All Stories

A VISTA Story
By Jeffrey Cutter
West Virginia 1990

How to build (and rebuild) a community center in rural West Virginia.


A Year in the Domestic Peace Corps
By Al Garner
Arkansas 1965

Mr. Garner served in New Mexico, 1965. Currently, he is a writer/landlord in California. An earlier version of this account was published in the Santa Fe Reporter on 10 February 1988


An Organ of Human Life
By Scott Glaser Green
Kentucky 1992

Scott served with Longfellow Adult Learning Center in Owensboro, KY, doing everything from Art exhibition-fundraisers to setting up literacy outreach programs and developing volunteer recruitment strategies.


Arrival
By James Thibeault
West Virginia 1970

James Thibeault came to West Virginia in 1970 to help with pollution issues due to coal mining. The following account is the first installment from his larger manuscript of the experience.


Bitter Baptisms
By David Sackin
Georgia 1989

Provocative reflections after service with Economic development initiative.


Coney Island Elegy
By Hilde Weisert
New York 1966

This poem was originally published in Ironwood, Vol 12 No 1.
For more poems by Hilde Weisert, please visit
https://hildeweisert.com/


Domestic Violence
By Jill Baker
Virginia 1992

Living her assignment at a domestic violence shelter along the eastern shore of Virginia.


First VISTA Christmas 1969
By Edward Wilson
Alaska 1970

I’ve been transcribing,editing and annotating my early Alaska letters (1969-77) and various writings — here’ a Chauthbaluk Christmas for your enjoyment.


Government Lady
By P.C. Ingraham
Oklahoma 1976

She stood up to go and I pulled her back down, hissing, “Not in my lifetime.” I didn’t see the irony until later…


HASTA LA VISTA
By Jeremiah Maxwell
Oregon 1966

The original of this informal VISTA Newsletter was given to Oregon state office in 1994 by Ben Hatchett. Mr. Hatchett’s aunt, Florence Fulton, had served as a VISTA and saved it, along with other materials. Whimsical, irreverent, detailed… it is a time capsule that reveals much of the early VISTA experience as well as the times.


Helping
By Joanna Atkins
1966

While they were driving back from a branch meeting on Pigeon Forge, Escoe talked about his pension for coon hunting. One of the girls, a broad waist believer from Wheaton College shuttered her body in discust. One thing led to another and like most of the conversation that took place that day, it was soon discovered that what they had here was the inevitable failure to communicate syndrome.


Home (Learning to Spit)
By Leah Williams
Kentucky 1993

Preparing to leave assignment in Appalachia


It's Cold in Vermont
By Linda Lee Law
1975

Linda served with the Bennington-Rutland Opportunity Council from February 1971 to 1974 in Vermont. Currently, she is a nurse.


Learning to Read
By Melanie Hobbs
Arizona 1994

Literacy efforts in rural Maricopa County.


Lena Hawkins and Grace Jackson
By James Thibeault
West Virginia 1970

James Thibeault came to West Virginia in 1970 to help with pollution issues due to coal mining. Here are the voices of two women in an Appalachian mining town over 30 years ago.


A Letter from Leah Williams to a friend during service in rural Appalachia.


Memories of Ivy Marshall
By Ivy Marshall
Kentucky 1965

Ivy was one of the first VISTA Volunteers, serving in rural Appalachia, Kentucky, in 1965. During the years after her service, she collected her amazing experiences toward publishing a book.


My Mom Stopped George Wallace
By Donovan Kuehn
Florida 1966

I am the son of two former VISTA Participants (Sadie Kuehn nee Sams and Larry Kuehn) and my mother told me a great story about a run in she had with George Wallace while on the VISTA program in Florida. I have written it up and it follows.  I hope it is of some interest.


Nema Belcher
By Carol Patch
West Virginia 1971

On the Cabin Creek Quilt project I was known as Nema’s girl, and it felt good to know that someone with the quiet dignity and hard life of Nema would take to a city person such as myself.


Nepal
By Ellen Smith
1994

Ellen didn't do the Peace Corps. She did VISTA with the Public Library's Literacy Center/San Diego Council on Literacy in Chula Vista.


No Hats…
By Jim Adolf
Pennsylvania 1994

Jim Adolf, Philadelphia , 1994, offers a few snapshots of life in a Philadelphia school. The overall goal of the project was to introduce volunteering into the school curriculum.


Old Man Bum
By Justine Hamilton
1993

One day in the Summer of 93, Ms. Hamilton put her belongings in her car and drove from her home, New York City area, to northern Kentucky with the assignment to expand literacy services there. These excerpted journal entries give some insight into the issues (loniliness) of making a new home.


Over the Rim
By Karen Mattison
1992

Loralie remarked to me once that white people think Indians are dumb because they don't have a written history and a written language. She said, If we don;t remember what we are told, then it was not ours to know. Medicine men learn everything by watching and hearing. Then they can do it. We remember. This struck me. And I guess thats why I've written so little about what I've heard from her and others about Navajo beliefs and traditions. I don't want to betray her. I want to remember.


Respect and Paved Streets
By Jim Zelenski
1976

Describes a community that wants two things.


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By test zelson
Alabama 1964

The Other Side Of The Tracks
By Margeurite Coppinger
Arkansas 1977

Richly detailed journal of the VISTA experience in Arkansas, 1977


There and Here
By Greg Swinarski
Ohio 1989

Fiji in Cincinnati – A Peace Corps Alum doing VISTA.


Warmth in Alaska
By Caren McDonald
1991

Teaching literacy at a prison in Ketchikan, Alaska


What A Time It Was
By Judee Kennedy Borm
Wisconsin 1966

…Everywhere I looked I saw hatred and rage. Then, Martin Luther King came walking by. The crowd's actions intensified. Someone threw a bottle that just missed him. He continued staring straight ahead, walking proud and tall…


Why Live Flat?
By Peggy Truesdale
1971

Started her life work with migrant farmworkers, as a VISTA. She's probably been funny all her life, though.