© 2024 University of Missouri - KBIA
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

StoryCorps In Kansas City — Sisters Remember Growing Up Poor, But Happy, In Leeds

Earline Bentley and Cheryl Looney remembered their childhoods growing up in Kansas City's Leeds neighborhood.
StoryCorps
Earline Bentley and Cheryl Looney remembered their childhoods growing up in Kansas City's Leeds neighborhood.

StoryCorps' MobileBooth is in Kansas Cityuntil September to collect the stories and memories of residents. This is one in a series of stories KCUR has chosen to highlight.

Today, Kansas City's Leeds neighborhood is an industrial area near the Truman Sports Complex. But back in the 1940s and '50s, it was a self-contained black community.

"Leeds was a place where people from the deep south come up to live with their relatives to start a new life," said Earline Bentley, who grew up in Leeds with her sister Cheryl Looney.

"Like the African proverb, 'It takes a village,' Leeds was a village," said Looney. "We had our own grocery store, our own schools."

The sisters grew up poor — they laughed at the memory of running to the outhouse in the snow — but they both remember their childhoods fondly.

"I had a really, really almost magical childhood," said Looney. "I didn't realize we were poor until someone told me we were poor."

Though they may not have had much money, the sisters remember how their mother, Gertrude Gladys Williams Gillham, was one of the best-dressed residents of Leeds.

"I remember she said, 'You may not have a penny in your purse, but don't go out of this house looking like you don't have anything,'" said Looney.

Earline Bentley and Cheryl Looney recorded their experiences at the StoryCorps MobileBooth in August. 

Matthew Long-Middleton is a community producer for KCUR 89.3. Follow him on Twitter @MLMIndustries.

Cody Newill is an audience development specialist for KCUR 89.3. Follow him on Twitter @CodyNewill.

Copyright 2021 KCUR 89.3. To see more, visit KCUR 89.3.

Cody Newill was born and raised in Independence, Missouri, and attended the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Cody won a Regional Edward R. Murrow award for his work curating kcur.org in 2017. But if you ask him, his true accomplishments lie in Twitter memes and using the term "Devil's lettuce" in a story.
Matthew has been involved in media since 2003. While hosting a show on his college radio station, he quickly realized the influence, intimacy and joys of radio. After graduating from Kenyon College he had a brief stint as a short-order cook in exotic Gambier, Ohio. He then joined Murray Street Productions as the marketing manager. At Murray Street he also conducted interviews, produced podcasts, wrote scripts for Jazz at Lincoln Center Radio, and made the office computers hum. In addition to working at Murray Street, Matthew has done freelance radio production and his work has been featured on Chicago Public Radio’s local news program Eight Forty-Eight. He has also worked as a marketing assistant at WBGO in Newark, NJ, where he helped to grow audience through placing advertisements, managing the station social media, improving the website, building email campaigns and doing in person promotion at jazz events throughout New York and New Jersey. Matthew has won several awards for radio production including a Gold and Silver from the Kansas City Press Club in 2017. You can find Matthew bicycling around the city and the globe.