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Preserving African American Family History

 

As part of the African American Family Documentation Initiative, the Southern Historical Collection at UNC's Wilson Library will host an exhibit of photographs, letters, and documents from the newly acquired Lewis Family Collection. J.D. Lewis was one of the state's first African American broadcasters, starting with WRAL radio in the 1940s and moving to WRAL-TV when the station went on the air in December 1956. 
 
The Lewis Family Collection is the centerpiece of Southern Roots, Enduring Bonds: African American Families in North Carolina, which will run March 20 through July 1, 2012.
 
Exhibit Opening
With remarks by: Yvonne Lewis Holley, daughter of J.D. Lewis; Reginald F. Hildebrand, UNC professor of history and African and Afro-American studies; Joshua Davis, recent Ph.D. in history at UNC; and Geoff Hathaway, performer on “Teenage Frolic”
Tuesday, Mar. 20, 2012
5:00 p.m. Exhibit viewing, 4th floor
5:30 p.m. Program, Pleasants Family Assembly Room (main floor)
Wilson Library
 
Researching African American Family History Workshop
Saturday, Apr. 14, 2012
9:30 a.m. – 1 p.m.
Wilson Library, main floor
 
Events are free and open to the public. For information, contact:
Liza Terll
Friends of the Library
(919) 548-1203

Honoring St. Agnes Hospital

 

As part of its Black History Month celebration, Raleigh's North Central Citizens Advisory Council will host a celebration of St. Agnes Hospital today from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Martin Luther King Jr. Ballroom on the St. Augustine’s College campus. The mayor and Raleigh City Council have proclaimed February 25 St. Agnes Hospital Day.
 
You can read Thomasi McDonald's story about the hospital and its history here. It is most likely known as the hospital where boxing legend Jack Johnson died after an auto accident in Franklinton.
 

Documentary spotlights African American pilots

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

 

The N.C. Museum of History has several programs coming up during Black History Month that focus on North Carolina’s African American history and culture. All of these events are free.
 
African American History Tour
Saturday, Feb. 4, 11, 18 and 25
1:30-2:30 p.m.
Explore the lives and accomplishments of African American North Carolinians from the antebellum period to the Civil Rights era.
 
History à la Carte: Operation Dixie
Wednesday, Feb. 8
12:10-1 p.m.
Bring your lunch; beverages provided.
Nearly 10 years before the Montgomery bus boycott, black workers in eastern North Carolina campaigned for civil rights in tobacco warehouses. Discover how thousands organized and secured union contracts in nearly 30 “leaf houses.” James Wrenn from the Phoenix Historical Society will present the program.
 
Music of the Carolinas: Boo Hanks
Sunday, Feb. 12
3-4 p.m.
Drawing from a deep musical well, Hanks showcases his virtuosity in the delicate finger-style guitar of classic Piedmont blues. The performance is presented with PineCone, with support from the N.C. Museum of History Associates, Williams Mullen, and WLHC-FM/WLQC-FM.
 
To Free a Family: The Journey of Mary Walker
Monday, Feb. 13
11 a.m.
Leaving her son and daughter behind in 1848, Mary Walker fled from slavery and the plantation that is now Historic Stagville in Durham. She spent 17 years trying to recover her family. Dr. Syd Nathans, Professor Emeritus at Duke University, will present a talk based on his book about her remarkable story. The program is sponsored by the N.C. African American Heritage Commission. 
 
Return to Tradition
Saturday, Feb. 25
10 a.m.-noon
Presented in conjunction with the Sons of the American Revolution, this program focuses on a lesser-known fact about the American Revolution: significant numbers of people of color fought for the Patriots during the war. Hear keynote speaker Gen. James Gorham, North Carolina’s only African American four-star general.

Integrating Raleigh's schools

 

The Raleigh City Museum is re-opening its standing Civil Rights exhibit with a month of special events. Let Us March On: Raleigh's Journey Toward Civil Rights has undergone a major redesign and includes new photos and information. On February 18, Joe Holt, the first African American student to try to integrate Raleigh schools, will share his documentary, “Exhausted Remedies: Joe Holt’s Story” and hold a Q&A session.
 
In 2004, to mark the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, the Supreme Court decision outlawing segregated schools, former N&O writer Tim Simmons revisited Holt's story.
 
In the recent history of Atlanta, William "Bill" Campbell is a former mayor. But in school board minutes of 1960, he is a 7-year-old boy -- the first black child to attend a white school in Raleigh.
 
It wasn't for lack of trying that Joseph Holt Jr. didn't precede Campbell by several years.
 
Holt was 13 years old in the summer of 1956 when his parents tried to send him to ninth grade at the all-white Daniels Junior High School. The Raleigh school board, apparently caught by surprise, rejected the application, saying it came too late to be considered.
 
"When our photo was put in the paper, it sent shock waves through the community, especially the black community, " said Holt, 60, a retired Air Force officer who tutors at Shaw University. "After that, the pressure was enormous."
 
Holt's parents applied again in 1957, this time to have Joe attend Broughton High School as a 10th-grader. Again, the board rejected the application, saying the transfer wasn't in his best interest.
 
The family filed suit in federal court, only to lose the first round in 1958. The court ruled that the district could reject the application because the family sent a lawyer to its transfer hearing instead of attending in person.
 
Looking back over 50 years of history, Holt can see there was no way Raleigh schools would enroll a black child in 1956.
 
Although the Supreme Court ruled in 1954 that the doctrine of "separate but equal" had no place in America's schools, it did not say how towns should resolve the inequities. Those looking to the federal government for help found no guidance, particularly not from President Dwight Eisenhower, who pointedly refused to say whether he approved of the court's ruling.
 
Deliberately slow
 
By 1955, when the Supreme Court said states must integrate their schools "with all deliberate speed, " many lawmakers chose to focus on "deliberate" rather than "speed." That was especially true in the North Carolina General Assembly, which met just a few miles from Joe Holt's home.
 
Looking for a way to preserve segregation without defying the courts, Gov. Luther Hodges helped guide legislation that relieved the state and local school districts from the responsibility of integration by requiring that parents request transfers. Boards then rejected the requests for a variety of reasons that officially had nothing to do with race.
 
The state offered private school tuition vouchers to parents who did not want their children to attend integrated schools. It also allowed communities to close schools by public referendum if desegregation occurred.
 
If those messages weren't clear enough to black families, those who knew the Holts also understood the issue on a personal level. It wasn't long before Joe Holt Sr. was demoted and then fired from his job at a local warehouse.
 
Freedom of choice
 
By the time Bill Campbell enrolled at Murphey School, a handful of school boards were claiming integration by granting small numbers of transfer requests.
 
Sometimes called "freedom-of-choice" assignments, the transfers were considered only if families asked. Routinely, school administrators screened applicants in visits to their homes.
 
In Raleigh the task often fell to Fred Carnage, the city's only black school board member of that era.
 
"Basically, a family needed a recommendation from Mr. Carnage before they would be considered, " said Sylvia Ruby, a white woman who was active in the League of Women Voters during the 1950s and later served on the Wake school board. "This kept things gradual, which was the only way any integration was going to occur in the city." -- The News & Observer 5/2/2004
 
Ten years after the Holt family's case, Joe was in the news once again, this time as a hero. A member of the Military Airlift Command based at McGuire AFB, he "helped bring a crippled C-130 Hercules in for a safe landing in the Philippines after a tense 2 1/2-hour trip and a series of inflight emergencies over the South China Sea." -- The Raleigh Times 11/29/1967
 
Students protest in front of Raleigh Public School offices on Devereux Street. N&O File Photo

No Signifyin' Please: Your visual dose of black history


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

Lavonia 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.

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