Michael Honey undertook more than fifty oral histories of black and white workers and labor and civil rights organizers for his first book, Southern Labor and Black Civil Rights (1993). Without people’s stories, he could not tell a story that did not exist on the printed page. Inspired by the work of Theodore Rosengarten, Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, and Nell Irvin Painter, he continued on with black worker interviews. In Black Workers Remember (1999), workers tell their own story, mediated by the “shared authority” of the historian. He did more interviews and drew extensively on scores of oral histories done by others located at the Sanitation Strike papers of the Mississippi Valley Collection at the University of Memphis, for Going Down Jericho Road (2007). Pete Seeger introduced Honey to John Handcox, the renowned Southern Tenant Farmer’s Union organizer and African American singer John Handcox who people had disappeared from history since the 1930s, resulting in the book, Sharecroppers’ Troubadour, and recordings of his songs. Some of these works and writing and audio clips can be explored here. He has taught oral history skills to generations of students at the University of Washington Tacoma (see link below).

Michael K. Honey, University of North Carolina Oral History collection

Labor: Michael Honey Collection on Southern Labor, 1981-1998.

Tacoma Community History Project

Remarkably little Tacoma community has been written. Honey’s community history classes taught for more than 25 years produced more than 70 oral histories of people in the Tacoma and South Puget Sound community. It provides one of the community’s most important history primary research sources.

Book highlights struggle world forgot as "Black Workers Remember" visits labor veterans - Bob Roseth, University Week: March 30, 2000

pdf (Click to view): 

Tacoma Professor Tells The Story Of The 'Sharecropper's Troubadour'

by Ashley Gross


The movie "12 Years A Slave" has made clear the extent of the brutality slaves had to endure before emancipation. But life in the segregationist south up until the civil rights movement was, in many ways, not much better than during slavery.

Freedom After While - No More Mourning by John Handcox

Videos (Click to view): 

Pages