sand and then later paved and we had a sidewalk in front of our house because we use to play jackstones at night and things like that and some Saturday nights our mother would tell us to go and take our bath early and we had to bathe in a tin tub at that time and because the Klu Klux Klan would march down Tenth Street, they would come from across the railroad down Tenth Street, I know Second Avenue and I don't know where they would go from there, all with hoods. (Ms. Wanza): Where did your neighbors work? (Mrs. McKellar): Where did they work? (Ms. Wanza): Yes. (Mrs. McKellar): Now Mr. Rogers worked at Swift, I don't know what you would call it but they would have sausages and things of that sort and they would ship places and there was Myrtle...I've forgotten her name but she did laundry work and her grandmother also worked at the laundry where the Chinamen were there on Tenth...on Second Avenue, not too far from my home. I'm not too sure about the other people but across the street, yes, was Mr. Sam Donovay and he worked on the railroad and then he had a sister-in- law who lived next door, Georgia Campbell and she had a rooming house and then there was the Dorsey Hotel right on the corner. (Ms. Wanza): What happened to those neighbors? (Mrs. McKellar): Well most of them moved from Overtown, some of them here and some out of town, where I don't know. (Ms. Wanza): When did they leave? (Mrs. McKellar): When? I know Georgia Campbell came out here 8