Preserving African American Family History
Submitted by tleonard on 03/14/2012 - 16:51Honoring St. Agnes Hospital
Submitted by tleonard on 02/25/2012 - 02:30
Documentary spotlights African American pilots
Submitted by brookecain on 02/11/2012 - 11:00
There's another good Smithsonian Channel documentary this weekend, this one spotlighting African American pioneers in aviation.
"Black Wings" tells the stories of black aviators -- from barnstormers to war fighters -- who broke the racial barriers that for many years kept black Americans from pursuing their dreams of flying.
The documentary tells the story of the Tuskegee Red-Tail Angels, the first African American pilots to train for combat during World War II (the Red-Tails are also the subject of a new George Lucas film).
Bessie Coleman (left), the first African American woman with a pilot's license, is also profiled. In the 1920s, no one in the United States would train a black woman to fly, so Coleman earned enough money to travel to France and train there. She returned to American and became a barnstorming stunt pilot.
For more stories like these, tune in to "Black Wings" on Saturday, February 11 at 9 p.m. or Thursday February 16 at 8 p.m.
Smithsonian Channel is on Time Warner Cable digital channel 1264, DirecTV 565 and 1565, and AT&T U-Verse 118 and 1118.
Events celebrating Black History Month
Submitted by tleonard on 02/01/2012 - 16:50
Integrating Raleigh's schools
Submitted by tleonard on 02/01/2012 - 11:52
No Signifyin' Please: Your visual dose of black history
Submitted by adriennj on 02/04/2009 - 17:07

February, you might have heard, is Black History Month (or African-American History Month, depending on your leanings).
What better way to celebrate than to actually learn a little history? And what better way to learn than through your television? Isn't that what it's for?
Mark your calendar.
UNC-TV will air four Independent Lens films. Unfortunately, they will air at 2am on Friday mornings. DVR, tape, or stay up -- they are all worth seeing. (If anything changes in the airdates, I'll update.)
So, early on Feb. 6 is "Adjust Your Color: The Truth of Petey Greene" a film about the late, great outrageous Washington, DC TV and radio host. Don Cheadle, who played Greene in an underseen, underrated 2007 movie "Talk to Me", narrates. If you saw that film, you really only got a taste of Greene and his vast influence. (Two words: Howard Stern.) And Greene's family didn't like that dramatization. The documentary must be more to their liking; Greene's children participate. It includes footage of Greene on his DC TV show that was presumed lost for 25 years. Artist Ernie Barnes, sports broadcaster James Brown, actor Robert Hooks are just a few of the folk whose lives Greene touched.
A gift from Lavonia
Submitted by jaydub on 07/14/2008 - 12:36Lavonia Allison, longtime leader of the Durham Committee on the Affairs of Black People, is donating papers and memorabilia to the N.C. State Archives at a Tuesday ceremony at N.C. Central University.
Her donation includes Durham Committee records from the group's founding in 1935 up to the present; some records of the N.C. Black Leadership Caucus; and political fliers, buttons and signs from various Democratic Party campaigns, among them Jesse Jackson presidential runs of 1984 and 1988.
Lisbeth Evans, state secretary of cultural resources, said in a prepared statement that Allison's gift "marks an important way to strengthen the resources available for African-American history."
State archivists will copy the collection electronically and on microfilm, and make the material available to researchers.




