Wednesday, July 16, 2014

THE {BLACK} AMERICAN REVOLUTION

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During the middle 1700s, demands for freedom made slaves impatient. The American colonists wanted freedom from Great Britain to govern themselves, and slaves wanted freedom from their white masters, for the same reason .

Some Blacks in the north took their masters to court, demanded their freedom, and often won. For the most part, however, the government paid no attention to the slaves' complaints.

In April, 1775, British troops marched into Massachusetts to destroy guns and ammunition stored there; they found instead, a band of armed colonists in the towns of Lexington and Concord waiting for them. Although the British forces
resisted the attacks, they did not get the weapons.

These battles convinced colonial leaders that they should form an army of their own. Many Blacks wanted to join this army, but the Continental Congress, the governing body of America, decided that Blacks could not enlist.

Since most Blacks were slaves, colonial leaders did not want to give slaves a reason to run away from their masters, and they also feared that armed slaves might be dangerous.

Meanwhile, the British announced that they would free any Blacks who joined their army. Many Blacks accepted this offer and joined the British army.

It did not take long for the colonial leaders to realize they needed more soldiers to fight the well-trained British army, and they quickly changed their minds about enlisting Blacks.

Finally, in 1776, the Continental Congress passed a law saying that Blacks could enlist in the American Continental Army.

When the war ended in 1783, the British kept their promise to free the Black soldiers who fought for them. Those Black soldiers who fought in the American army also kept their freedom.

Friday, July 4, 2014

IN MEMORY OF

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BOBBY WOMACK  (3/4/1944 - 6/27/2014) was a singer, songwriter, and musician. His career started in the 1960s as a guitarist playing for the legendary soul singer, Sam Cooke, and spanned more than 50 years.

In 2009 Womack was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
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THE BLACK EXPERIENCE 101

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DID YOU KNOW THAT...

The U.S. President named this person to be the first Black to hold a seat on the Supreme Court, the highest court in the land.

...CAN YOU NAME THAT PERSON?
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS QUIZ (6/20):  HARRIET TUBMAN

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Thursday, July 3, 2014

INDEPENDENCE DAY

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On July 4th 1852, Frederick Douglass gave a speech to a White audience. The following is part of that speech:

This is the Fourth of July. It is the birthday of your political freedom. But the blessings you enjoy--justice, liberty, and independence--are not shared by me. This Fourth of July is yours, not mine.

What to the American slave, is your Fourth of July? It is a day that shows the cruelty he suffers. To him, your holiday is a fake. No other nation does things more shocking or bloody than the United States.

Americans! You boast about your love of liberty. But the political power of the nation helps enslave three million people. You help those who have runaway from Russia. But you hunt, arrest, and kill fugitives from slavery. You say, "All men are created equal." But you hold in bondage one seventh of the American people.

Yet I do not give up on this country. Forces are at work that will bring the downfall of slavery. The end of slavery is certain. Things are changing. No evil can hide itself. With William Lloyd Garrison, I say: God speed the year of jubilee the wide world over!