On Dec. 26, 1908, Jack Johnson, with a 14th-round KO of Tommy Burns in Australia, became the first African American to win the world heavyweight boxing title. — UPI Staff, United Press International Dec. 26 (UPI) — On this date in history: In 1776, American forces under Gen. George Washington, having crossed the Delaware River […]
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Indiana Avenue: The Ethnic Cleansing of Black Indianapolis | New America
During its heyday, Indiana Avenue was the center of Black culture in Indianapolis. During the Jazz Era legends like Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald played alongside locals like the Hampton Sisters and Wes Montgomery at the 30-plus clubs in the neighborhood. “The Avenue” was also home to the headquarters of Madam C. J. Walker’s […]
View MoreHow an unsung black inventor saved lives as ‘The King of Cool’ | Chicago Sun Times
Frederick McKinley Jones invented a cooling unit used in Army trucks to transport food, medicine and blood during WWII. Jones is credited with launching the refrigerated trucking industry. — Denise I. O’Neal, Chicago Sun Times As a 62-year-old African American mother and grandmother, I am embarrassed — and should be ashamed to admit but am […]
View MoreTommy Oliver Philadelphia didn’t learn from what happened to MOVE. We must not repeat that history. | Think, NBC News
We can’t learn any lessons from our past if we allow it to be covered up — or we just allow ourselves to forget what happened. — Tommy Oliver, Think, NBC News What the city of Philadelphia did to the people in MOVE was simultaneously a big deal and not at all when I was […]
View MoreMa Rainey Is Best Known as a Pioneer of the Blues. But She Broke More Than Musical Barriers | TIME
— Andrew R. Chow, TIME Ma Rainey, known as the “Mother of the Blues,” isn’t nearly as famous as the blues artists who built on her foundation, from Bessie Smith to Billie Holiday. But her overlooked legacy is being revisited thanks to the release of Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, a film adaptation of August Wilson’s acclaimed […]
View MoreThe Unsolved Mystery of the First People Killed During the Civil Rights Movement | History.com
Law enforcement knew who killed Harry and Harriette Moore on Christmas in 1951. So why wasn’t justice served? — History.com It was a double celebration: Christmas, and the Moores’ 25th anniversary. Harry T. and Harriette Moore celebrated the way they had 25 years before, cutting the cake together like newlyweds. They had no idea that the tender […]
View MoreThe Mississippi home of civil rights leader Medgar Evers is now a national monument | CNN
— Kay Jones, CNN (CNN)The Mississippi home of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers is now a national monument. The Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument in Jackson is the 423rd unit of the National Park System, Interior Secretary David Bernhardt announced on Thursday. The monument “commemorates the legacies of two civil rights activists […]
View MoreBlack people were denied vanilla ice cream in the Jim Crow south – except on Independence Day | The Guardian
One result of legalized racism in America was this strange limit, which helped teach kids the rules of a segregated society — Michael W Twitty, The Guardian By custom rather than by law, black folks were best off if they weren’t caught eating vanilla ice cream in public in the Jim Crow South, except – […]
View MoreCalifornia College Football Players Barred from “Race Mixing” at Holiday Bowl in Florida | EJI, Equal Justice Initiative
— EJI Staff, EJI, Equal Justice Initiative On December 10, 1960, Black college football players from Humboldt State College in California were required to not mix with white people during their stay in Florida for the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) National Championship Football Game. After an undefeated season, the racially integrated team […]
View MoreThe Saltwater Underground Railroad Moved Slaves From Florida to Freedom | How Stuff Works
When we hear the term “Underground Railroad,” we usually think of the network of secret overland routes traversed by fugitive slaves escaping north into Ohio and across the border into Canada. — Carrie Tatro, How Stuff Works In early 19th century America, the Underground Railroad launched a freedom movement that brought people of varying religions and races together […]
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