• Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy
Sunday, February 5, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
OvaNewsBlast.com
No Result
View All Result

Historian explains forgotten Hyde Park African American history

November 19, 2021
in Business
Reading Time: 2min read
A A
Historian explains forgotten Hyde Park African American history
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share ShareShareShareShareShare

“It’s the story of how people overcame the adversity that was entrenched in segregation,” he said.

TAMPA, Fla. — Guests at the Café Con Tampa lecture series took a trip back into the past for a better understanding of one of Hyde Park’s historic neighborhoods lost to time and destroyed by development.

“You can’t tell the story of Hyde Park without telling the story of Dobyville at the same time,” Tampa Bay History Center Historian Rodney Kite-Powell said.

Hyde Park is one of the most popular areas of Tampa, but Dobyville is often overlooked. It was a middle-class African American neighborhood that developed in the Hyde Park area in the late 1800s as the phosphate and railroad industries grew, and as white residents hired African Americans in their homes for domestic help.

“It’s the story of how people overcame the adversity that was entrenched in segregation,” he said.

Kite-Powell says finding the boundaries of Dobyville took some work. He used city directories from the 1920s that made note if a resident was African American. 

He says he took this information and looked at every street in Hyde Park until he was able to fill out a map of Dobyville. He concluded the area existed within the boundaries of Willow Avenue, Albany Avenue, Horatio Street and Fig Street.

Dobyville was home to several churches, businesses and a school until development led to the neighborhood’s demise. Part of the Selmon Expressway cuts through the main part of Dobyville.

“We can’t lose sight of what was originally there,” Kite-Powell said.

Dobyville’s namesake, Richard Doby, was a businessman who owned land throughout the city. He was the original owner of Zion Cemetery in Robles Park, where archaeologists recently detected hundreds of graves under public housing apartments, a towing lot and a neighboring business.

“There is so much of the African American history that is visually no longer seen,” the historian explained.

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
Previous Post

Chad Cooper to Receive the 2021 NAIFA Diversity Champion Award

Next Post

Athlete reactions to Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty verdict by jury

Next Post
Athlete reactions to Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty verdict by jury

Athlete reactions to Kyle Rittenhouse not guilty verdict by jury

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The ABC’s of 2022 in Maryland and beyond: The news year remembered

The ABC’s of 2022 in Maryland and beyond: The news year remembered

December 20, 2022
Acadiana Power Poll respondents: Yes to new BR bridge, no to Confederate monument in St. Landry | Business

Acadiana Power Poll respondents: Yes to new BR bridge, no to Confederate monument in St. Landry | Business

March 25, 2022
Reparations Task Force’s Anchor Orgs Are Holding Public “Listening Sessions”

Reparations Task Force’s Anchor Orgs Are Holding Public “Listening Sessions”

May 25, 2022
Q&A with Kevin Williams – Trade Only Today

Q&A with Kevin Williams – Trade Only Today

May 24, 2022
The Wallpaper That Is Also a ‘Reminder That My Ancestors Had My Back’

The Wallpaper That Is Also a ‘Reminder That My Ancestors Had My Back’

March 25, 2022
MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

February 5, 2023
Xavier Houston Alumni Mardi Gras Gala

Xavier Houston Alumni Mardi Gras Gala

February 5, 2023
Emmett Jay Scott

Emmett Jay Scott

February 5, 2023

Black History: Pains and Chains

February 5, 2023
We Real Cool – African American News and Issues

We Real Cool – African American News and Issues

February 5, 2023

Recent News

College Board Makes Changes to State’s Black Studies Course

College Board Makes Changes to State’s Black Studies Course

February 2, 2023
African American Textile Society Provides community and inclusion at NC State | News

African American Textile Society Provides community and inclusion at NC State | News

February 1, 2023
Horizon League to Honor Coach John McLendon with February 10-12 Celebration

Horizon League to Honor Coach John McLendon with February 10-12 Celebration

February 1, 2023
Here are 20 facts to test your knowledge of Mid-Atlantic Black history

Here are 20 facts to test your knowledge of Mid-Atlantic Black history

February 2, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com

A reliable source for African American news, from a different lens. Yours. News about us, by us.

Follow Us

Recent News

MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

MFAH Gordan Parks’ Stokely Carmichael and Black Power Exhibit

February 5, 2023
Xavier Houston Alumni Mardi Gras Gala

Xavier Houston Alumni Mardi Gras Gala

February 5, 2023

Topics to cover !

  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com