Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Oral History Interview with Brennie Acra

Audiobook

This interview is part of a collection of interviews conducted between 1976 – 1981.

Mrs. Acra talks about growing up in the town of Petersburg, Kentucky as well as farming, homelife during World Wars I & II, and life in a river town along the Ohio River.

Kentucky Oral History Commission

The Kentucky Oral History Commission is a nationally recognized program that has provided for the collection of more than 25,000 oral history interviews. It was formed in 1976 by Governor Julian Carroll as the Kentucky Bicentennial Oral History Commission. The Kentucky Oral History Commission (KOHC), now part of the Kentucky Historical Society, reaches across the state to record and preserve the diverse stories that are a part of Kentucky's rich and colorful history. A grant program that provides financial and technical assistance to academic and community oral historians is responsible for the collection of the majority of interviews. The commission also offers workshops, sponsors state conferences, and participates in collaborative projects with other agencies and institutions. More information is available on the Commission's website.

Use and Quotation Policy

Authorization must be granted by the Kentucky Historical Society (which includes the Kentucky Oral History Commission) to use or publish by any means any archival material to which the Society holds copyright. To obtain authorization, users will submit a completed Use Agreement to the Kentucky Historical Society Special Collections and Reference Services. Fees for all uses, excepting non-profit or other use, with the intent to enhance understanding of or appreciation for Kentucky's heritage will be assessed on a case-by-case basis and added to the cost of reproduction.

Users may not alter, distort, or change in any way the text or the image to be used, unless otherwise authorized by the Society. Researchers are responsible for obtaining permission to publish by any means any material held at the Society but to which the KHS does not hold copyright. The Society is not responsible for any copyright infringement.

Users will not quote or otherwise reproduce in part or in whole any archival material, without citing the "Kentucky Historical Society," and without giving explicit written acknowledgement of the collection from which it was obtained, as designated by the Society.

Users will present to the Kentucky Historical Society Special Collections & Reference Services one (1) copy of any publication using materials held by the Society or will provide any other proof of appropriate acknowledgment and citation as the Society will designate.

Only material that will not be physically damaged by the process of duplication will be copied. The Society reserves the right to withhold permission for the reproduction of any material involving unusual difficulty or great risk to the original.

Kentucky Historical Society
Kentucky Oral History Commission
100 W. Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601
502-564-1792
Fax: 502-564-0475
http://history.ky.gov

Expand title description text

Formats

OverDrive Listen audiobook
MP3 audiobook

Languages

English

This interview is part of a collection of interviews conducted between 1976 – 1981.

Mrs. Acra talks about growing up in the town of Petersburg, Kentucky as well as farming, homelife during World Wars I & II, and life in a river town along the Ohio River.

Kentucky Oral History Commission

The Kentucky Oral History Commission is a nationally recognized program that has provided for the collection of more than 25,000 oral history interviews. It was formed in 1976 by Governor Julian Carroll as the Kentucky Bicentennial Oral History Commission. The Kentucky Oral History Commission (KOHC), now part of the Kentucky Historical Society, reaches across the state to record and preserve the diverse stories that are a part of Kentucky's rich and colorful history. A grant program that provides financial and technical assistance to academic and community oral historians is responsible for the collection of the majority of interviews. The commission also offers workshops, sponsors state conferences, and participates in collaborative projects with other agencies and institutions. More information is available on the Commission's website.

Use and Quotation Policy

Authorization must be granted by the Kentucky Historical Society (which includes the Kentucky Oral History Commission) to use or publish by any means any archival material to which the Society holds copyright. To obtain authorization, users will submit a completed Use Agreement to the Kentucky Historical Society Special Collections and Reference Services. Fees for all uses, excepting non-profit or other use, with the intent to enhance understanding of or appreciation for Kentucky's heritage will be assessed on a case-by-case basis and added to the cost of reproduction.

Users may not alter, distort, or change in any way the text or the image to be used, unless otherwise authorized by the Society. Researchers are responsible for obtaining permission to publish by any means any material held at the Society but to which the KHS does not hold copyright. The Society is not responsible for any copyright infringement.

Users will not quote or otherwise reproduce in part or in whole any archival material, without citing the "Kentucky Historical Society," and without giving explicit written acknowledgement of the collection from which it was obtained, as designated by the Society.

Users will present to the Kentucky Historical Society Special Collections & Reference Services one (1) copy of any publication using materials held by the Society or will provide any other proof of appropriate acknowledgment and citation as the Society will designate.

Only material that will not be physically damaged by the process of duplication will be copied. The Society reserves the right to withhold permission for the reproduction of any material involving unusual difficulty or great risk to the original.

Kentucky Historical Society
Kentucky Oral History Commission
100 W. Broadway, Frankfort, KY 40601
502-564-1792
Fax: 502-564-0475
http://history.ky.gov

Expand title description text