Stories about Black History: Vol. 2 - Charles Young and the Buffalo Soldiers
Charles Young was a Buffalo Soldier, a pioneer in many ways, and one of the most celebrated African-American military men, at the time of his death.
He was born in 1864, in Kentucky, to Gabriel and Arminta Young. Gabriel and Arminta moved to Ripley, Ohio in 1866. Gabriel Young was a soldier in the Union Army during the Civil War and Charles grew up admiring his father's military background.
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Unfair and Unequal Drug Policy for Almost 40 Years
We have to examine our past to determine the impact of current drug policy in order to ensure that these results don't just happen again--while we stand by and watch.
Since the 1980s no single issue has struck at the heart of the struggles of Black America quite like the "War on Drugs" has.
Let me first state that the majority of black, white and Hispanic people in America do not use illicit drugs and if they do, they do so AT THE SAME RATES
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Garrett Morgan: A Hero and An Inventor
Garrett Morgan was born around 1877 in Paris, Kentucky. He did not receive a formal education beyond a several-year period of time when he was living with his parents. He later hired a tutor, for himself, after he left his parents' home. He eventually moved to Cleveland, Ohio in 1895 where he became an entrepreneur, an inventor, the founder of a local newspaper, and a community leader.
When he moved to Cleveland he got a job as a machinist in a textile factory. He and his wife then opened up a shirtwaist company, shirtwaist was a style of women's clothing (a long shirt) that was popular at the time.
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Ida B. Wells-Barnett: A Voice Crying Out for Change
In September of 1900 Ida B. Wells stopped the project she was working on to report on the outrageous actions that took place in New Orleans in July of that year. Robert Charles was an African-American man who had an encounter with police, while sitting on the steps of a building with his friend, one night. In that encounter shots were fired and Charles wounded one of the police officers. Over the ensuing days...
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Remembering the People Who Helped to Shape This Country: Paul Jennings
Many people did the work that helped make the country function--people who were not given the respect and remembrance they were due.
Paul Jennings was born in 1799...enslaved to James and Dolley Madison, in Virginia.
In 1808 James Madison was elected President of the United States and Paul Jennings, still a boy, moved to the White House with Dolley and James Madison.
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Stories about Black History: Vol. 3 - Christiana, William Parker and the Horn
One of the most famous challenges to slavery took place at the home of an African-American man named, William Parker. On September 11, 1851, Edward Gorsuch showed up at Parker’s home. Gorsuch was seeking several escaped men whom he believed were being sheltered at Parker’s house. William Parker was, himself, a person who escaped from slavery and settled in the Lancaster area of Pennsylvania (near Christiana).
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