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TIPHC Newsletter, May 20-26, 2018

Lynching: What happens when we forget? Photo: A rare sight, a marker commemorating a lynching, this one in Brighton, Alabama. (Photo by Lance Warren.) (Facing South) We didn't know. Why didn't we know? The truth crept in — unexpected, unsought, unforgettable. Yet so many had forgotten; so few knew. We had to know why. [...]

TIPHC Newsletter, May 13-19, 2018

How a Wave of Honest History Museums Is Changing Black Tourism Photo: Visitor Dwayne Wilson sits in the Contemplative Court at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington on Sept. 7. (Evelyn Hockstein/For the Washington Post via Getty Images) (Slate) While 30 percent of black leisure travelers consider learning about history [...]

TIPHC Newsletter, May 6-12, 2018

One Day in Texas, Two Different Responses to Our Confederate Legacy As Austin honored a former slave, Panola County celebrated the Confederacy and ignored his brother. Photo: Milton M. Holland, a former slave and recipient of the Medal of Honor from Panola County, is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. (Photo by R.G. Ratcliffe) (Texas Monthly) [...]

TIPHC Newsletter, April 29-May 5, 2018

The Remarkable Rise of One of Texas’s Most Accomplished Families How an African American family achieved extraordinary prominence in San Antonio during the height of Jim Crow–era segregation. Photo: Sutton family photo taken in 1917, with Lillian and Samuel seated in the center. (Courtesy of UTSA Special Collections) (Texas Monthly) For much of San Antonio’s [...]

TIPHC Newsletter, April 22-28, 2018

Slavery and the American University Photo: Henry Martin, born into slavery at Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello estate, began working at the University of Virginia in 1850 as a waiter and then a janitor; pictured here on the UVA lawn, 1896. (University of Virginia) (The New York Review of Books) According to the surviving records, the [...]

2023-04-26T13:12:00-05:00April 25, 2018|2018 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, April 15-21, 2018

National Memorial to Honor Lynching Victims Opens April 26 (DiversityInc) There was a time in the U.S. when white people would gather in public squares in the Deep South to witness Black men, women or children hanged, burned or amputated, sometimes all of the above. This form of domestic terrorism is a painful part [...]

2023-04-26T13:09:03-05:00April 18, 2018|2018 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, April 8-14, 2018

Textbook Racism How scholars sustained white supremacy Image: A drawing by Hanson Booth in "The Development of America," by Fremont P. Wirth (American Book Company, 1937). The caption reads in part: “Slaves at home, after the day’s work was over. Negroes always have been fond of singing and dancing.” (The Chronicle of Higher Education) There it sat [...]

2023-04-26T12:12:24-05:00April 11, 2018|2018 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, April 1-7, 2018

Why People Rioted After Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Assassination Photo: Onlookers watch as a Chicago storefront building burns during riots in the wake of Martin Luther King Jr's assassination, 1968. (Credit: Lee Balterman/The Life Picture Collection/Getty Images) (History.com) Every night in November 1968, National Guardsmen circled the streets in Wilmington, Delaware, armed with loaded [...]

2023-04-26T11:13:06-05:00April 4, 2018|2018 Fall, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, March 25-31, 2018

TEACHING THE HARD HISTORY OF AMERICAN SLAVERY Schools are not adequately teaching the history of American slavery. Educators are not sufficiently prepared to teach it. Textbooks do not have enough material about it. (Southern Poverty Law Center) American enslavement of Africans shaped our country's sociopolitical institutions and formed the cornerstone of our industrial revolution. [...]

2023-04-26T14:20:01-05:00March 28, 2018|2018 Fall, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Mar. 18-24, 2018

'Black 14' Tells Story of College Football Players Who Risked Their Careers for Racial Justice Colorlines talks to Darius Clark Monroe about his new short documentary, which chronicles the 1969 saga of Black University of Wyoming football players who protested against racism in the Mormon Church. Photo: A mural by Adrienne Vetter depicts the members [...]

2023-04-26T12:35:55-05:00March 21, 2018|2018 Fall, Featured|