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[Last name, First name], Oral history interview conducted by [Interviewer’s First name Last name], [Month DD, YYYY], [Title of Collection], [Call #]; Brooklyn Historical Society.

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Cynthia Beckford

Oral history interview conducted by Alex Kelly

March 31, 2010

Call number: 2010.020.004

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0:11 - Introduction, biographical details

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0:29 - First impressions of neighborhood, cultural/racial diversity

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1:45 - Immigration from Jamaica, description of apartment

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5:58 - Childhood in rural Jamaica, first time away from home

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11:32 - Sewing school, career as dressmaker

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15:55 - Permanent resident status, problems with apartment

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21:51 - Apartment hunting success, union assistance, first car and new life

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26:23 - Advice on perseverance and faith through difficult times

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Interview Description

Oral History Interview with Cynthia Beckford

Cynthia Beckford was born in 1973 in Jamaica. Raised in the Jamaican countryside, at a young age Beckford had dreams of immigrating to urbane London, England. After a brief time spent in the care of an Indian woman who ran a hotel in Kingston, Jamaica she returned home for sewing school and a career as a dress maker. During a visit to the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn in the early 1980s, Beckford was awe-struck by its beauty, diversity and experienced a kind of deja vu for her childhood fantasies of England. After a return to Jamaica, she applied for and was granted permanent resident status. With some help Beckford was able to obtain an apartment - as well as a new life for herself and her son - in Crown Heights.

Cynthia Beckford remembers her childhood in rural Jamaica, her first impressions of - and first apartment in - the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, and her career as a skilled dress maker. She glowingly describes Crown Heights as a diverse, peaceful and beautiful residential enclave of New York City. Beckford recounts her first visits to the neighborhood, as well as her subsequent quest for permanent United States residence and employment. Beckford also recalls how after some early setbacks, perseverance, faith, and help from friends - as well as her labor union - she was able to secure a job and apartment, making a new life for herself and her son in a place where she feels blessed to be. Interview conducted by Alex Kelly.

Listen to This: Crown Heights Oral History includes interview audio and summaries created and collected within the context of a community project undertaken by project director Alex Kelly and Paul J. Robeson High School interns Treverlyn Dehaarte, Ansie Montilus, Monica Parfait, Quanaisha Phillips and Floyya Richardson. These interviewers recorded conversations with forty-three narrators. In addition to the educational experience for the student interns, the oral histories were conducted as life history and community anthropology interviews. Topics of discussion include family and parenting, migration, cultural and racial relations, occupations and business, education and religion, housing and gentrification, civil unrest and reconciliation, and community activism.

Citation

Beckford, Cynthia, Oral history interview conducted by Alex Kelly, March 31, 2010, Listen to This: Crown Heights Oral History collection, 2010.020.004; Brooklyn Historical Society.

People

  • Beckford, Cynthia

Topics

  • African American neighborhoods
  • American Dream
  • Clothing and dress
  • Emigration and immigration
  • Family life
  • Immigrants
  • Jamaican Americans
  • Jamaicans
  • Jews
  • Women

Places

  • Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
  • Crown Heights (New York, N.Y.)
  • New York (N.Y.)

Finding Aid

Listen to This: Crown Heights Oral History collection