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Home/Black History

Tag: Black History

Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 14, 2017

Black History Day 14: Frederick Douglass

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We’ve made it halfway through the month and with Day 14 of February I present to you, Frederick Douglass.

Frederick Douglass was born into slavery in February of 1818. As a young child he was taught to read by his masters and other white children in the neighborhood. Because of his gift for reading he was chosen to read the Bible to slaves during church services though it was later disbanded.

In 1838 he and a woman named Ann Murray escaped slavery and later married each other later on in the year. After his escape he regularly attended abolitionist meetings and years later in 1845 wrote his first autobiography.

Douglass was also present when the Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863 and served in several political areas, mainly for black suffrage and women’s rights. He would also revise and add on to his biography as the years went along. Doigohas gone down as one of the most influential African Americans of all time and his examples are still being referenced in today’s society.

Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 6, 2017

Black History Day 6: Melvin B. Tolson

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As we scratch a little more of the surface of Black History Month I present to you Melvin B. Tolson. Tolson was a modernist poet, educator, columnist and politician. His work concentrated of the experiences of African American which includes several long historical poems.

One of his thesis projects was “The Harlem Group of Negro Writers”, which was based on his extensive interviews with members of the Harlem Renaissance. His poetry was strongly influenced by his time in New York. When he completed his work he was awarded the master’s degree in 1940.

After he graduated, Tolson and his wife moved to Marshall, Texas, where he taught speech and English at Wiley College. The small,Methodist Episcopal college had a high reputation among blacks in the south.

In addition to teaching English, he used his energy in several directions at the school. He built an award-winning debate team, the Wiley Forensic Society. During their tour in 1935, they broke through the color barrier and competed against U.S.C., and won. He also co-founded the black intercollegiate Southern Association of Dramatic and Speech Arts, and directed the theater club. He also coached the junior varsity football team.

Tolson mentored students such as James L. Farmer Jr. and Heman Sweatt , who later became civil rights activists. He encouraged his students to be well-rounded and to also to stand up for their rights which was a controversial position in the segregated southof the early and mid-20th century.

Tolson went on to accomplish many great things such as becoming the Poem Laureate of Liberia and becoming mayor of Langston, Michigan from 1954-1960.

Melvin Tolson was definitely a man of great intellect and had a strong influence on his students to where they eventually became part of the Civil Rights Movement. For those who may be unfamiliar with this man, check out the movie The Great Debaters starring Denzel Washington as Melvin B. Tolson

Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 5, 2017

Black History Day 5: Robert Tanner Freeman And Ida Grey Nelson

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As the celebration of black history month continues, it’s important to celebrate the lesser known figures that you don’t hear much about.

Today I present to you the first African American dentist and first African American female dentist, Robert Tanner Freeman and Ida Grey Nelson.

Freeman was born into slavery in 1846, as a child he became friends with Henry Bliss a local dentist in Washington D.C. He became his apprentice and continued up until his adulthood. Dr. Noble who had connections to Harvard Medical School encouraged Freeman to apply the school and by 1867 was accepted in. With his graduation in 1869 Freeman and another African American student George Franklin Grant became the first became the first black dentists .

Freeman made his way back to D.C. and opened his own practice. He became a pillar of the black community of D.C. because of his devotion to helping the African american youth. Unfortunately it was short lived when he contracted a water-borne disease in 1873 and died soon after. He was honored by the National Dental Association, an all black dental group which was founded in 1913.

Ida Gray Nelson was born in Clarksville, Tennessee, on March 4, 1867.  She was orphaned when her mother died in her early teens. Nelson’s white father played no role in her childhood or education.  After her mother’s death, Nelson was raised by her aunt.

Nelson’s aunt was 35, uneducated, and unable to read or write when she moved from Clarksville, Tennessee to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1867, with her four children. Gray supported the family by working as a seamstress and housing foster children. When she was in high school, she worked as a seamstress and dressmaker and in the dental office of Jonathan and William Taft.  Ida Gray graduated from Gaines Public High School in 1887 when she was 20 years old.

With the mentorship  provided by William Taft, Nelson became the first African American woman to graduate from a dental school.  Her ability to pass the entrance exam into the University of Michigan was aided by the experience she gained working in his dental office.  Gray enrolled in October 1887 and, three years later, she became the first African American woman to graduate with a Doctorate of Dental Surgery in the United States.

After graduation in 1890, she returned to Ohio and opened a private dental practice.  She remained in this practice until 1895 when she married Sanford Nelson. The couple then moved to Chicago where she  where she set up a practice serving men and women of all races. She also became the first African American, male or female, to practice dentistry in Chicago.

Nelson participated in a number of women’s organization and served as president of the Professional Women’s Club of Chicago.  She later retired from her dentistry practice sometime in the mid-1930s.

For any young black men and women who are looking to dentistry as their goal these are great examples to follow by because no matter what obstacles they had to face they always pulled through and reach their goals.

Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 4, 2017

Black History Day 4: Rosa Parks

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In the continuation of Black History Month we will discuss one of the major catalysts of the Civil Rights Movement, Rosa Parks. Born on February 4, 1913 in Tuskegee, Alabama it was this woman’s action that snowballed the Montgomery Bus Boycott.

On December 1, 1955 after a long day at work, Ms. Parks boarded a bus home while on the bus the driver ordered her to give up her seat for a white man. She refused and with that the driver call the police and Parks was arrested. Overall she was charged with a $14 fine. It was with this action that sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott. It was also with this incident that Rosa Parks is called the mother of the Civil Rights Movement.

One fact about Rosa Parks is that prior to her arrest, she was already a member of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP as a secretary. It also wasn’t her first encounter with that particular bus driver. Had she paid attention to who was driving the bus she would’ve never gotten on that particular bus in the first place.

With the Montgomery Boycott underway Parks eventually lost her job and she and her husband relocated to Detroit, Michigan where she stayed for the rest of her life. It was there where she founded Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development for youth and seniors.

On this day I chose her as the subject she show respect and honor for her birthday, Happy Birthday Rosa Parks.

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