Showing posts with label African American Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African American Women. Show all posts
Sunday, March 15, 2015
Tonya Marie Evans Esq.
"Tonya Marie Evans, Esq. is a Philly-based poet with mass appeal because her poetry is intellectually, spiritually and sensually stimulating. She is affectionately known as Lawyer by day, Poet by night in the spoken word community and she achieves balance within her hectic billable hour life by writing and performing. While countless corporate drones pour heart and soul into one career, Tonya Marie has chosen two paths. She simply refuses to allow the limited thinking of others to determine who and what she can be." Internet Archive
This audio is part of the collection: IUMA (Internet Underground Music Archive) Collection
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Nikki Giovanni
Nikki Giovanni was born (Yolande Cornelia Giovanni, Jr) on June 7, 1943.
She graduated with honors from Fisk University in 1967. She published
her first book of poems, Black Feeling, Black Talk in 1968.
Since the late 1960s she has been a resonant voice in the African American
community, as well as an prominent force in the Black Arts movement.
Some literal consciousness on Youtube from sistah Giovanni with love.
Thursday, March 13, 2014
"Lifting As We Climb" Colored Women's Clubs
The Race Problem. As Discussed by Negro Women (March 1, 1901)
Author: Blauvelt, Mary Taylor
Volume: 6
Publisher: The American Journal of Sociology
Language: English
Book contributor: JSTOR
Link
https://archive.org/stream/jstor-2762006/2762006
As an example of the above content I'll include the following.
The story of the Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs (1922)
Author: Davis, Elizabeth Lindsay
Subject: Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs; African American women; African American women
Publisher: [Chicago : s.n.]
Possible copyright status: Public Domain assumed. No evidence of copyright renewal could be found. Contact dcc@library.uiuc.edu for information.
Language: English
Call number: 1155289
Digitizing sponsor: CARLI: Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois
Book contributor: University of Illinois at Chicago
Collection: UniversityIllinoisatChicago; americana
Notes: Handwritten notes may not be legible. Some light text.
Link
https://archive.org/stream/storyofillinoisf00davi
Author: Blauvelt, Mary Taylor
Volume: 6
Publisher: The American Journal of Sociology
Language: English
Book contributor: JSTOR
Link
https://archive.org/stream/jstor-2762006/2762006
As an example of the above content I'll include the following.
The story of the Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs (1922)
Author: Davis, Elizabeth Lindsay
Subject: Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs; African American women; African American women
Publisher: [Chicago : s.n.]
Possible copyright status: Public Domain assumed. No evidence of copyright renewal could be found. Contact dcc@library.uiuc.edu for information.
Language: English
Call number: 1155289
Digitizing sponsor: CARLI: Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois
Book contributor: University of Illinois at Chicago
Collection: UniversityIllinoisatChicago; americana
Notes: Handwritten notes may not be legible. Some light text.
Link
https://archive.org/stream/storyofillinoisf00davi
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
The colored girl beautiful (1916)
Author: Hackley, E. Azalia (Emma Azalia), 1867-1922
Subject: Young women; Conduct of life
Publisher: Kansas City, Mo., Burton Pub. Co
Year: 1916
Possible copyright status: The Library of Congress is unaware of any copyright restrictions for this item.
Language: English
Call number: 8248646
Digitizing sponsor: The Library of Congress
Book contributor: The Library of Congress
Collection: library_of_congress; americana
Link
https://archive.org/stream/coloredgirlbeaut00hack
Monday, March 10, 2014
Women Of Distinction :
Remarkable In Works And Invincible In Character (1893)
Digitizing sponsor: LYRASIS members and Sloan Foundation
Book contributor: State Library of North Carolina, Government & Heritage Library
Collection: statelibrarynorthcarolina; americana

Author: Scruggs, L. A. (Lawson Andrew), 1857-1914
Subject: North Caroliniana; African American women; African Americans; Women
Publisher: Raleigh : L. A. Scruggs
Link
https://archive.org/details/womenofdistincti00scru
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Women of Achievement by Benjamin Brawley
Written for the Fireside Schools,
Under the Auspices of
the Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society
by Benjamin Brawley
I. Introduction The Negro Woman in American Life
II. Harriet Tubman
III. Nora Gordon
IV. Meta Warrick Fuller
V. Mary McLeod Bethune
VI. Mary Church Terrell
Publisher: [Chicago, Ill.] : Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society
Possible copyright status: NOT_IN_COPYRIGHT
Language: English
Call number: ucb_banc:GLAD-185380101
Digitizing sponsor: MSN
Book contributor: University of California Libraries
Collection: cdl; americana
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
The Role of Black Women in American History continued
This is the continuation of the talk by Dr. John H. Bracy on the role of Black Women in American History. You won't want to miss these next 3 segments of this informative and insightful talk.
(See parts 1&2 here)
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 3
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 4
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 5
(See parts 1&2 here)
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 3
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 4
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 5
Monday, March 18, 2013
The Role of Black Women in American History 1&2
Dr. John H. Bracy delivers a poignant talk on the role of Black Women in American history with emphasis on Amanda Berry Smith and Mary Mcleod Bethune. This is recorded in 5 ten minute segments for convenient listening but I can tell you that once you start you'll want to go to the next segment for more ASAP.
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 1
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 2
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 1
Dr. John H. Bracey, Jr.: The Role of Black Women in American History 2
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Jackie Ormes - Cartoonist
| Jackie Ormes at the drawing board |
Jackie Ormes was born Zelda Mavin Jackson in Monongahela, Pennsylvania. Ormes started in journalism as a proofreader for the Pittsburgh Courier, a weekly African American newspaper that came out every Saturday. Her 1937-38 Courier comic strip, Torchy Brown in Dixie to Harlem, starring Torchy Brown, was a humorous depiction of a Mississippi teen who found fame and fortune singing and dancing in the Cotton Club.
In the United States at mid-century, in an era when there were few opportunities for women in general and even fewer for African American women, Jackie Ormes blazed a trail as a popular artist with the major black newspapers of the day.
The First African American Woman Cartoonist.
Jackie Ormes chronicles the life of this multiply talented, fascinating woman who became a successful commercial artist and cartoonist. Ormes's cartoon characters (including Torchy Brown, Candy, and Patty-Jo 'n' Ginger) delighted readers of newspapers such as the Pittsburgh Courier and Chicago Defender, and spawned other products, including fashionable paper dolls in the Sunday papers and a black doll with her own extensive and stylish wardrobe. Ormes was a member of Chicago's Black elite in the postwar era, and her social circle included the leading political figures and entertainers of the day. Her politics, which fell decidedly to the left and were apparent to even a casual reader of her cartoons and comic strips, eventually led to her investigation by the FBI.
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Black Women's History Month - The Internet
The WebDiva
Back in the mid 1990's there used to be a sista online named Sandra Hall, aka (the WebDiva) her site was the most impressive grouping of Afro-related links that had ever been seen online. Although it's long gone, you'll still find the occasional reference to her and her site, The WebDivas Infocenter, on some of the sites that are still around from the old days.
Well I'm here to declare, that there is a new WebDiva on line. She's smart, she's good lookin', she's talented, she's ambitious, she's creative and she's on the move.
Her name is Jessica Ann Michell and I dare say, if there are more like her coming along, then we can look forward to an Afro Internet Renaissance.
Ms. Mitchell is of course, as we would expect any "Renaissance Woman" to be, multi-talented. She is a scholar, poet, playwright, entrepreneur, creator of Black social media,
a writer and public service volunteer.
She has travelled to several African countries and the Dominican Repulic.
a writer and public service volunteer.
She has travelled to several African countries and the Dominican Repulic.
Mitchell is the owner of The Black Blogger Network and Black Bloggers Connect. These two undertakings alone can potentially revolutionize Black Blogging. I have for years been blogging more or less in a vaacuum, for lack of an easy way to network with other Afrocentric blogs and now that has all changed. I hope to see some interesting collaborative projects coming out of these networks not to mention the extended outreach that the networks make possible.
Jessica has a Bachelor’s Degree in African World Studies, a Masters Degree in Pan African Studies and is currently studying to obtain her Masters Degree in Public Relations at Syracuse University.
Ms. Mitchell is also the CEO of Lamzu Media LLC, a consultancy firm that aids companies in directing their online reach to their appropriate target audience.
Look out world, here comes Jessica Ann Mitchell
Click here to listen to an interview on Vibe and Vegas Show
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Maria W. Stewart - Women's History Month
There are many flowers among us that are
…born to bloom unseen, And waste their fragrance on the desert air. - Maria W. Stewart
"Maria W. Stewart (1803-1879) was one of the first American women to leave copies of her speeches. The address below is her second public lecture. It was given on September 21, 1832 in Franklin Hall in Boston, the meeting site of the new England Anti-Slavery Society. Although as an abolitionist, she usually attacked slavery, in this address she condemns the attitude that denied black women education and prohibited their occupational advancement. In fact she argues that Northern African American women, in term of treatment, were only slightly better off than slaves.
Few white persons of either sex, who are calculated for any thing else, are willing to spend their lives and bury their talents in performing mean, servile labor. And such is the horrible idea that I entertain respecting a life of servitude, that if I conceived of there being no possibility of my rising above the condition of a servant, I would gladly hail death as a welcome messenger. O, horrible idea, indeed! to possess noble souls aspiring after high and honorable acquirements, yet confined by the chains of ignorance and poverty to lives of continual drudgery and toil. Neither do I know of any who have enriched themselves by spending their lives as house-domestics, washing windows, shaking carpets, brushing boots, or tending upon gentlemen's tables. I can but die for expressing my sentiments; and I am as willing to die by the sword as the pestilence; for I and a true born American; your blood flows in my veins, and your spirit fires my breast."
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH.
About 1867 I became acquainted with the subject of
this sketch in the city of Washington, D. C, a lady ex-
ceedingly modest and very retiring in her expression. I
at once became deeply interested in her, because there
Was a quiet sadness and melancholy of expression which,
to a close observer, denoted a life of sorrow and disap-
pointment. But soon after I lost sight of her, as she
obtained a position under the Government, and by her
more than faithful attention to her duties she almost
entirely excluded herself from the outside world, and I
rarely ever met her, excepting she was going or coming
from church or Sabbath-school, or from visiting or gath-
ering in the school poor and destitute children in the
neighborhood of the hospital, so they might be taught to
fear God and keep His Commandments.
In the month of September, 1878, 1 called at the Freed-
men's Hospital to say farewell to the matron as my friend,
Mrs. Stewart ; and as a law had recently passed Congress
granting pension to the widows of the war of 1812, and
her late husband, James W. Stewart, having served four
years under Commodores Porter and Decatur, and doing
laudable service for the Government, he was honorably
discharged in 1815 ; and as Mrs. Stewart (formerly Miss
Miller, of Hartford, Conn.,) had married Mr. Stewart in
Boston, where they both resided, she was left a widow in
three years and four months after marriage. When I
told my friend, ]\Irs. Stewart, I was coming to Boston
she requested of me to do her a favor by investigating
her case, and to find if there were persons living who
might identify her as the widow of James W. Stewart.
I of coarse promised her I would do all I could when I
arrived in Boston, and I did so. One of the first things
I did was to find some of the oldest citizens of color in
the city of Boston, as Mr. Stewart had been dead forty-
nine years. I finally succeeded in finding suflftcient
evidence from four reliable witnesses, who were person-
ally acquainted with both Mr. and Mrs. Stewart. The
witness made oath to the above statement. I had the
aflSdavits made out, and sent them to Washington. She
presented her claim to Iphe Department, and it was accepted.
In investigating her case I was startled at the devel-
opments made, and at once understood why she carried
such a sad, sorrowful, and mysterious countenance. In
having occasion to very often visit the different courts
I found her husband had been a gentleman of wealth,
and left her amply provided for; but the executors lit-,,
erally robbed and cheated her out of every cent ; so she
was left entirely alone in the world as without mother,
father, sister, or brother sa” in fact, not a living relative in
the world to care for her, and with so much amiability
and piety of character that she would have suffered
wrong rather than defend her rights. She knew there
was a will made, but never heard it read, as one of the
executors took it out of the house as soon as it was drawn
up as which was two days previous to her husband's death.
She never knew the contents of her husband's will until
1879, when I myself informed her. It was made on the
15th of December, 1829.
In investigating her case I made frequent visits to the
different courts, to find her marriage record and also his
death record. I heard there was a will made. I also
visited the Probate Court. I asked for the will ; it was
given to me ; and I spent quite a time in reading it over,
with surprise and indignation. I cannot express the
horror I felt at the great wrong and injustice done the
poor, helpless woman, now far advanced in years ; but at
that time one of the most beautiful and loveliest of
women. O, what a shame as what a dreadful shame as for
those robbers to so shamefully cheat her out of all that
her husband had left her, and to send her away penniless,
to combat a heartless world, among strangers. But surely
God was good to her and did answer her prayers, as she de-
voutly prayed to Him for His guidance and protection, and
she now blesses His Holy Name for keeping her through
these many long years. Immediately after the death of
her husband, she wrote and published her book ; then
went to New York ; went to school seven years ; then
taught school several years ; finally went South and did
good work in. instructing and teaching her unfortunate
race. If it had not been for the pension bill that passed,
she might have died in ignorance of the existence of her
book, as she had not seen a copy of it for over forty years.
In my great search to find evidence to identify her as the
widow of the late James W. Stewall, I found out a great
many marvelous things that would have remained hidden
until the end of time. I also found out, from all the old
personal friends of Mrs. Stewart, that she was then, as
now, a very devout Christian lady, a leader in all good
movements and reforms, and had no equal as a lecturer
or authoress in her day ; and I have no doubt if she could
have had the advantages of an early education and an
opportunity to have developed her superior intellect, she
would have been the equal, if not the superior, of her sisters
of the more favorite race. But, as it is, she is really a re-
markable person, considering all under which she has
labored ; and I hope now, as our Heavenly Father has
permitted her to live to see the injustice that has been
done to her, she may be spared still many years to enjoy
life as she never has before ; and when life's journey is
ended here, she will then receive her reward, for her work
has been well and faithfully done on earth, and her sum-
mons will be, "Well done, thou good and faithful one;
enter into the Kingdom prepared for you from the foun-
dation."
LOUISE C. HATTON.
Boston, May 28, 1879.
A Testimonial Letter
I have been requested to state what I know about the
work done by Mrs. Maria W. Stewart in behalf of her
race in this city during the war and since that time. I
became personally acquainted with her in 1863, when
she first came to work in our midst. She organized a
school and succeeded in interesting the people in the
great work of educating their children. I know how hard
she labored to establish this school. My own children
were among her first scholars. In a short time the people
of this District decided to start an independent free school.
A meeting was called and a committee, of which I was a
member, was appointed. We then persuaded ]Mrs. Stew-
art to combine her school with the free school, and to
use all of her influence in keeping up a free District
school. She labored for a few months in this school, but
being an Episcopalian, and this denomination not being
favorable to free schools, we concluded to dismiss her
unless she would agree to forsake her denomination. This
she refused to do, and the result was she was discharged.
However, she soon organized a pay school, and many
persons like myself preferred to pay for their children's
instruction, and thus have them taught by Mrs. Stewart.
Through much suffering and great labor she succeeded in
building up her private school. I have seen her going
through the streets in the dead of winter looking up the
little children who should be attending school : and
whether their parents could pay or not, she was perfectly
willing to give her time and strength in teaching them.
Her work in the District of Columbia among her people
has made me consider her a "true teacher in Israel,"
because after laboring in the school-room all the week
she considered it her duty to do something more in the
way of education. She made out of her day school a
general Sabbath school, that she might teach the children
the wisdom of repentance, and also a knowledge of Him
" who is the giver of every good and perfect gift."
Mrs. Stewart has done a great work here. Truly can
we say of her that she " went about doing good." And
she justly merits all the praise which has been bestowed
upon her, because she has always highly sustained her
dignity, both spiritual and moral, as an earnest and con-
scientious Christian worker.
Most respectfully,
HENRY BAILEY,
Pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church.
Sunday, March 21, 2010
"Queen Mother" Audley E. Moore
"Queen Mother" Audley Moore
Queen Mother Audley E. Moore
In Honor Of A Warrior Woman
On December 6 and 7, 1991, the Department of Pan-African Studies at Kent State University dedicated the entire third floor of the Center of Pan-African Culture to Queen Mother Audley E. Moore, a "Warrior Woman," born on July 27, 1898, who devoted her life to active struggle on behalf of all people of African descent. She was honored for having organized on many fronts, from the great influenza epidemic of 1918 in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, where she worked as a volunteer nurse, to the United Nations, where she presented petitions in the 1950s charging genocide and demanding reparations to descendants of former slaves.
She was born as Audley to Ella and St. Cry Moore on July 27, 1898 in New Iberia, Louisiana. Her grandmother, Nora Henry, was born into slavery, the daughter of an African woman who was raped by her slave master who was a doctor. Her grandfather was lynched before his wife's eyes leaving Nora Henry with five orphaned children of whom Ella Johnson — mother of Queen Mother Moore — was the youngest. Ella died in 1904.
Queen Mother Moore completed only the third grade of her formal education. Her struggles began at the tender age of twelve fighting the advances of white men in the South . . . Queen Mother has been struggling for seventy-seven years for the human and civil rights of all African people throughout the world which makes her our warrior queen and a living legend. At the grand old age of ninety-eight, she continues to make her home in Harlem.
Some of her efforts — to help our struggle to take us towards self-determination, acquisition of our inheritance in Africa and our just claim for reparations from the United States government — are documented below:
The founder and president of the Universal Association of Ethiopian Women, she is a life member of both the Universal Negro Improvement Association and the National Moorish Council of Negro Women. She joined Marcus Mosiah Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League (UNIA) while living in Louisiana. She participated in Garvey's first international convention in New York City, owned stock in the Black Star Line, and came to New York when the UNIA launched the Black Star Line's first ship.
She is President-General, World Federation of African People, Inc. She is founder and president of the Universal Association of Ethiopian Women, Inc. which led a successful fight to restore 23,000 families to the welfare rolls after they had been ruthlessly cut off by Louisiana authorities. She is the founder of the Committee for Reparations for Descendants of U.S. Slaves. She is a founding member of the Republic of New Africa to fight for self-determination, land, and reparations. She is founder of Mt. Addis Ababa, Inc., envisioned as a facility to totally embrace the cultural, educational, and industrial needs of her people. Through Mr. Roscoe Bradley, her executive vice president, this organization, located at Mt. Addis Ababa, Box 244, Parksville, NY 12768, taught hundreds of children African music, dance, and culture.
She is Bishop of the Apostolic Orthodox Church of Judea. She is a founding member of the Commission to Eliminate Racism, Council of Churches of Greater New York. In organizing this commission, she staged a twenty-four-hour sit-in for three weeks. She is a founder of the African American Cultural Foundation, Inc., which led the fight against usage of the slave term "Negro."
She joined the Republican Party, found them racist, left and joined the Communist Party to fight the Scottsboro Boys' imprisonment. She led the fight to end Jim Crow in big league baseball. She organized the community with Captain Hugh Mulzac as chairman and the Reverend Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. as co-chairman. Later realizing the fallacy in this, she apologized to her people. She resigned from the Communist Party in disillusionment after they changed their position on self-determination in the South's Black Belt.
She led protests against the Apollo Theatre for showing racist shows and led protests against the Alhambra Theatre for showing a white man as Hannibal. She helped organize CIO unions and the Work Progress Administration. She forced the WPA to employ black women on sewing projects who were previously relegated to domestic work. She also tried to organize a domestic workers union. She was arrested three times during her struggle-first for defending the rights of our children to use the public Colonial Park pool without bringing along their birth certificates; another time for defending a peddler from arrest for selling tomatoes to support his seven little children; the third time for trying to register people to vote in Green County, New York.
She led the fight with Assemblyman William Andrews, the Reverend Ethelring Brown, and Ludlow Werner to get a congressional district in Harlem in the 1930s. She helped to organize the Maritime Union under Ferdinand Smith. She also led the fight to break Jim Crow policy in the Coast Guard and became the first black stewardess to be hired. She helped stranded seamen in London and held a mass meeting in 1946 in a hotel lobby in London for the management's refusal of accommodations due to racism. She campaigned for medical aid and funds for Ethiopia after the Italians attacked. She organized 500 nurses to sterilize sheets which were collected from laundries for bandages for the wounded Ethiopian soldiers.
She investigated the condition of our little girls, ages twelve to fourteen, who gave birth while in a mental institution in Louisiana. The girls had been raped by their white male attendants. She was encouraged by Dr. A.L. Reddick and Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, both of whom were eminent educators, to take to public speaking in defense of her people's liberty. Before this she only spoke at street meetings from a box or a ladder on the corner of 125th Street and 7th Avenue. She organized the first rent strike on Sugar Hill in 1930 and restored tenants to their apartments after having been evicted. She supported the Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya and took a delegation to the British Embassy to protest the ultimatum given to the Mau Mau to surrender or be annihilated.
She fought to save from execution the Martinville Seven and helped to organize street meetings and demonstrations. She helped to free Mae Mallory imprisoned for defending herself from an attack of the KKK in Monroe, North Carolina. She presented a petition to the United Nations in 1957 for self-determination and against genocide. She presented a second petition in 1959 to the United Nations for land and reparations. She toured throughout the country by car in 1962 begging gas from gas station to gas station to alarm our people to prepare for our Emancipation Proclamation Centennial by presenting a judicial document for reparations and self-determination proclaiming us a non-self-governing nation.
She organized a soup kitchen in Harlem for African students after learning two students had died from malnutrition after they received their Ph.D. She also helped to organize Africa House in New York City with Mrs. Mattie Hunter for African students. She participated in the North American Regional Planning Conference (held at Kent State University in 1973) leading up to the Sixth Pan-African Congress. In 1974, she attended this international Congress in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania. This Congress was the first ever international meeting of African people held on the soil of Mother Africa. She, at the request of Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, became a life member of the National Council of Negro Women. She is the founder and president of the Harriet Tubman Association. She helped to organize the Unemployed Councils when millions were on the brink of starvation. She presented a demand for reparations to President Kennedy which caused him to say: "Ask not what this country can do for you, but what you can do for it."
As mentioned earlier, the above represents only "some" of the activities in which Queen Mother Moore has been involved for the past seventy or more years. We are, therefore, very much honored to have her in our presence and to take time out to honor this great African Warrior Woman.
Unfortunately, Queen Mother Audley E. Moore, a life-long "Warrior Woman," died on May 2, 1997, at the age of 99. We will miss her. May she rest in eternal peace.
SOURCE: This "Biographical Data" was prepared by the Honorable Dr. Deloise Naewoaang Blakely, Deputy Mayor of Harlem, New York, 1993.
Reparations, Queen Mother Moore
Interview - Part 1
Reparations, Queen Mother Moore
Interview - Part 2 www.queenmothermoore.org
Those who seek temporary security rather than basic liberty deserve neither...
Queen Mother Moore
Thursday, February 11, 2010
The BlackPast.org website

If you want to stay at the head of the class for
Black History Month and the rest of the year,
Thousands of pages of Black History a mouse click away.
- African American History
- African American History in the West
- Global African History
Lots of photos but limited audio files thus far.
"BlackPast.org, an online reference center makes available a wealth of materials on African American history in one central location on the Internet. These materials include an online encyclopedia of over 1,500 entries, the complete transcript of over 125 speeches given between 1789 and 2008, over 100 full text primary documents, bibliographies, timelines and four gateway pages with links to 50 digital archive collections. Additionally 75 major African American museums and research centers and over 400 other website resources on black history are also linked to the website. The compilation and concentration of these diverse resources allows BlackPast.org to serve as the "Google" of African American history.""BlackPast.org (www.blackpast.org) began in January 2004 as an online reference center in African American history when Quintard Taylor, the Scott and Dorothy Bullitt Professor of American History at the University of Washington, and his graduate assistant, George Tamblyn, placed on his faculty website various reference materials which described historical figures and events discussed in Taylor’s class lectures. Soon afterwards they added a bibliography, a timeline, and links to other internet sites that presented or discussed various aspects of the black historical experience."
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Dec. 23 1867 - The Birthday of Madame C.J. Walker
Madame C.J. Walker
Madame C.J. Walker businesswoman and philanthropist generally regarded as the first female self-made millionaire in America.
The Legacy of Madam CJ Walker Part I
The Legacy of Madam CJ Walker Part II
Madame Walker not only trained thousands but taught them to be socially responsible at the same time. She embodies the the example of the best our race and our country has to offer.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
African American Podcaster
For those who have heard the Girl 600 podcast from time to time be advised that she has moved to -African American Podcaster
I don't listen to her podcast that often because I find she tends to ramble. On the other hand I like a lot of the the material that I find on her web site. She is always original and IMO she keeps it real and there is always something new. This keeps me going back cause her stuff is like a box of choclates---------.
I don't listen to her podcast that often because I find she tends to ramble. On the other hand I like a lot of the the material that I find on her web site. She is always original and IMO she keeps it real and there is always something new. This keeps me going back cause her stuff is like a box of choclates---------.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Aron Ranen's Black Hair Documentary Part One
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Black Women's History Month
I haven't presented anything for Women's History Month but I came across a story of some contemporary young Black Women that should prove to be an inspiration to all of us, Whatever our sex or color.
I found this great presentation on youtube called;
So what if I an a Black Woman performed by Arbeny Davis
So what if I an a Black Woman performed by Arbeny Davis
After watching this superb performance by this beautiful little girl,
I googled her name to see what else she may have done and I discovered some very interesting info.
First I found an article
I wonder what this little girl is doing now...
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
which included a comment by the little girl herself.
Hey Nesha thanks for showing me love on your website. In case you dont know my name is Arbeny Davis, and I am the little girl; well no longer a little girl.LOL!!! I attend the University of Memphis now, I am majoring in Dance, my goal is to own my own dance studio. Thats just a little info about what Im doing now. I love what you are doing and good luck with everything. Much Love!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Further research showed that not only is Arbeny talented, intelligent and ambitious, she is also a very brave young woman.
The company she keeps is no less courageous.
The company she keeps is no less courageous.
Here's what lead me to that conclusion---
Best Friend Saves Life
by Donating Kidney
Lifelong Friends Recovering After
Transplant
Last Edited: Wednesday, 17 Dec 2008, 4:09 PM CST
Created On: Wednesday, 17 Dec 2008, 4:09 PM CST
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (WHBQ FOX13 -
Both girls are in as high of spirits as one can be a day after a major operation, but they were willing to let our cameras into their hospital rooms long enough to share a heartfelt story of giving.
Lying in her hospital bed, Arbeny Davis calls this "the best Christmas I've ever had."
It's a tearful thank you for a grateful 19 year old girl born with a diseased kidney.
Davis says "I don't know what I could do for her that she's done for me."
With tubes delivering oxygen to her pained body, Arbeny Davis is recovering on the 10th floor of Methodist Hospital.
Lying in her hospital bed, Arbeny Davis calls this "the best Christmas I've ever had."
It's a tearful thank you for a grateful 19 year old girl born with a diseased kidney.
Davis says "I don't know what I could do for her that she's done for me."
With tubes delivering oxygen to her pained body, Arbeny Davis is recovering on the 10th floor of Methodist Hospital.
She is fighting abdominal aches from the surgical incisions that saved her life. None of it would have been possible without the courage of her best friend, Kenesha Reed.
Reed murmurs "It makes me feel really good that God used me to save her life."
For two girls who have never really been apart since meeting in grade school, the kidney transplant bonds them for life.
Arbeny says of Kenesha, "She means the world to me."
When no one in Arbeny's family was a match, her best friend got tested shortly after her 18th birthday. Kanesha says the decision was easy.
"Because I love her and the Bible says there is no greater love than a man who will lay down their life for a friend, and I love her, so I'll give it to her, I'll do it all over."
Young siblings recognize Kenesha's bravery in words expressed as poetry. But the selfless teen doesn't want any acknowledgment. She hopes the noble effort inspires more giving this holiday season.
"I hope people learn to step outside of themselves and be willing to give, be willing to share with other people, and stop being so selfish."
I'm proud to say that these young women are our future. Their lives, like those of many of their peers, are history in the making and we owe it to ourselves and them to ensure that they receive our continued acknowledgment and support by any means necessary, as
Malcolm X would say.
Malcolm X would say.
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