This image is the cover for the book That's the Way It Was

That's the Way It Was

13 Black Americans share their everyday experiences with racism in twentieth-century St. Louis.

Segregation was a way of life in St. Louis, aptly called “the most southern city in the North.” These thirteen oral histories describe the daily struggle that pervasive racism demanded but also share the tradition of self-respect that the African-American community of St. Louis sought to build on its own terms.

Vida Goldman Prince

Vida "Sister" Goldman Prince has been researching, conducting and recording oral history interviews for the past 30 years. As chairman of the Oral History Project at the Holocaust Museum and Learning Center in St. Louis, Prince interviews survivors, liberators, witnesses, and rescuers, including people of other faiths

The History Press