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2019 Spring

TIPHC Newsletter, Apr. 7-13, 2019

40 Years a Slave: The Extraordinary Tale of an African Prince Stolen from His Kingdom Abdulrahman Ibrahim Ibn Sori was West African royalty before he was enslaved on a Mississippi plantation. Image: Abdulrahman Ibrahim Ibn Sori (Library of Congress) (History) After a shackled journey across the Atlantic, Abdulrahman Ibrahim Ibn Sori was desperate to [...]

2023-04-26T12:57:47-05:00April 10, 2019|2019 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Mar. 31-Apr. 6, 2019

Seventy-Five Years Ago, the Military’s Only All-Black Female Band Battled the War Department and Won The women of the 404th Armed Service Forces band raised morale and funds for the military, but they had to fight discrimination to do so Photo: The 404th AFS Band pictured in Fort Des Moines (Women's Army Corps and [...]

2023-04-26T11:16:59-05:00April 3, 2019|2019 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Mar. 24-30, 2019

New TIPHC Exhibit! “Biscuits and Business” The Legacy of Lucille Smith and Southern Black Chefs                    Lucille Smith In celebration of Women’s History Month, the Texas Institute for the Preservation of History and Culture presents, “Biscuits and Business: The Legacy of Lucille Smith and [...]

2023-04-26T13:19:31-05:00March 27, 2019|2019 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Mar. 17-23, 2019

The Bold Accomplishments of Women of Color Need to Be a Bigger Part of Suffrage History An upcoming Smithsonian exhibition, “Votes For Women,” delves into the complexities and biases of the nature of persistence Image: Anna Julia Haywood (Cooper), by H.M Platt, 1884 (Courtesy of Oberlin College Archives) (Smithsonian) The history of women gaining [...]

TIPHC Newsletter, Mar. 10-16, 2019

Explore the Underground Railroad’s ‘great central depot’ From Harriet Tubman to Gerrit Smith, abolitionists in central New York ushered thousands of escaped slaves to freedom. (National Geographic) A mere mention of Harriet Tubman or Fredrick Douglass conjures up images of former slaves, abolitionists and the struggle for freedom for enslaved Africans. Both New York [...]

TIPHC Newsletter, Mar. 3-9, 2019

Story of slave, Alamo hero recounted in new book Image: In this sketch by artist Gary Zaboly, a wounded Joe is forced at the point of a bayonet to identify key members of the Alamo garrison after the final attack of March 6, 1836. (Image courtesy of Lee Spencer White) (Houston Chronicle) Texans who [...]

TIPHC Newsletter, Feb. 24-Mar. 2, 2019

In Search of George Washington Carver’s True Legacy The famed agriculturalist deserves to be known for much more than peanuts Photo: Botanist George Washington Carver, seen here in a 1940 photo, donated $33,000 in cash to the Tuskegee Institute to establish a fund to carry on the agricultural and chemical work he began. (Bettmann) (Smithsonian) [...]

2023-04-26T12:31:24-05:00February 27, 2019|2019 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Feb. 17-23, 2019

7 black composers who changed the course of classical music history (Classic FM) From Scott Joplin to Florence Price, the music of these brilliant composers has too long been neglected in Western classical music tradition. In Black History Month, we’re celebrating the most famous and influential black composers in classical music history. 1. Joseph [...]

2023-04-26T14:40:14-05:00February 20, 2019|2019 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Feb. 10-16, 2019

Life Aboard a Slave Ship (History.com) Video: TV-PG, 4:02 (graphic content) From approximately 1525 to 1866, 12.5 million Africans were forcibly transported across the Middle Passage to serve as slaves in the New World. Life aboard slave ships was agonizing and dangerous; nearly 2 million slaves would perish on their journey across the Atlantic. [...]

2023-04-26T12:40:54-05:00February 13, 2019|2019 Spring, African American Texas History, Featured|

TIPHC Newsletter, Feb. 3-9, 2019

The Racism of 19th-Century Advertisements Illustrated advertising cards invoked ethnic stereotypes, using black women as foils in order to appeal to white consumers. Image: A trade card for Dilworth's Coffee, Philadelphia via Flickr (JSTOR Daily) After decades of presenting the archetypal American consumer as white and female, advertisers are slowly broadening their imagery to include [...]

2023-04-26T14:16:58-05:00February 6, 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