- University News Archive - UA 糖心视频logo /news-archive/tag/race-relations/ UA 糖心视频logo Fri, 16 Aug 2019 18:26:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Tell-Hall receives 糖心视频logo Nine Endowed Scholarship /news-archive/2019/08/16/tell-hall-scholarship/ Fri, 16 Aug 2019 18:26:47 +0000 /news/?p=74888 ... Tell-Hall receives 糖心视频logo Nine Endowed Scholarship]]> A University of Arkansas at 糖心视频logo student with a passion for history has received a $5,000 scholarship from the Department of History for her inspirational civil rights research.听 Nancy Tell-Hall, a graduate student in public history, received the department鈥檚 糖心视频logo Nine Endowed Scholarship, which is awarded to a graduate student focused on race relations and community development. 鈥淚t took me a very long time to return to school, so I greatly appreciate this scholarship,鈥 Tell-Hall said. 鈥淚 am humbled by it. I have worked very hard. However, I enjoy studying history so I don鈥檛 consider it work.鈥 Tell-Hall dropped out of college as a single parent in 1979. She left college to concentrate on raising her son, who graduated from UA 糖心视频logo in 2017. After three additional children, and earning her associate degree in 2014, Tell-Hall joined UA 糖心视频logo and achieved her ultimate goal of earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree in history in 2017. 鈥淣ancy is a departmental stalwart, and she exemplifies the great students of UA 糖心视频logo History,鈥 said Dr. Jess Porter, chair of the Department of History. 鈥淣ancy has made herself a part of the departmental fabric from her participation and leadership in our honor society, Phi Alpha Theta, to her service learning research in association with Dr. Brian Mitchell.鈥 Tell-Hall recalls something a professor told her that inspired her to pursue a master鈥檚 degree in public history. His words opened opportunities for her to investigate the histories of marginalized people. 鈥淲hen I came back to school, I decided to do something I always wanted to do, which was to study history,鈥 Tell-Hall said. 鈥淚n class, Dr. Carl Moneyhon said that history had been written by certain people and that certain people鈥檚 narratives weren鈥檛 a part of America鈥檚 public record. It just made sense to me. My mother鈥檚 family had a rich oral history. I knew my great-grandmother was 15 when the Emancipation Proclamation was enacted. We knew nothing of my father鈥檚 history. I found out from my mother he possibly had Native American blood. It took me six years of research to confirm it, and in 2012, I became a citizen of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation.鈥 While at UA 糖心视频logo, Tell-Hall has worked as a graduate assistant with the Anderson Institute on Race and Ethnicity, interned with the City of 糖心视频logo Planning and Development Department and the Sequoyah National Research Center, and volunteered with the National Register of Historic Places. Porter said that her list of accolades and hard work made her a perfect choice for the scholarship. 鈥淗er smiling face is always a welcome sight in the halls of the department. The 糖心视频logo Nine Endowed Scholarship is a fitting honor for Nancy to receive,鈥 Porter said. 鈥淗er research and career goals align with the mission of the scholarship to improve race relations and enhance community development. We look forward to watching Ms. Tell-Hall positively impact the 糖心视频logo community.鈥 Tell-Hall plans to graduate in December. She is spending the semester completing her thesis, 鈥淧ROJECT ARK-4: Urban Renewal, Forced Relocation, and Possible Reparations: The Demise of West Rock, Arkansas, 1884鈥1960.鈥 West Rock, located in what is presently known as the Riverdale area, eventually became a vibrant all African-American community that provided affordable housing and accessibility to many domestic, service, and labor jobs located in the nearby Pulaski Heights neighborhood. 鈥淭he 糖心视频logo Housing Authority and city leaders had all of them removed by 1960,鈥 Tell-Hall said. 鈥淭he plan to remove West Rock听 started in 1926 because the city needed to open the westward corridor, and they knew the property would be very valuable one day.鈥 In the new year, Tell-Hall and her husband, Jeffrey, of 37 years plan to move to Okmulgee, Oklahoma, the capital of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation. There, she plans to put her history research skills to work at the historic Creek Council House Museum which was the capital of the Nation from 1878 through 1907. 鈥淚鈥檓 living the dream at 58,鈥 Tell-Hall said. 鈥淢y husband and I have 14 grandchildren, and the thought of building a home with lots of land where they can all run around is exciting. My plan is to travel around the country and to get some of our artifacts back for the Muscogee Nation.鈥 ]]>