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mdhurd

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So far mdhurd has created 86 blog entries.

Football is still football

Since we’re into the football season I thought it was time to interject my two cents. I’ve noticed several teams starting black quarterbacks these days. Some because of injury, but others have been under center since training camp. By my count, the first weekend of the National Football League season in September saw nine African [...]

2019-12-15T15:20:56-06:00October 14, 2019|Goodwin|

TIPHC Newsletter, Oct. 6-12, 2019

The Battle to Rewrite Texas History While a new generation of scholars is correcting the historical record, supporters of the traditional narratives are fighting to keep their grip on the public imagination. Illustration by David Palumbo (Texas Monthly) On the mild, cloudy day of April 14, 2015, exactly 150 years and five days after [...]

2023-03-16T13:17:48-05:00October 9, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Sept. 29-Oct. 5, 2019

In rural Texas, black students’ fight for voting access conjures a painful past Photo: Even after the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the ratification six years later of the 26th Amendment, lowering the voting age to 18, Prairie View students faced barriers, including a “residency questionnaire” in the 1970s and [...]

2023-04-27T13:23:52-05:00October 2, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

1960s Revisited

Over the last few years our society has spent a great amount of energy reliving and analyzing the 1960s. Every event – from the deaths of the Kennedy brothers, MLK and Malcolm X, landing on the moon, war protests, and the hippie revolution – has been scrutinized through the microscope of history. The interesting thing [...]

2019-12-15T15:21:02-06:00October 1, 2019|Goodwin|

TIPHC Newsletter, Sept. 22-28, 2019

A Secret 1950s Strategy to Keep Out Black Students Long-hidden documents reveal the University of Texas’s blueprint for slowing integration during the civil-rights era. Photo: Heman Sweatt (right) at the University of Texas (Joseph Scherschel / Getty) (The Atlantic) In the summer of 1955, administrators at the University of Texas at Austin had a [...]

2023-04-27T13:33:07-05:00September 25, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Sept. 15-21, 2019

Restoring Black Cowboys to the Range At the Black Cowboy Museum in a storefront near Houston, one man celebrates the lives of African-Americans in the West’s most iconic role. Photo: Mr. Callies used his life savings to open the museum in 2017. (Credit: Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York Times) (New York Times) [...]

2023-04-27T13:51:31-05:00September 18, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

We owe them reverence

Given the infinite nature of the Universe, four hundred years is merely a blink of the eye. But the human existence is not infinite. We understand that from the moment we take our first breath out of our mothers’ wombs, our journey begins towards that moment when we take our last breath. So, for us [...]

2019-12-15T15:21:03-06:00September 18, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Goodwin|

TIPHC Newsletter, Sept. 8-14, 2019

Harris County Takes Steps To Face A History Of Racial Lynchings A national movement to commemorate lynching victims could come to the Houston area and recognize four black men who were killed here. Photo: Located at 1115 Congress Street, Quebedeaux Park -- proposed site for lynching markers -- sits right across from the Harris [...]

2023-04-26T11:07:45-05:00September 11, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Sep. 1-7, 2019

The Thorny History of Reparations in the United States In the 20th century, the country issued reparations for Japanese American internment, Native land seizures, massacres and police brutality. Will slavery be next? Photo: President Harry S. Truman signing a bill providing for the establishment of the Indian Claims Commission. (Thomas D. Mcavoy/The LIFE Picture [...]

2023-04-26T12:42:12-05:00September 4, 2019|2019 Fall, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Aug. 25-31, 2019

Her Fight for Civil Rights Was Recognized During the March on Washington's Tribute to Women—But She Wasn't Actually There Photo: Gloria Richardson, left, a leader in the Cambridge, Md., integrationist's movement, Dr. Rosa L. Gragg of the National Association of Colored Woman's Clubs and Mrs. Diane Nash Bevel, right, representing the Southern Christian Leadership [...]

2023-04-26T12:46:07-05:00August 28, 2019|2019 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

Contents

-- The Troubling History of Big Tobacco’s Cozy Ties With Black Leaders

-- African-American books of Interest, 2015-2016

-- Black Artists and the March Into the Museum

-- As it nears its 50th year, Kwanzaa strives for relevance

-- TBHPP Bookshelf: "No Color Is My Kind, The Life of Eldrewey Stearns and the Integration of Houston"

-- This Week In Texas Black History, Dec. 20-26

-- Ron Goodwin Blog

-- Submissions wanted

Contents

-- A brief history of Islam in America

-- New book chronicles African-American characters in "The Little Rascals"

-- Study: Black athletes and “The height of hypocrisy in higher education”

-- TBHPP Bookshelf: "Disney's Most Notorious Film: Race, Convergence, and the Hidden Histories of Song of the South"

-- This Week In Texas Black History, Dec. 27-Jan. 2

-- Ron Goodwin Blog

-- Submissions wanted