Memoir Chronicles Black Cowboy’s Horseback Ride From Shore To Shore NEWARK, NEW JERSEY – One of the most recent and fascinating Black History memoirs published in 2012 tells the little-known six-month adventure of an African-American cowboy who rode horseback from Manhattan to California. That gripping journey by Miles Dean, filled with stops to recognize sites […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Emmit McHenry
Emmit McHenry was born in Forrest City, Arkansas, on July 12, 1943, the grandson of a minister. Growing up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, McHenry attended Stewart Elementary School, Carver Middle School and Booker T. Washington High School. After graduating in 1962, he went on to receive his B.S. in communications from the University of Denver in […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Emma Wheeler
A native Floridan, Emma Rochelle Wheeler was born near Gainesville on February 7, 1882. She grew up in Florida, where her intrigue with the medical profession was aroused at the early age of six. An eye problem prompted her father to take her for treatment to a white female diagnostician. Young Emma and the female […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Lloyd Hall
Lloyd Augustus Hall (June 20, 1894 – January 2, 1971), An industrial food chemist, Lloyd Augustus Hall revolutionized the meatpacking industry with his development of curing salts for the processing and reserving of meats. He developed a technique of “flash-driving” (evaporating) and a technique of sterilization with ethylene oxide which is still used by medical […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Dr. Daniel Williams
Dr. Daniel Hale Williams (1856-1931) the founder of Provident Hospital was born in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania. His father was a barber who was deeply religious and imparted a sense of pride in his eight children. When his father died of tuberculosis, Daniel was nine years old. His mother, Sarah Price Williams moved the family to Baltimore […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Frederick Jones
Frederick McKinley Jones (May 17, 1893 – February 21, 1961) was an African-American inventor who patented several products in the field of refrigeration. He had over 60 patents. He also made several innovations for sound equipment for “talkie” movies, but they were predominantly unpatented. Several of his unpatented inventions were duplicated and patented by others, […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Negro Leagues
Most everyone knows that Jackie Robinson was the first African-American to play major league baseball during the modern era. Surprisingly, few people have given much thought to how Robinson came to the attention of major league scouts, where he played before signing with the Dodgers, or just what the nature of baseball in the black […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Paul Dunbar
Paul Laurence Dunbar was born in Dayton, Ohio, on June 27, 1872. His parents, Joshua Dunbar and Matilda Murphy Dunbar, were married just six months earlier, on December 24, 1871. Both slaves prior to the Civil War, Joshua Dunbar escaped and eventually served in both the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment and the 5th Massachusetts Colored […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Buffalo Soldiers
Buffalo Soldiers originally were members of the U.S. 10th Cavalry Regiment of the United States Army, formed on September 21, 1866 at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. The nickname was given to the “Negro Cavalry” by the Native American tribes they fought; the term eventually became synonymous with all of the African-American regiments formed in 1866: 9th […]
Read moreFaces of Black History – Rebecca Lee Crumpler
Rebecca Lee Crumpler challenged the prejudice that prevented African Americans from pursuing careers in medicine to became the first African American woman in the United States to earn an M.D. degree, a distinction formerly credited to Rebecca Cole. Although little has survived to tell the story of Crumpler’s life, she has secured her place in […]
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February 29, 2012 
