Louisiana Archives - Page 2 of 2 - StoryCorps
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Jerome Smith and Carol Bebelle

Jerome Smith tells Carol Bebelle about an experience he had as a young man on a streetcar in pre-Civil Rights era New Orleans that made him the person he remains today.

Originally aired December 1, 2006, on NPR’s Morning Edition.

David Duplantier and Melissa Eugene

New Orleans police officer David Duplantier tells his wife, Melissa Eugene, about patrolling the Superdome during Hurricane Katrina.

Originally aired August 25, 2006, on NPR’s Morning Edition.

Bobby Brown and Rufus Burkhalter

New Orleans Pump Station workers Rufus Burkhalter (right) and Bobby Brown remember the night Hurricane Katrina hit.

Originally aired August 25, 2006, on NPR’s Morning Edition.

Roy Calabrisi and Anthony Calabrisi

Roy Calabrisi and his brother Anthony talk about rebuilding their lives after Hurricane Katrina.

Originally aired August 25, 2006, on NPR’s Morning Edition.

John W. Taylor, Jr.

John W. Taylor, Jr. talks about how New Orleans has changed since Hurricane Katrina.

Originally aired August 25, 2006, on NPR’s Morning Edition.

Kiersta Kurtz-Burke and Justin Lundgren

Dr. Kiersta Kurtz-Burke tells her husband, Dr. Justin Lundgren, about caring for patients at Charity Hospital in the days following Hurricane Katrina.

Originally aired August 25, 2006, on NPR’s Morning Edition.

Tossing Away the Keys

The Louisiana State Penitentiary, Angola Prison, is a sprawling old plantation on the Mississippi River. It was named, long ago, for the birthplace of the slaves who were brought here to work the land.

Now, Angola holds more than five-thousand prisoners, mostly African Americans. It still has the look of another time: long straight lines of black men march to work along the levees with shovels over their shoulders. They are trailed by guards on horseback, shotguns resting in their laps.

It used to be that a life sentence in Louisiana meant a maximum of ten years and six months behind bars. But, in the 1970s, the state’s politicians changed the definition. A life sentence in Louisiana now means just that. Unless they’re pardoned by the Governor, inmates today know they will never again see the outside world — that they will die inside Angola prison. Tossing Away the Keys is their story.

Recorded in Angola, Louisiana. Premiered April 29, 1990, on Weekend All Things Considered.

Update on Tossing Away the Keys

After the broadcast of Tossing Away the Keys, some of the prisoners profiled in the documentary were released from Angola.