStoryLives

Oral histories, family photographs, neighborhood walking tours — preserving the lived memory of Black Chicago before it fades.

4,200+
Oral Histories
38 yrs
In Community
12
Neighborhoods
890
Scholarship Recipients
Scroll
Community Voices

A Living Quilt of Memory

Each tile is a voice, an artifact, a thread. Scroll the way you would walk through a museum — let your eye wander, let a story stop you.

Migration
"We left Greenwood, Mississippi in 1951 with two suitcases and my mother's cast iron skillet. She said the skillet was coming even if the clothes had to stay."
Bernice CaldwellOral History Contributor1951 →
Rows of wooden school desks in a segregated classroom, 1959
Education
1959

Dunbar Elementary, 1959. Every desk had initials carved into it by children who came before.

Faith

Deacon Harold Price describes the first Juneteenth celebration held at Greater Harvest Baptist Church, East Austin, Texas, 1967.

Deacon Harold Price

1967

Archive
Portrait of an elderly woman wearing reading glasses

Tamara Osei-Mensah

Librarian, Chicago Public Library

Legacy found my grandmother's oral history — recorded in 1994 — that I never knew existed. I heard her voice for the first time in twenty years.

Migration
"Dearest Mama, Chicago is cold in a way Mississippi never prepared me for. But the work is steady and the pay is honest. Tell Papa the North is real."
James Whitfield to his motherFebruary 14, 1944
Close up of aged hands holding a property deed document
Land
1920

The Simmons family deed for 40 acres in Macon County, Alabama, 1920. The only land ever owned by seven generations.

Education
Portrait of a middle-aged Black man smiling in a classroom setting

Marcus Webb

AP History Teacher, Kenwood Academy

I used Legacy's walking tour materials to teach my AP History students about Bronzeville. They walked streets their great-grandparents walked. Three students cried.

Faith

Sister Odessa Cunningham sings the original version of "Lift Every Voice" as taught to her by her choir director at Provident Hospital, 1953.

Sister Odessa Cunningham

1953

Land
"They tried to tell us we never owned anything. But I have the deed. I have the tax receipts. I have the photographs. Legacy helped me build the case."
Reverend Calvin TateCommunity Elder, Bronzeville
Young woman in church clothes standing in front of a train station sign
Migration
1962

Lucinda Graves, age 22, photographed at Union Station, Chicago, the day she arrived from Jackson, Mississippi, July 1962.

Education
"To the Selection Committee: I am writing on behalf of Carolyn Mosley, who has shown more quiet courage in one semester than I have witnessed in thirty years of teaching."
Recommendation letter, 1978November 3, 1978
Migration
Young Black man in his mid-twenties wearing a navy jacket

Darius Fontaine

Graduate Student, DePaul University

My grandfather traced our family from Natchez to Cairo, Illinois to Chicago in three generations. Legacy's oral history index connected dots that took him forty years to find on his own.

Resource Hub

Find Your Thread

Four thematic collections — each with downloadable guides, searchable records, and community-contributed artifacts.

Search All Records
Train tracks stretching into the horizon at sunset, symbolizing the Great Migration north
847 records

Migration

Trace the Great Migration routes from the Deep South to Chicago, Detroit, and beyond. Oral histories, census records, and route maps.

Browse Migration
Old school books and a chalkboard eraser on a worn wooden desk
1,204 records

Education

Segregated schools, unsung teachers, and the students who carried their lessons forward. School photographs, report cards, and yearbooks.

Browse Education
Sunlight streaming through stained glass windows of a historic Black church
963 records

Faith

Church bulletins, choir recordings, pastor biographies, and congregation histories stretching back to Reconstruction.

Browse Faith
A weathered wooden house with peeling paint in a historic neighborhood
612 records

Land

Property deeds, redlining maps, neighborhood surveys. Documentation of what was owned, what was taken, and what was reclaimed.

Browse Land

Upcoming: Spring Walking Tour Series

March 15 · Bronzeville Heritage Walk — April 5 · South Side Church History Tour — May 10 · Great Migration Memorial Walk

View Calendar
Programs & Impact

Preservation Is Participation

Scholarship recipients, walking tour participants, and community archivists — every person who contributes becomes part of the record.

890
Scholarship Recipients
47
Walking Tours Per Year
4,200+
Oral Histories Archived
38
Years of Service

2023–2024 Scholarship Recipients

Young Black woman smiling wearing a graduation stole

Aaliyah Pemberton

Oral History Fellowship · 2024

"Legacy gave me the tools to record my great-aunt's story of leaving Alabama. She passed six weeks after we finished."

Young Black man in his twenties with a warm smile against a neutral background

Jerome Okafor

Digital Preservation Grant · 2023

"Three thousand church bulletins, now searchable online. My grandmother's name appears in 214 of them."

Middle-aged Black woman in professional attire looking directly at camera

Constance Delacroix

Community Archivist Award · 2024

"I cataloged 800 photographs from my neighborhood's 1970s block clubs. Every face deserved a name."

Recent Walking Tours

Group of people walking along a Chicago street past historic brownstone buildings

Bronzeville Heritage Walk · February 2026

Tour guide gesturing toward a historic church facade while participants look on

South Side Church History Tour · January 2026

Community members gathered around a historical marker in a neighborhood park

Great Migration Memorial Walk · November 2025

Contribute to the Record

Share Your Story

Every name remembered is a life preserved. Tell us what you carry — a memory, a decade, a photograph. We will hold it with care.

Click to upload a photograph, scan, or document

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Your submission is reviewed by a community archivist before being added to the archive. We will contact you before publishing. Your story belongs to you.