Washington DC Jazz Oral History Project Chapter 11

“[I]t was on our people’s backs that the area was built and built up.” –The Rev. Dr. Ginger Cornwell

Rev. Dr. Ginger Cornwell

The Rev. Dr. Ginger Cornwell –saxophonist, vocalist, Howard University alumna, and founder of Reaching for the World Ministries–describes her early life in Maryland, part of the “Tobacco Coast.”

“I actually grew up on the outskirts of DC, but practically everything we did was in the city, because we had to come out of there to do it . . . My doctors’ offices, my shopping, my schooling, all of it was here in the heart of the city. Now, a lot of my ministry and most of my playing is in the city.”

“. . . I think back, and I drive to La Plata and Pomonkey [Maryland], and those places now, and it looks nothing at all [like it used to]– I’m not talking about buildings, but every field was tobacco. Just field after field after field of tobacco. Now, people have to go outside and smoke, or they can’t smoke on campuses. But, when it was time to farm the tobacco, we were farming it. We can’t lose sight of all of that.”

“I think that is one of the things that we don’t pass on to our children, not from the perspective of trying to force them to be prejudiced, but so that they understand our history, and they understand that it was on our people’s backs that the area was built and built up.”

 

Interviewed on April 11, 2017
By Dr. Regennia N. Williams
Life Member, Oral History Association
Founder and Director, The RASHAD Center, Inc.
Photograph Courtesy of the Rev. Dr. Ginger Cornwell
Reaching for the World Ministries
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About Dr. Regennia N. Williams, Founder, President, and Executive Director

Dr. Regennia N. Williams is the Founder and Executive Director of The RASHAD Center, Inc., a Maryland-based non-profit educational corporation. Williams holds a PhD in Social History and Policy from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. A native Clevelander and a four-time alumna of Cleveland State University, information on RASHAD's “Praying Grounds, African American Faith Communities: A Documentary and Oral History” project is now available online at www.ClevelandMemory.org/pray/, a site that is maintained by CSU's Library Special Collections, home of the Praying Grounds manuscript collections. Praying Grounds was the primary inspiration for the launching of the Initiative for the Study of Religion and Spirituality in the History of Africa and the Diaspora (RASHAD) at CSU, and links to RASHAD's scholarly journal and newsletter are also available on the Praying Grounds site. On April 28, 2020, the RASHAD Center, Inc. became a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. In 2010, Dr. Williams was a Visiting Fulbright Scholar at Nigeria’s Obafemi Awolowo University, where she taught history and directed a RASHAD-related oral history project that focused on the role of religion in recent Nigerian social history. Other research-related travels have taken her to Canada, China, France, South Africa, and Austria. In 2013, she conceived and produced “Come Sunday @ 70: The Place of Duke Ellington’s Sacred Jazz in World History and Culture, c. 1943-2013,” a project that included scholarly presentations and performing arts activities. From September 1993 until May 2015, she was a faculty member in the Department of History at Cleveland State University. She served as a Fulbright Specialist at South Africa's University of the Free State in the summer of 2019, and completed a short-term faculty residency at Howard University in the fall of 2019. She is based in Cleveland, Ohio. As a public scholar, her current research projects focus on African American history and culture, especially as it relates to music, religion, and spirituality. She is a member of the Oral History Association, the Western Reserve Historical Society, and the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
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