Skip to main content
dPanther Home
|
Community Data Curation
mydPanther Home
Oral History Interview with Samuel Woods
Item menu
Print
Send
Add
Share
Description
Standard View
MARC View
Metadata
Usage Statistics
Map It!
STANDARD VIEW
MARC VIEW
METADATA
USAGE STATISTICS
Permanent Link:
http://dpanther.fiu.edu/sobek/FI14105303/00001
Material Information
Title:
Oral History Interview with Samuel Woods
Creator:
Woods, Samuel
(
Narrator
)
George, Emmanuel
(
Interviewer
)
Publisher:
African American Research Library and Cultural Center
Publication Date:
2022-07-14
Language:
English
Physical Description:
00:41:35
Subjects
Subjects / Keywords:
Woods, Samuel --Interviews
Woods, Samuel -- Childhood and youth
African American men
African American cooks -- Florida -- Broward County
Restaurants -- Florida -- Pompano Beach
Vegan cooking
African American Research Library and Cultural Center
Public libraries -- Special collections
Genre:
Interview
Spatial Coverage:
United States
--
Florida
--
Ft. Lauderdale
Coordinates:
26.1288434638441
x
-80.177418476336
Notes
Abstract:
Emmanuel George interviews Samuel Woods on July 14, 2022 at the African American Research Library and Cultural Center. Samuel Woods was born on December 1, 1987 in Detroit, Michigan. He is one of six children. Samuel describes his childhood in Detroit, attending car shows and family gatherings. He moved with his mother and siblings to Landover, Massachusetts in high school. After high school, Samuel attended Johnson and Wales for culinary school for two years. He describes returning to Detroit, Michigan where he earned a degree in Business Management from Oakland Community College. While in school, he worked as a sous-chef for the Detroit Institute of Art and as an executive chef at Detroit Medical Center. He worked as a chef for fifteen years before opening his first restaurant in downtown Detroit. Samuel became a vegan in 2018 and six months later moved to South Florida. He discusses opening the restaurant The Rabbit Hole in Pompano Beach, Florida. Additionally, he shares his experience volunteering at the African American Research Library and Cultural Center where he processed the Dorothy Porter Wesley Collection in the Special Collections and Archives department.
Funding:
This content is part of a Mellon Foundation-funded project coordinated by the Wolfsonian Public Humanities Lab (WPHL) at FIU and eight community partner institutions titled "Community Data Curation: Preserving, Creating, and Narrating Everyday Stories."
Creation/Production Credits:
Dominique St. Victor recorded this interview.
Record Information
Source Institution:
African American Research Library and Cultural Center
Holding Location:
African American Research Library and Cultural Center
Rights Management:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
Resource Identifier:
FI14105303
Related Items
Host material:
CLICK HERE FOR VIDEO
dpSobek Membership
Aggregations:
Community Data Curation - Preserving, Creating, and Narrating Everyday Stories
African American Research Library and Cultural Center
***This is default web skin for this SobekCM digital library.
Developed for the
University of Florida Digital Collections
For any questions about this system, email
Mark.V.Sullivan@gmail.com
Last updated January 2012 -
4.10.1