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BlackFacts Minute: December 19

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Black Facts for December 19th

1828 - (1828) David Walker, “The Necessity of A General Union Among Us”

David Walker (1796-1830) is best known for his revolutionary pamphlet, Walker’s Appeal, in Four Ariticles: together with a preamble, to the coloured Citizens of the World, but in Particular and Very expressly to those of the United States of America. This twenty-six-page pamphlet warned of a bloody insurrection if American slaveholders did not liberate their enslaved. This was the first call for armed insurrection. Walker was born free in Wilmington, North Carolina, and moved to Boston, where he was the proprietor of a new and used clothing store form 1825 to his death in 1830. Walker’s speeches are less well known. In December, 1828 he delivered an address before the Massachusetts General Colored Association, an organization founded two years earlier in Boston to oppose slavery and discrimination against free blacks. The speech, which called for organization and united action among African Americans, appears below.

Mr. President,—I cannot but congratulate you, together with my brethren on this highly interesting occasion, the first semi-annual meeting of this Society. When I reflect upon the many impediments though which we have had to conduct its affairs, and see, with emotion of delight, the present degree of eminency to which it has arisen, I cannot, sir, but be of the opinion, that an invisible arm must have been stretched out in our behalf. From the very second conference, which was by us convened, to agitate the proposition respecting the society, to the final consolidation, we were by some, opposed, with an avidity and zeal, which, had it been on the opposite side, would have done great honor to themselves. And, sir, but for the undeviating, and truly patriotic exertions of those who were favorable to the formation of this institution, it might have been this day, in yet unorganized condition. Did I say in an unorganized condition? Yea, had our opponents their way, the very notion of such an institution might have been obliterated in our minds. How strange it is, to see men of sound sense, and of

2010 - Left of Black with Marc Lamont Hill and Salamishah Tillet

Season 1, Episode 12

Mark Anthony Neal talks to Marc Lamont Hill about black youth, schooling and Jay-Zs new book Decoded. Later, Mark is joined by Salamishah Tillet to discuss Kayne West as a genius and to re-define the markers of genius.

Marc Lamont Hill gets into it with OReilly - Duration: 5:41. Robert Barrimond 456,431 views

Left of Black with Salamishah Tillet and Sohail Daulatzai - Duration: 44:45. John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University 950 views

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Left of Black with Melissa Harris-Perry and Marc Lamont Hill - Duration: 49:02. John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University 4,832 views

Left of Black with Carrie Mae Weems and Thabiti Lewis - Duration: 59:47. John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University 2,527 views

Marc Lamont Hill Talks Politics with David Anderson - Duration: 28:11. The Business Bully 4,137 views

Left of Black with David J. Leonard and Natalie Y. Moore - Duration: 49:32. John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University 959 views

Marc Lamont Hill - Our World with Black Enterprise - Black Republicans - December 19 2010 - Duration: 12:49. way180 2,422 views

Left of Black with Danielle McGuire and Stephane Dunn - Duration: 48:49. John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University 2,137 views

Left of Black with Lakesia Johnson and Natalie Hopkinson - Duration: 33:01. John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University 592 views

Marc Lamont Hill Address NAACP 2012 - Duration: 47:08. Herbert Glenn 2,481 views

Left of Black with T.J. Anderson and Alexis Pauline Gumbs - Duration: 36:36. John Hope Franklin Center at Duke University 1,349 views

Left of Black with Michael Eric Dyson

1875 - Woodson, Carter G. (1875-1950)

Historian Carter G. Woodson was born to poor, yet land-owning, former slaves in New Canton, Virginia on December 19, 1875.  During the 1890s, he hired himself out as a farm and manual laborer, drove a garbage truck, worked in coalmines, and attended high school and college in Berea College, Kentucky—from which he earned a B.L. degree in 1903.  In the early 1900s, he taught black youth in West Virginia.  From late 1903 until early 1907, Woodson worked in the Philippines under the auspices of the US War Department.  Woodson then traveled to Africa, Asia, and Europe and briefly attended the Sorbonne in Paris, France.  In 1908, he received an M.A. degree in History, Romance languages, and Literature from the University of Chicago in Illinois.  In 1912, while teaching in Washington, D.C., he earned his doctorate in history from Harvard University. 

In 1915, Woodson published his first book, The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861 and co-founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH).  In 1916, he singlehandedly launched The Journal of Negro History, now The Journal of African American History.  In 1918, Woodson published A Century of Negro Migration and became the principal of Armstrong Manual Training School, Washington, D.C.  From 1919 until 1920, he was the Dean of Howard University’s School of Liberal Arts and from 1920 until 1922 he served as a dean at West Virginia Collegiate Institute.  In 1921, he published The History of the Negro Church and founded the Associated Publishers, Inc.  After founding the ASNLH, he also became active in black organizations like the NAACP, the National Urban League, the Friends of Negro Freedom, and the Committee of 200.