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'York Project' Revisited: NPR Catches Up With Four 2008 Voters

A screenshot of the York Project interactive. If your browser supports Flash, you can read more about the <a href="http://www.npr.org/news/graphics/2008/nov/york/york.html" target="_blank">voters who participated in the series here.</a>
David Deal
/
NPR
A screenshot of the York Project interactive. If your browser supports Flash, you can read more about the voters who participated in the series here.

We're near the end of an eight-year chapter in American history, one that began with the election of Barack Obama in 2008. It's ending as a new president takes power after another election that forced Americans to confront questions of race.

Back in 2008, NPR visited York, Pa., to talk to more than a dozen voters about race and the election. Those 8-year-old recordings are like a time capsule now. And the online interactive that complemented the radio stories similarly feels like digital flashback. If your browser supports Flash, read more about the 15 voters here and see a photo gallery of York, Pa., here. You can hear the radio stories here.

We want to reintroduce you to that series of stories, called the York Project, because this week on Morning Edition,hostSteve Inskeep revisits York, after the victory of President-elect Donald Trump, and talks to some of the voters he met eight years ago.

On Thursday, Morning Edition will air new conversations with four of them. Find those four profiles here. And on Friday, they discuss race and the 2008 and 2016 elections. That story is here.

Click on the audio above — one of the original 2008 York Project stories — to hear voters react to Barack Obama winning the election.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.