Ann E. Moore was born in Washington, North Carolina in 1942 and raised by family there until her mother returned in 1949 to bring her and her siblings to Brooklyn, New York. She recalls the jarring adjustment from quiet Southern life to the rough streets of Brownsville — being chased home from the corner store, losing her eyelashes on an unfamiliar gas stove — while finding pride and inspiration in figures like Joe Louis and Jackie Robinson. Her story is a first-chapter portrait of the Great Migration seen through the eyes of a young Black girl learning to navigate two very different worlds.
Explore more voices, support the work, or share your own story at griotandgrits.org.
License: This content is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial–NoDerivatives 4.0 (CC BY‑NC‑ND 4.0). Permissions: If you would like to request permission for uses not allowed under this license (including commercial use, edits, remixes, or redistribution), please contact Griot and Grits at
[email protected].
This episode includes AI-generated content.