Booker Exercise 6: Image & Video w/ Narraration

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In this video Wildaliz and Eva Bermudez recall their earliest memories of activism for school integration in Greater Hartford through their involvement as young plaintiffs in the 1989 Sheff v O’Neill lawsuit, and how the case shaped their lives as politically active adults today. The sisters describe why their parents (Pedro and Carmen Wilda Bermudez) supported the integration movement, and reflect on their personal experiences as Puerto Rican youth growing up in Hartford’s South End neighborhoods, attending Hartford Public Schools and bilingual education programs, and eventually (for Eva) an interdistrict magnet school.

These two women talk about their experiences in an out of court and how it has affected their lives in the long run. The bilingual program in Hartford schools were a real factor in their personal successes in Hartford schools.

The women also talked about the transition to Kennelly which was a school with a majority of caucasian students. Kennelly was one of the last places in the South End of Hartford where white flight had not occurred yet.
Puerto Ricans on steps of City Hall, Hartford

Mary’s Practice Image Post

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1. Screenshot
Men and women float down Pleasant Street during the hurricane of 1938 in Hartford, Connecticut.

Hurricane of 1938, from Connecticut History Online, The Connecticut Historical Society, Hartford

2. URL
Vintage photo of the winner of Miss Hartford in 1950.

Miss Hartford, 1950, from Karen Studios, Ebay

3. Flickr Embed
In October 1967, protesters marched in the town of West Hartford, Connecticut. They were protesting against the poor housing conditions that existed in the North End of neighboring Hartford. Police officers accompanied the marchers, concerned that the protests would escalate and become violent.
Marchers for better North End (Hartford) housing, West Hartford, 1967
Source: Connecticut History Online, Hartford History Center, Hartford Public Library