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Home/black history month

Tag: black history month

Ralph Wrecks The Internet: Wreck It Ralph 2 Trailer
Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 21, 2018

Black History Month Part 7: Louis Armstrong

Music

As we get back on track in Black History month I’d like to show you a solo trumpet performance from none other that great jazz musician, Louis Armstrong!

Ralph Wrecks The Internet: Wreck It Ralph 2 Trailer
Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 13, 2018

Black History Day 5: Todd Duncan

Music

As we reach day five of Black History Month I’d like to introduce Todd Duncan. The first African American to sing on New York Broadway. Here’s one of the songs he sang, entitled Lost in the Stars

Ralph Wrecks The Internet: Wreck It Ralph 2 Trailer
Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 13, 2018

Black History Month Day 6: Bob Marley

Music

As we continue to celebrate Black History Month is like to talk about a person whom I didn’t get a chance to talk about last year. The great musician and activist Bob Marley.

This man was not only a great musician, but was a well known activist as well, receiving the Peace Medal of the Third World, regarded as an ambassador and was inducted into the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame.

Sit back and have a listen to One of his songs, Get Up Stand Up

Ralph Wrecks The Internet: Wreck It Ralph 2 Trailer
Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 7, 2018

Black History Month Day 4: Rosa Parks

News & Info

When you think of historical black figures I’m sure there is one that definitely comes to mind; Rosa Parks.

Born on February 4th, 1913, Rosa Parks set off a chain reaction which led to the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The incident occurred on December 1st 1955 when she refused to give up her seat to a white man and sit in the back. This resulted in her getting arrested. On December 5th she was put on trial and was ordered to pay a $10 fine and a $4 court fee.

It was also during this time that the bus boycott took place. After seeing as how the bus system was losing money, they officially ended the boycott which in turn allowed African Americans to sit in any area of the bus as they pleased.

However despite her brave act, Rosa Parks’ like in the south still wasn’t easy. She lost her job and her husband was also fired from his job. With no other choice, they packed up and moved to Detroit.

in 1987, Parks founded the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self-Development. This organization runs “Pathways to Freedom” bus tours, introducing young people to important civil rights and Underground Railroad sites throughout the country.

Along with the institute, Parks received many accolades during her lifetime, including the Spingarn Medal, the NAACP’s highest award, and the prestigious Martin Luther King Jr. Award.

She passed away on October 24, 2005 and was buried in the Detroit cemetery mausoleum which was then named after.

 

Ralph Wrecks The Internet: Wreck It Ralph 2 Trailer
Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 7, 2018

Black History Month Day 3: Harlem Renaissance

News & Info

As we continue to celebrate Black History Month, I would like to type about a very important of our History pertaining to the arts; the Harlem Renaissance.

What started out as a huge migration up north, eventually turned into one the greatest displays for African American culture. The Harlem Renaissance was gone to many different black writers, musicians, artists, poets and many more.

Poets like Langston Hughes, Claude McKay and Jean Toomer were some of the famous poets of this time period for their unique style of poetry. Jazz Music also played major role in the shape of the Renaissance. Harlem’s Cottom Club had talent such as Duke Ellington and singers like Bettsie Ross, and another famous jazz Musician Louis Armstrong.

This time period was a definite game changer in not just African American History and culture but American culture as a whole.

Posted by : lovelyti / On : February 2, 2017

Black History Day 2: Bessie Coleman

News & Info

In honor of the second day of Black History Month, I present to you, Bessie Coleman.

Bessie Coleman was the first black woman to receive her pilot license in 1922. Because flight schools denied her entry during this time period she taught herself french and moved to France. It was there that she earned her license from the Cauldron Brother’s School of Aviation in just a short seven months.

She specialized in stunt performing and parachuting, which earned her a living doing barnstorming and performing aerial tricks. Though tragically, on April 30, 1926, Bessie Coleman was killed in an accident during a rehearsal for an aerial show which sent her plummeting to her death.Coleman remains a pioneer of women in the field of aviation.

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