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PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE start some of these entries. Don't be shy!!! This page like any on Wikipedia, is open to additions and improvements by all. ✔️ indicates a page has been established on the subject. Please help expand and improve!
- Horace Sudduth, businessman in Cincinnati, Ohio
- Henry Lawrence McCrorey / Henry L. McCrorey / Henry McCrorey, spelled McCrore sometimes? college president. Journal founder.
- Harlem, Florida History? Naming?
- Marjorie Parham / Marjorie Ann Parham / Marjorie Bowser Parham / Marjorie B. Parham February 12, 1918 -2021 newspaper publisher in Cincinnati[1][2][3]
- Juliet E. K. Walker / Juliet Walker historian of Black businesses in the U.S.
- Vera Moore (businesswoman) actress and cosmetics business[4][5][6][7]
- Rose Meta Morgan very prominent businesswoman and bank founder
- Charles H. Crandon public official in Florida. Crandon Park named for him. Papers.[8]
- Richard J. Arena / Richard Joseph Arens / Richard Arens, Haitian filmmaker
- Bob Lemoine / Robert V. Lemoine (1942 - 2015) Haitian journalist, radio personality, filmmaker[9][10]
- Antonio Vieux, Haitian lawyer, politician, cultural leader, and writer. Apparently he was tortured and murdered.
- Marion B. Lucas / Marion Lucas emeritus professor historian who has written about the history of African Americans in Kentucky.[11]
- John A. Prall / John Prall / John Andrew Prall a lawyer and state legislator in Kentucky who was involved in the development of the Pralltown neighborhood
- Urban Street, a Chicago show hosted by Ty Wansley. Interviewed notables?
- Let Us Break Bread Together (film), New York Board of education film.
- John W. Jacks / James Jacks / James W. Jacks , newspaperman in Missouri[12]
- Mabel Reinecke, woman who was internal revenue appointee of Warren G. Harding. Short documentary films Aunt Mabel was lade about her.
- Howe Institute (Louisiana) (Draft:Howe Institute (Louisiana)) African-American school in New Iberia, Louisiana; in operation from 1890 to 1933; has historical plaque; disambiguation needed from Howe Institute, Howe Institute (Tennessee).
- Jamaica Training School / Jamaica State Normal School (Draft:Jamaica Training School) in Queens, New York City. Had a streetcar stop? Now the site of Hillcrest High School (map image)[13]
- Charles Sumner Smith, a New England legislator has the same name around the same time????
- Mary Ann Webster Loughborough / Mary Webster Loughborough / Mary W. Loughborough[14] (has image in WikiCommons) wife of James M. Loughborough and author of "My Cave Life in Vicksburg"[15] (son James Fairfax Loughborough / J. F. Loughborough)[16] lawyer[17] daughter Mrs. Jean Loughborough Douglass[18][19][20][21] Arkansas Ladies' Journal[22] He husband was Frank Middleton Douglass
- National Theater of Egypt (Draft:National Theater of Egypt) (formerly the Egyptian National Theatre Troupe in Cairo), operated by the Ministry of Culture; this was tied to the early history of cinema in the country of Egypt.[23]
- 1967 Newark Black Power Conference; check for notability, in the documentary film Still a Brother
- William Wallace Derrick (Draft:William Wallace Derrick), early Black physician and medical professor in Knoxville; check for notability
- Theodore Roosevelt visit to Buganda[24] part of the Smithsonian–Roosevelt African Expedition. African Game Trails is book he wrote about the trip. Roosevelt in Africa is a documentary film made about the trip and filmed during it.
- W. M. Webb, William Menzie Webb,[25] minister who founded a historic church and school in Jamaica.[26] Only mentioned in Westwood High School, Jamaica. Wife[27]
- McAllister Fund, or the James McAllister Christmas Fund / McAllister Christmas Fund, a trust funding the Black residents of Fayetteville, Arkansas (formerly Cross Creek Township)[28]
- Independent Florida State Negro League, Bradenton Aces / Bradenton Nine Devils, Zulu Giants (Miami team), Lakeland Tigers[29] Tampa Bay Rockets
- Florida Emancipation Day, celebrating May 20, 1865 the Emancipation Day for slaves in Florida following the American Civil War[30]
- Draft:List of Colored Citizens Protective Leagues
Books
[edit]- Mississippi; a Guide to the Magnolia State (1938), a Federal Writers' Project book
- Goodspeed Publishing, Godspeed Histories (1904) book[31] / authored by Weston Arthur Goodspeed[32]
- A Bibliography of the Negro in Africa and America, a bibliography edited by Monroe Work[33]
- History of the American Negro and His Institutions (1917) by Arthur Bunyan Caldwell
- Southern Writers: A New Biographical Dictionary (1980) edited by Joseph M. Flora and Amber Vogel
People
[edit]Activists, lawyers, judges
[edit]- Edgar Keemer / Edgar B. Keemer Jr. / Edgar Bass Keemer Jr. doctor who performed abortions for women in Detroit.[34][35][36] Also a civil rights activist. Jailed. (source but not reliable per wiki srandards)[37] Edgar Keemer one of the authors of Fighting Racism in World War II? Autobiography[38] Article he wrote[39]
- Jimmy Travis / Jimmie Travis, civil rights organizer.[40][41] Featured in film The Last White Knight
- Not finding anything on him other than him being shot when he was a field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (checked GBooks, JSTOR and Proquest) May be worth a mention in that article but do not see notability for a stand-alone article. ~~~~
- Edwin Luther Hawkins Sr. educator and civil rights leader[42]
- Sidney Dillon Redmond / Sidney D. Redmond, (1871 - 1948) doctor, lawyer and educator
- Barbara Bellis / Barbara N. Bellis Connecticut judge involved in lots of interesting case. Covered.[43]
- Ferdinand Desoto Lee (Draft:National Memorial Association), lawyer and organizer for a national museum to honor African American Civil War veterans. Howard University alum[44]
- Charles Hamilton Houston (1895–1950), American civil rights lawyer and educator - this lawyer visited San Francisco and was the namesake of The Charles Houston Bar Association (CHBA), a specialty bar association under the State Bar of California in 1975 and became an affiliate of the National Bar Association[45] - add information about club to existing or make new article?
- Eugene Covington, doctor, civil rights campaigner, and politician in Bloomington, Indiana?[46]
- Richard Edward Westbrook, lawyer, high school principal, delegate to Lincoln Jubilee. Represented Chicago Defender
- Charles Henry Alston (currently a redirect to another subject) (Charles Henry Alston (lawyer) (Draft:Charles Henry Alston (lawyer)) Could use a double check by someone familiar with American legal terms and abbreviations, and someone with access to the back catalogue of the The Florida Historical Quarterly.
- Eugene Covington, civil rights campaigner, doctor, and politician in Bloomington, Indiana?[47][48][49]
- Roosevelt Barnett, civil rights leader in Alabama[50]
- Ida D. Bailey / Ida Bailey (Draft:Ida D. Bailey) civil rights advocate
- William Elfe / William T. Wlfe (Draft:William Elfe) judge and legislator in North Carolina
- Carl Simms, state legislator and civil rights lawyer in Arizona[51]
- Hamilton Geale (Draft:Hamilton Geale), Irish lawyer and author
- Hayzel Daniels / Hayzel B. Daniels, state legislator and civil rights lawyer in Arizona[52]
- Ruth Howard (activist) SNCC field secretary. activist and organizer involved in selecting Black Panther for new political party[53] Now Ruth Howard Chambers[54] Ruth Chambers teacher and potter[55]
- Janice Duffy, Australian woman has won a second defamation case against Google[56]
- John Moss Jr., lawyer[57] This obituary appears to be for his father
- Benner C. Turner, law school dean married Julia Allen daughter of Benjamin F. Allen president of Lincoln Institute in MO. Dispute.[58] Source[59]
- William L. Robinson, civil rights lawyer, public official, and law professor[60]
Architects
[edit]- Draft:Nevin, Wischmeyer & Morgan firm in Kentucky
- Lowell W. Baker[61] built the Albion Post Office. Is there enough independent coverage for an entry?
- Albert Grant Brown (1881–1924),[62][63] architect from Campbell's Creek, West Virginia, educated at West Virginia Colored Institute
- Robert Lester Buffins (1892–1981),[62] architect, educated at Howard University
- George B. Blacknall, George Blacknall, contractor and builder in Franklin County, North Carolina. Mather covers him and a speech he gave was transcribed[64] but I can't find a lot on him. Maybe he can be noted in a broader entry on Blacknall?[65]
- Ralph Victor Cook (1875–1949), architect[62][66]
- William Jefferson Decatur (1874–unknown),[62] architect from Atlanta, Georgia
- Charles Edgar Dickinson (1908–1964),[62] the first Black member of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA)
- Clyde Martin Drayton (1915–1983),[62][67] architect from Southern Pines, North Carolina
- DeWitt Sanford Dykes Sr. (1903–1991),[62][68][69] architect and minister
- Gaston Alonzo Edwards (1875–1943),[62][70] architect, taught at Shaw University in Raleigh
- Robert Lionel Fields (1918–1985),[62] architect from Charleston, South Carolina
- Wade Alston Ford (1886–1949),[62] architect from Columbia, South Carolina
- Louis Edwin Fry Sr. (1903–2000),[62][71][72] Washington, D.C. architect and former chairman of the department of architecture at Howard University
- Clinton Stevens Harris (1900–1992),[62] architect from Queens, New York
- William Augustus Hazel (1854–1929),[62][73] architect from Wilmington, North Carolina
- Joseph E. Hill (unknown–1892),[62] architect, teacher; from Philadelphia
- James Edward Hutchins (1890–1970),[62][74] architect from Blakely, Georgia; active in Jacksonville, Florida
- Percy Costa Ifill (1913–1973),[62] architect; from Harlem
- Willie Edward Jenkins (1923–1988),[62] (W. Edward Jenkins),[75] architect practicing in North Carolina
- Harvey Nathaniel Johnson Sr. (1892–1973), architect[62][76] from Virginia
- Arthur Edward Lankford (1879–1908),[62][77] architect from Potosi, Missouri
- Henry Lewis Livas (1912–1979),[62][78] architect, educator; active in Norfolk, Virginia
- Howard Hamilton Mackey Sr. (1901–1987),[62][79] architect and educator, Howard University faculty member (1924–) and department head (1929–) then an associate dean of the School of Architecture and Engineering (1937–)
- William Henry Moses Jr. (1901–1991),[62][80] "architect, columnist, and founder of the architecture program at the Hampton Institute (now Hampton University)"
- Joseph Lincoln Parker (1898–1959),[62] "architectural engineer associated with large public transportation projects in New York"
- Edward Lyons Pryce (1914–),[62] landscape architect, educated at Tuskegee Institute (B.S. 1937), Ohio State University (B.Land.Arch.1948).[81]
- Leon Andrew Ransom Jr. (1929–1971),[62] architect from Columbus, Ohio
- Lawrence Reese (1865–1915),[62][82] self taught architect from Bennetsville in Marlboro County, South Carolina
- Francis Jefferson Roberson (1862–1944),[62] architect from Saint Louis, Missouri; designed St. Peter's African Methodist Episcopal Church in Minneapolis
- Walter Lenox Roberts Jr. (1908–1982),[62] architect, Modernist designs; from Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Edward Walter Owen Young (1874–unknown),[62][83] architect in Tacoma, Washington state, he was related to the "Edmonson sisters"
- William Steitenroth, architect (builder?) in Mississippi from Natchez firm of Stietenroth and Dowda (Charles J. Dowda).
- Donald Frank White (1908–2002), first Black licensed architect in Michigan[84][62]
- National Technical Association[62]
- Council for Advancement of Negroes in Architecture (NACA)
Business people
[edit]- Robert T. Bess (Draft:Robert T. Bess), stockbroker, businessman and civil rights organizer in New York City
- West A. Hamilton, Draft:West A. Hamilton, American publisher, military service personnel, community leader, businessman - would anyone be able to help with this one?
- Jacob Godfrey Schmidlapp businessman and philanthropist especially in Cincinnati[85][86][87]
- Isreal Pinkney Stanback / I. P. Stanback, businessman and philanthropist from Columbia, South Carolina. South Carolina State College (1966-1982). I. P. Stanback Museum / I. P. Stanback Museum & Planetarium at South Carolina State University
- John Jackson Benson (September 1850–November 9, 1925; Draft:John Jackson Benson), businessman, community founder of Kowaliga, Alabama, formerly enslaved
- William E. Benson (Draft:William E. Benson) (1873–1915), community founder of Kowaliga, Alabama
- Frank D. Banks school official, businessman, and resort founder. Worked at Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute and led efforts to establish a beach resort for African Americans on the Chesapeake Bay. He also helped organize People's Savings and Loan in 1888 and helped establish the Hampton Supply Company.[88] Held local elected office? City Council? He formed the Bay Shore Hotel Company with a group of local leaders.[89] Also a folklorist[90] F. D. Banks (some notable folklorist colleagues)[91]
- John Mallory Phillips businessman in Hampton, Virginia[92] At least 3 family members had this name.[93] Historical marker[94][95] J. M. Phillips Seafood
- William Patrick Burell, W. P. Burrell, business leader[96]
- George Washington Dennis, and George W. Dennis (Draft:George Washington Dennis), 19th-century African-American businessman during the Gold Rush; a former slave; he became one of San Francisco's wealthiest Black men and fought against discrimination[97][98][99]
College presidents
[edit]- M. W. Dogan / Matthew W. Dogan / Matthew Winfred Dogan, president of Wiley University[100][101] Former middle school named for him?[102][103] University's president for 46 years? Findagrave entry[104]
- O. L. Coleman, founder and president of Coleman College of Gibsland, Louisiana.[105][106] Was part of Booker T. Washington's delegation to visit Southern University A&M in 1915? Died in an auto accident in 1927?
- John Wesley Strong, president of Central Texas College (Waco, Texas) in Waco, Texas in 1915. Our entry on Central Texas College is for a community college founded in Killeen, Texas in 1965. Weirdly I can find very little about the college. this book notes Strong as president and one of protestors of a lynching? This book says 1903-1937. Gives years for its football team in Waco and "Ind."????? I know there is a book about black colleges in Texas. Maybe it's covered there???
- John Dewey Boyd / J. D. Boyd president of HBCUs apparently somewhat controversial[107]
- Henry Nehemiah Tisdale, Henry N. Tisdale, President Emeritus at Claflin University[108][109][110][111][112]
- Alonzo Webster, President Emeritus at Claflin University[113]
- Benjamin F. Allen (educator) / B. F. Allen, professor and college president[114][115][116] (Link from Benjamin Allen, Benjamin F. Allen, and B. F. Allen) Benjamin F. Allen Hall is/was? a dormitory[117]
- Ralph P. Bridgeman, former president of Hampton University
- Malcolm Shaw MacLean, former president of Hampton University
- James Edgar Gregg, former president of Hampton University[118]
- Jonas Henderson (Draft:Jonas Henderson); Baptist minister at St. Mary's Baptist Church,[119] principal/president of Howe Institute (Louisiana) and the namesake of a former segregated African American school in New Iberia, Louisiana.[120]
Filmmakers, actors, entertainers
[edit]- Jeanne Luckett (Draft:Jeanne Luckett) filmmaker among other things. Interviewed here Won a lifetime achievement award 2023[121]
- Artie Young (Draft:Artie Young), actor.
- Alec Lovejoy (Draft:Alec Lovejoy), actor
- Wendell James Franklin (Draft:Wendell James Franklin), first African American member of the Director's Guild, directed The Bus Is Coming[122][123][124][125]
- Eric Adjepong (Draft:Eric Adjepong), American celebrity chef of Ghanian descent;[126] on Tournament of Champions (TV series)
- Tobias Dorzon (Draft:Tobias Dorzon), American celebrity chef and former NFL player;[127] Tournament of Champions (TV series)
- Darnell Ferguson (Draft:Darnell Ferguson), American celebrity chef;[128] Tournament of Champions (TV series)
- Robert Fontaine Jr. (Draft:Robert Fontaine Jr.) filmmaker. Crispy Crackers and Beans, Mi America[129][130]
- Marguerite Mosier / Margaret Mosier, performer. Lady of the Rose (1925)[131] The Half Naked Truth (1926) as Mamie[132] Junk (Edwin B. Self's debut as a playwright)[133] as Nancy (1927)[134][135] Slaves All[136] as Jenny Venn[137] My Country (1926)[138][139] Noted here?
Historians
[edit]- Thomas Aiello, history professor and author in the U.S.
- W. Sherman Savage / William Sherman Savage (1890-1981; Draft:William Sherman Savage), professor and author who wrote about African American history.[140][141]
- Wilfred Augustus Low / W. Augustus Low (Draft:Wilfred Augustus Low), historian and author
- Sally McMillen Sally G. McMillen (Draft:Sally G. McMillen), history professor and author
- Stephen Cresswell (Draft:Stephen Cresswell), historian and author in Mississippi.
- Mary Jane Barry / Mary J. Barry, author of books on the history of Alaska[142][143]
- Jean B. Lee, history professor emeritus who has researched "Revolutionary America, historical memory, the South to 1835, and slavery in the Atlantic world" and author[144] Link from Jean Lee
- Anderson Delano Macklin (Draft:Anderson Delano Macklin) professor, art historian, and author who wrote A Biographical History of African American Artists (2001)
- Michael W. Fitzgerald (historian) (Draft:Michael W. Fitzgerald (historian)), needs book reviews to establish notability
- Billy D. Higgins (Draft:Billy D. Higgins) professor of history and author in Arkansas. Needs some book reviews
- Douglas Walter Bristol Jr.[145] (born 1965) history professor and author. Wrote Knights of the Razor: Black Barbers in Slavery and Freedom Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2009)[146][147] Integrating the US Military : Race, Gender, and Sexual Orientation since World War II co-author
- Sir W. M. N. Geary author of Nigeria Under British Rule. Noted here[148] Authored "The Development of Lagos in 50 Years; From Head Town of "Slave Coast" to be "The Liverpool of West Africa" (1924)[149]
- Frenise A. Logan / Frenise Avedis Logan / Frenise Logan / Frenise Avedis Logan Sr. (September 30, 1920-1995) diplomat, historian, poet,[150] scholar and author wrote The Negro in North Carolina, 1876-1894 (1964)[151] also wrote "The Movement in North Carolina to Establish a State Supported College for Negroes," NCHR 35 (April 1958) British cotton trade in India [152]
Newspaper people
[edit]- The Afro-American Press and Its Editors, lists people profiled including numerous red links
- William Lewis Eagleson / W. L. Eagleson, newspaperman in Kansas[153][154][155]
- Thomas Wallace Swann, newspaperman and organizer of Lincoln Jubilee in Chicago. His photograph appears on page 3ish here
- Charles Dimitry (Draft:Charles Dimitry) novelist and newspaperman and John Dimitry Confederate officer? and writer. Sons of Alexander Dimitry Their sister married a military officer Ruth.
- Magnus L. Robinson, journalist and editor of the National Leader newspaper; Eisenhower East in Alexandria, Virginia
- Albert Dunmore journalist at the Michigan Chronicle. Inducted into National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame
- Henry Levette, sports and entertainment editor for the California Eagle,[156] columnist,[157] writer and poet,[158] actor?
- Charles B. W. Gordon (1861–?), African-American Baptist minister, and newspaper editor for the National Pilot[159]
- Viola Bradford (Viola B. Bradford) reporter for The Southern Courier. Born in Mississippi and grew up in Montgomery, Alabama.[160]
- W. Paul Woolley, publisher. His Southeastern Publishing Company in Montgomery, Alabama published The Southern Courier
- Norman Lumpkin, news reporter and public official[161] Earlier worked at The Southern Courier?
- Charles Franklin Lane, a Beach Institute alumnus as well as Boston Latin School, studied with professor Edward Price of Harvard, Suffolk Law School, Boston Law School, publisher and law student (as of 1915) published The Citizen literary magazine
- Hiram T. Fisher (Draft:H. T. Fisher) newspaper editor
- Jerry Mondesire, journalist in Philadelphia[162]
- Alexander Purdie (publisher) (1743–1779), Scottish-born American newspaper publisher, printer, co-owner of The Virginia Gazette[163]
Politicians
[edit]- John Mayo (born 1838–?) (Draft: John Mayo (politician); John Mayo (politician) ), an African American member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from Rapides Parish; father-in-law of John Baptist Lafargue[164][165][166][167][168]
- Otis Davis (politician) / Otis L. Davis (Draft: ), pastor,[169] member of the Arkansas House of Representatives[170]
- Nancy Duffy Blount / Nancy Duffy,[171] member of the Arkansas House of Representatives[170]
- Tommy Lee Baker[172] member of the Arkansas House of Representatives [170]
- James Edward Mason, religious leader, professor, speaker, twice led opening Senate and General Assembly in Albany "during administration of Theodore Roosevelt". Interesting list of lectures he gave is included in Mather's Who's Who. Were any of them transcribed?
- M. LaRue Harrison (Marcus LaRue Harrison, mayor of Fayetteville, Arkansas 1868), anti-slavery activist, railroad employee (surveyor?), and Union Army officer. Removed from office of mayor by revocation of city's charter. Harrison, Arkansas is named for him.[173] received a ceremonial sword[174]
- E. I. Stirman (1869) (Erasmus "Ras" Stirman), next mayor of Fayetteville was a Confederate officer[175][176][177] (Marcus LaRue Harrison)
- Jean C. Edwards state legislator in Arkansas who served in Arkansas Senate from 1991 to 2000;[178] Jean Edwards (currently a redirect to someone else)
- William L. Walker / Bill Walker state legislator in Arkansas[179] Served in the Arkansas Senate from 1995 to 2002.[180]
- Alvin Simes, lawyer who served as a state senator in Arkansas in 2001 and 2002[181]
- Jack Crumbly state senator in Arkansas 2007-2012[182]
- L. L. Keenan, or Roy Keenan (1894?–1949), member of the South Carolina House of Representatives for Aiken, South Carolina, and supporter of the KKK[183][184]
- Tom Williams (Mississippi politician), state senator in 1960s "Senator " Tom " Williams , as he was affectionately known , respected and admired , labored unselfishly as a member of the Mississippi Senate from 1952 to his demise in 1967 during four administrations , and during.."[185] "State Senator Tom Williams is pub- licly accusing the Kennedy - Johnson ticket of " riding the integration train and ..."[186]
- Howard McDonnell a lawyer and state senator in Mississippi who opposed abuse of prisoners[187] and unconstitutional bills in Mississippi during the civil rights era. He lived in Biloxi. Seems like quite a guy.
- Reginald Boldin / Reginald Bolding Jr., state representative in Arizona (D-Phoenix)[188]
- James Henry Presnell (Draft:James Henry Presnell) also known as James H. Presnell and "The Bronze Mayor" from Knoxville, TN, politician and community leader, has historic marker[189][190]
- Hermanze Edwin Fauntleroy Jr. (2010), Hermanze E. Fauntleroy Jr., former mayor of Petersburg, Virginia; building named for him at Virginia State University.[191][192]
- Girod Jackson / Girod Jackson III, former state rep. in Louisiana[193]
- Florence Farley (1928–2022), Florence Saunders Farley; psychologist, educator, elected official, artist; former mayor of Petersburg, Virginia; first Black female mayor of Petersburg.[194]
Others
[edit]- Morgan London Latta / Morgan L. Latta / Latta University, formerly enslaved educator who founded a school and orphanage in Raleigh, North Carolina[195][196] We have an entry on his house Rev. M.L. Latta House
- Arthur Bunyan Caldwell / A. B. Caldwell (1873–1944), white publisher and editor in the South (History of the American Negro and His Institutions, editor (various state editions)[197] The History of Harlem An Historical Narrative Delivered at Harlem Music Hall[198]
- John Fleer (Draft:John Fleer), an American chef, redefining Appalachian cuisine in Asheville, NC, and pioneer of farm-to-table cooking[199]
- A'Lelia Ransom Nelson (1991–2001),[200] née A'Lelia Emma Ranson (Draft:A'Lelia Ransom Nelson), former president of Madame C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company, Black studies scholar, librarian, her father was Freeman Ransom and brother was Willard Ransom
- Anthony Binga Jr. (1843–1919) (Draft:Anthony Binga Jr.) African-American Baptist minister in Virginia, and former VP of the Negro Development and Exposition Co.[201][202] Has image in WikiCommons
- Mary D. Hudgins / Mary Dengler Hudgins (1901–1997), librarian, author and collector of Arkansas. Hosted a radio show on Arkansas history.[203][204][205][206]
- Sarah Ellsworth / Sarah Van Patten Ellsworth (noted for her historic impact in AR, and the Wildwood Bed & Breakfast in Hot Springs, Arkansas)[207]
- George W. Levere / G. W. LeVere (Draft:George W. LeVere), chaplain, organizer, church leader
- Doswell E. Brooks (Draft:Doswell E. Brooks), Supervisor of Black schools for 34 years in Prince George's County, Maryland. An elementary school is named for him
- Fred Sulis (Draft:Fred Sulis) Frederick Douglass Sulis / F. D. Sulis, musician[208]
- Jim Peppler (Draft:Jim Peppler), photographer who captured images of the civil rights era
- Pete Rydolph (Draft:Pete Rydolph), a prosperous Texas rancher. An African American he was involved in the NAACP. He was kidnapped as part of an attempted extortion
- Susan McMartin (Draft:Susan McMartin) (currently a redirect to a film) Is she independently notable? Screenplay writer whose work includes an Eddie Murphy film.
- Clyde Winkfield (Draft:Clyde Winkfield), concert pianist and piano teacher from Chicago.
- Douglas Watson Onley (Draft:Douglas Watson Onley) dentist and essayist. Notable?
- Avis Williams, school superintendent[209]
- Berhanou Abebbé (Draft:Berhanou Abebbé) scholar of Ethiopia
- William Hilton Catlin, founder of the 19th-century all African-American National Guard unit in Pennsylvania[210]
- Cindy Wolf (Draft:Cindy Wolf), chef and restaurateur in Baltimore,[211] of Charleston (restaurant)
- Audrey Thomas McCluskey (Draft:Audrey Thomas McCluskey), film scholar in the U.S.
- Adrienne Fried Block (Draft:Adrienne Fried Block), musicologist[212]
- Judith Tick musicologist and author. Several books. Articles.[213] Lifetime Achievement Award from Society for American Music (2004)?
- Manacs Tavern, Samuel Manac / Sam Manac / Samuel Moniac and other names and spellings [214][215] Family tree from Ancestry[216] Wikitree[217] Site of a guy writing a book on him and his family[218]
- Mary Ann Spencer Smith (1917–2001; Draft:Mary Ann Spencer Smith), postal worker, real estate broker, and civil rights activist - she worked to eliminate redlining in San Jose, California[219]
- Martha Bireda / Martha R. Bireda scholar and author on various subjects including foodways and African Americans, director of Blanchard House Museum
- Mary Postell (Draft:Mary Postell), woman who lived during the Revolutionary War era and was enslaved, escaped, and was then re-enslaved. A book has been written on her and there appears to be a lot of other coverage of her. I believe she lived in North Carolina, East Florida and Canada. There is a contemporary poem about her by Sylvia Hamilton.[220]
- John Henry Bohte / J. H. Bohte, publisher and translator? Book bout him by ..
- Graham Jefcoate British author and publisher?
- Zack Van Landingham / Zack J. Van Landingham, FBI agent who became a Mississippi Sovereignty Commission official[221] Independently notable?
- Ellen C. Scott[222] associate professor (UCLA) and author. Film, Television and Digital Media including censorship and African American culture; possibly too soon
- William Holtzclaw and the Utica Institute, Utica Institute Museum established in 1903 to educate rural Black Mississippians.[223]
- Ebony Lumumba (Draft:Ebony Lumumba), artist, social justice activist, associate professor and chair of the department of English, Foreign Languages, and Speech Communications at Jackson State University. Lumumba heads a penitentiary reading program[224] Mothers Obtaining Justice and Opportunities (MOJO).[225]
- Rebecca Tuuri (Draft:Rebecca Tuuri) associate professor of history at University of Southern Mississippi, author, and scholar. Wrote Strategic Sisterhood; The National Council of Negro Women in the Black Freedom Struggle. On C-Span[226] Speaker[227] Teacher of the Year[228] Humanities Award[229] - this one is possibly too soon because of her academic title
- Cora Norman[230] The Cora Norman Award is given by the Mississippi Humanities Council
- Lloyd Miller Cooke (1916–2001), (Draft:Lloyd Miller Cooke) noted African American industrial chemist and researcher, son of architect William Wilson Cooke (1871–1949)[62][231][232]
- Peter Quire (Draft:Peter Quire), Black leader and founder of St. John's Episcopal Church in Newport, Rhode Island[233][234]
- Robert Broadhurst (pan-African nationalist) (1859/60–1948), a founding member of the London-based African Progress Union[235] - Robert Broadhurst should link
- H. Minton Francis (1922–?), Army lieutenant and school administrator at Howard University, born in Piqua, Ohio[236][237]
- Colonel Howard Donovan Queen, military commander
- Robert W. Fitzhugh of Natchez, Mississippi (check for notability)
- T. M. J. Clark (Draft:T. M. J. Clark), official in Louisiana
- Charles Franklin Lane (Draft:Charles Franklin Lane), a Beach Institute alumnus as well as Boston Latin School, studied with professor Edward Price of Harvard, Suffolk Law School, Boston Law School, publisher and law student (as of 1915) published The Citizen literary magazine
- James Edward Mason, religious leader, professor, speaker, twice led opening Senate and General Assembly in Albany "during administration of Theodore Roosevelt". Interesting list of lectures he gave is included in Mather's Who's Who. Were any of them transcribed?
- Franklin Gatewood Smith principal of Pearl High School in Nashville covered in Martin Luther King Magnet at Pearl High School , check for notability
- James Guinee Trimble was a doctor in Brooklyn? Fisk University and Harvard. Appears to have had a long life but I can't find much on him apart from a brief in Mather. Jr.? I can only preview a snippet of this FloridaArmy (talk) 15:14, 12 January 2023 (UTC)
- Z. W. William Mitchell, Education researcher, speaker, and organizer. con man?[238] He's noted on this handwritten historical document a legal? doc
- William H. Brooks pastor and organizer[239] attended Clifton Conference
- Herman Bryan Sugg principal of H. B. Sugg High School (Farmville Colored School), "I admired their principal , H. B. Sugg , an old - timer , a fatherly type . He watched over all his teachers and students as if they were his own children . He owned the land a > the school was on and he ran everything like.."[240] He's also noted here
For followup
[edit]- Draft:Ross E. Hutchins entomologist and photographer who traveled in Guam dodging the Japanese and collecting bugs, invented some kind of photography thing for small insects. User:Fiveby has a pdf article Trails to Nature's Mysteries
- African American National Biography subjects
- these publications online? are a bibliography for Black Biography, 1790-1950? from W. E. B. Du Bois Institute and predecessor to AANB? Maybe a list of Bibliographic indexs and databases would be useful, for instance authors in Index to Black American writers in collective biographies?
- Estelle Brown Hamilton, entrepreneur and educator
- Michele Gillespie, historian
- Edward D. Green, politician
- Scott Newspaper Syndicate – a syndicate sponsoring dozens of newspapers; more sources needed, but an important part of journalism history (draft contains redlinks for more newspapers)
- Griffytown, Louisville, needs more citations
- Mary Kenner, needs more citations
- Geraldine Peten, could be expanded, Arizona State Representative D-Goodyear[241]
Women of distinction
[edit]- Ellen McClung Berry (1894–1992) society woman and philanthropist In Knoxville, Tennessee [242]
- Heidi Ardizzone / Heidi L. Ardizzone[243] American Studies associate professor and author whose research has focused on African American history, social movements, civil rights, "race, gender, sexuality, and marriage"[244] - this may be "too soon" based on her academic title
- Gabriela Herstik, American writer and "witch" based in Los Angeles
- Sidonie Wronsky / Siddy Wronsky, Jewish expert in social welfare and social pedagogy
- Sylvia Klingberg, French sociologist
- Elaine Kamarck / Elaine C. Kamarck / Elaine Ciulla Kamarck political official, researcher, author, and educator[245][246][247][248]
Arkansas legislators
[edit]- Dawn Marie Creekmore (Draft:Dawn Marie Creekmore)
- Nellie B. Mack
- Erle Chambers
- Florence McRaven
- Mary B. Wigstrand
- Maude Brown
- Ethel Cunningham
- Ella B. Hurst
- Alene Word
- Helen Buchanan
- Lera Rowlette
- Mattie Hackett
- Bernice Kizer
- Doris McCastlain
- Dove Mulkey
- Gladys Martin Oglesby
- Lucile Autry
- Sarah Jane Bost
- Norma Thompson
- Peggy Long Hartness
- Charlie Cole Chaffin
- Nancy Balton
- Myra Jones
- Wanda Northcutt
- Gladys Watson
- Jacqueline Roberts
- Judy Smith
- Dee Bennett
- Ann Bush
- Barbara Horn
- Peggy Jeffries
- Becky Lynn
- Sue Madison
- Bobbie L. Hendrix
- Pat Bond
- Rita Hale
- Dianne Hudson
- Sandra Rodgers
- Wilma Walker
- Cecile Bledsoe
- Joyce Dees
- Mary Beth Green
- Jan Judy
- Barbara King
- Judy Pridgen
- Betty Pickett
- Susan Schulte
- Beverly Pyle
- Sharon Dobbins
- Toni Bradford
- Joan Cash
- Tracy Pennartz
- Johnnie Roebuck
- Charolette Wagner
- Debra Hobbs
- Karen Hopper
- Stephanie Malone
- Barbara Nix
- Tiffany Rogers
- Linda Tyler
- Lori Benedict
- Mary P. “Prissy” Hickerson
- Sheilla E. Lampkin
- Charlotte Vining Douglas
- Camille Bennett
- Karilyn Brown
- Jana Della Rosa
- Julie Mayberry
- LeAnne Burch
- Sarah Capp
- Frances Cavenaugh
- Cindy Crawford (politician)
- Gayla H. McKenzie / Gloria McKenzie
- Jill Bryant
Colorado legislators
[edit]- Mary F. Barry (Draft:Mary F. Barry) disambig from Mary Barry
- Frances F. Lee (Draft:Frances F. Lee) disambig from Frances Lee
- Josie J. Jackson, Josie Jackson (Draft:Josie Jackson)
- T. C. Wilson (Draft:T. C. Wilson), Republican from Victor, Colorado pdf
- Louise M. Patterson (Draft:Louise M. Patterson) disambig from Louise Patterson
- Martha E. Long (Draft:Martha E. Long) disambig from Martha Long
- Kitty Brighton (Draft:Kitty Brighton)
- Anna G. Pettee, Anna Pettee
- Hattie A. Mead, Hattie Mead
- Florence Hill Kramer (Draft:Florence Hill Kramer)
- Patricia “Pat” Killian Jefferson County 1989-1992 Democrat
- Celina Benavidez Denver County from 1991-1994 Democrat
- Daphne Greenwood El Paso County 1991 to 1994 Democrat
- Carol Snyder from Adams County from 1991 to 1998 Democrat
- Mary Blue (politician) from Boulder County 1993 to 1994 Democrat
- Glenda Swanson Lyle Denver from 1993 to 1996 Democrat
- Mildred Mattingly Pueblo 1993 to 1994 D
- Alice Nichol Adams County 1993 to 1998 Democrat
Schools
[edit]List of schools for African Americans? Segregated schools? Schools for African Americans often went through various names
- List entry on high schools for African Americans?
- Mansfield High School (Louisiana), in majority African American DeSoto County, Louisiana county seat. African Americans attended DeSoto High School. Is there a segregation academy?
- DeSoto Parish Training School (1915–1961), Draft:DeSoto Parish Training School, segregated African American high school in Mansfield, Louisiana; "The Yellow Jackets" mascot[251]
- DeSoto High School (Mansfield, Louisiana) (1962–1979), Draft:DeSoto High School (Mansfield, Louisiana), segregated African American high school in Mansfield, Louisiana; "The Tigers" mascot; needs disambiguating DeSoto High School; Closed with integration. Vida Blue attended, graduated from there? Our entries offer contradictory info.
- Draft:DeSoto High School (Louisiana)
- Northside School / West Point Colored High School / Fifth Street School in Clay County, Mississippi
- Fannie A. Carter, Fannie Carter High School and current charter school? An educator who established a school for African Americans in Okolona, Mississippi.[252]
- Graefenberg Medical Institute / Philip Madison Shepard first "chartered" medical school in Alabama? Had a female grad? Other schools also established at it.[253][254]
- S. A. Owen Junior College / Owen College (redirects), (Draft:Owen College) 1968 merger of LeMoyne College and Owen College created LeMoyne–Owen College
- Colored High School, Draft:Colored High School
- Sabine Normal and Industrial School (Draft:Sabine Normal and Industrial School) in Converse, Louisiana (has a Commons page)
- Albert Town High School, Jamaica entry Draft:Albert Town High School, Jamaica
- William Floyd Academy / Floyd Academy School[255]
- Rosenwald High School (Panama City, Florida), Draft:Rosenwald High School (Panama City, Florida)
- Phillips School (Washington D.C.), Draft:Phillips School (Washington D.C.)
- Nashville Normal University (redirect), Draft:Nashville Normal University
- West Virginia Normal School (redirect), Draft:West Virginia Normal School
- Monroe County Training School, Draft:Monroe County Training School (disambiguation page)
- Rosa D. Bowser School, at 00 Clay Street, Jackson Ward, Richmond, Virginia by Rosa D. Bowser[256]
- Wilkins Heights School, originally Dunbar School, in Elsmere, Kentucky
- Colored School No. 4, a historic school building where African American students were educated, NYC[257]
- Kowaliga Rosenwald school in or near Kowaliga, Alabama; still standing across from Russell Crossroads
- Sallie McCall Industrial School in Cincinnati. Sallie McCall Here's a legal case over her estate
- Beach Normal Institute African American school in Savannah, Georgia. Predecessor of the The Beach Institute African-American Cultural Center, museum for African-American arts, history and cultural preservation.[258][259][260]
- Washington Park High School (Lakeland, Florida) / renamed Rochelle High School for William A Rochelle[261][262] Rochelle School of the Arts
- Tuggle Institute / Tuggle Elementary School founded by Carrie A. Tuggle. Angela Davis is an alum and has spoken at the school.
- Beach Normal Institute in Savannah, Georgia. Predecessor of the The Beach Institute African-American Cultural Center[263][264][265]
- Adkin High School in Kinston, North Carolina
- Pearl High School in Nashville covered in Martin Luther King Magnet at Pearl High School, Franklin Gatewood Smith principal
- Stowe Teachers College (currently a redirect to a succeeding institution) / Harriet Beecher Stowe Teachers College / Sumner Normal School (Draft:Sumner Normal School)
- North Lenoir High School (Draft:North Lenoir High School), high school in Kinston, North Carolina
- Welch High School (Draft:Welch High School), former high school in West Virginia
- Industrial High School in Birmingham, Alabama
- Colored High School in Decatur, Alabama
- Colored High School in Huntsville, Alabama Huntersville Colored High School
- Colored High School in Tuscaloosa, Alabama
- Colored High School Fernandina, Florida
- Colored High School Green Cove, Florida
- Colored High School Elberton, Georgia
- Colored High School in Moultrie, Georgia
- Colored High School in Rome, Georgia; is it related to, or an alternative name for Main High School (Rome, Georgia)(?)[266][267] The "Main High", sit-in of March 28, 1963.[268]
- Colored High School, DuQuoin Lincoln High School in DuQuoin, Illinois I find this one interesting. I've never heard of DuQuoin and I struggle to spell and pronounce it. Wikipedia's wntry on it shows it's overwhelmingly white. Why did it have a high school for African Americans in 1915? Informative blog post about the school and its extant building. FloridaArmy (talk) 17:10, 12 January 2023 (UTC)
- Okolona Colored High School and the Okolona Colored High School Gymnasium in Okolona, Arkansas
- Missouri Street High School Pine Bluff, Arkansas, noted here and appears to have been short lived so include in entry on Merrill School
- North Georgia Industrial High School in Atlanta, Georgia One of the Marshall's Sales items notes if adjacent to a property being sold. 1924 newspaper
- Barney Street High School in Madison, Georgia
- Eddy High School in Milledgeville, Georgia. Sallie E. Davis / Sallie Ellis Davis principal.[269]
- Clay Street High School in Thomasville, Georgia
- Dunbar High School (Metropolis, Illinois) in Metropolis, Illinois (Dunbar High School)
- Clark Street High School in Evansville, Indiana
- Broadway High School (Madison, Indiana) in Madison, Indiana (Broadway High School)
- Booker T. Washington High School in Mount Vernon, Indiana
- Lincoln High School in Princeton, Indiana, photo of the school ca. 1925 and address[270] There is this letter about it. Photo of the basketball team from 1947 yearbook[271] photo of a home economics class in 1947 held by state archives
- Colored High School in Vincennes, Indiana
- Sumner High School (Kansas City, Kansas) in Kansas City, Kansas
- State Street High School Bowling Green, Kentucky
- Colored High School in Hopkinsville, Kentucky
- Western High School (Owensboro, Kentucky) in Owensboro, Kentucky
- Moonlight Colored School, Owensboro, Kentucky
- Garfield School (Paducah, Kentucky), Paducah, Kentucky
- Paris Colored High School, Paris, Kentucky
- Colored School No. 1., Lexington, Kentucky
- High School, Winchester, Kentucky (name might be longer?)
- Colored High School in Richmond, Kentucky
- Southern University and A&M High School New Orleans, Louisiana
- Colored High School in Baltimore Maryland
- Colored High School Port Gibson, Mississippi
- Sheffield Colored School
- Sam Houston Industrial and Training School[272]
- Frankfort Female High School Mattie E. Anderson, apparently at least in part a normal school[273]
- Colored High School should be a disambig page also Colored School
- Richmond Colored High School which became Armstrong High School (Virginia)
- Magnolia Colored School seems to have a lot of notable alumni. More than one school named this? Magnolia Colored School Historic District in Arkansas
- Dunbar Colored High School (also known as Dunbar Colored School, Dunbar High School) in Graves County, Kentucky (Mayfield Ten), succeeded by the Graves County Training School
- Monroe Colored High School
- Highland Colored School
- Sumner High School (Cairo, Illinois)
- Lovejoy High School (Mound City, Illinois)
- Bessemer Colored High School became Dunbar High School (Bessemer, Alabama)
- Frederick Douglass School (redirects Frederick Douglass Academy in New York City), formerly Plano Colored School (?)
- Washington Colored High School in Washington D.C. Anna J. Cooper was a teacher Is this school related to M Street? Predecessor? Unrelated?
- Alabama Boys' Industrial School[274] Mount Meigs Campus Alabama Boys Industrial School There also appears to be 54+ minite video about it. A Home for Wayward Boys: The Early History of the Alabama Boys’ Industrial School by Jerry C. Armory et al. School founded by Elizabeth Johnston Elizabeth Johnston (education reformer? school founder?) / Elizabeth Evans Johnston, wife of Confederate general Robert Daniel Johnston[275] Did she attend the Clifton Conference? Her husband is listed as an attendee. Did other women attend?
Schools, follow up and expansion
[edit]- Richmond High School (Richmond, Kentucky), needs more citations
- Arcadia Colored High School in Arcadia, Louisiana needs a photo. NRHP listed
- Carver Vocational Technical High School, clean up, expand
- Houma Colored High School, expand, add image
- Hampton Colored School, expand, add more photos if possible
- New Canaan High School in Camp Hill, Alabama, add citations for alumni
- Phoenix Union Colored High School which became Carver High School (Phoenix, Arizona), add citations (may need to be separated?)
- Liberty Colored High School in Liberty, South Carolina, may need expansion
- Alapaha Colored School, expand
- Mineola Colored High School, expand
- Cleveland Colored Consolidated High School, early history is missing
- Snow Hill Colored High School in Snow Hill, North Carolina, expand
- Burgaw Colored High School which became Burgaw Normal and Industrial School, expand
- Wiley H. Bates High School, replaced Annapolis Colored High School, does it needs a redirect?
- Victoria Colored School in Victoria County, Texas
- Central High School (Louisville, Kentucky) in Louisville, Kentucky, needs more citations
- Dallas Colored High School add info about Thelma Paige Richardson, Thelma Elizabeth Page Richardson[276]
- Lincoln High School (Tallahassee, Florida) Tallahassee, Florida, clean up citations
- Howard Academy in Ocala, Florida, clean up, expand, see talk
- Howard High School of Technology, tagged, expand
- Lovejoy High School, Lovejoy High School (Mound City, Illinois) in Mound City, Illinois
- Sumner High School, Sumner High School (Cairo, Illinois) in Cairo, Illinois
- Scribner High School in New Albany, Indiana, expand, tagged
Towns and communities
[edit]- Eisenhower East in Alexandria, Virginia; African American neighborhood[277]
- Queen City, Arlington, also known as East Arlington on the site of Arlington Estate,[278] a demolished Black neighborhood in Arlington, Virginia. Displaced by the development of the Pentagon and roads for it.[279]
- Sprague, Alabama (Draft:Sprague, Alabama)
- Airdrie Hill, Kentucky or Airdrie, Kentucky, ghost town in Muhlenberg County, home of the former Airdrie Iron Works and precursor to coal mining[280][281]
- Negro Hill, California, a Gold Rush town established in 1849, now submerged under Folsom Lake; California Historical Landmark
- Little Egypt, North Carolina, former Black community now under Belews Lake, review for notability – may not have enough sourcing
- Ferguson, South Carolina, article could be expanded, a former Black community now under Lake Marion
- Oscarville, Georgia (currently a redirect to Lake Lanier; Draft:Oscarville, Georgia), former Black community now under the lake.[282][283]
Parks or designated heritage locations
[edit]- African American Heritage Park in Eisenhower East in Alexandria, Virginia
- African American Waterfront Heritage Trail in Alexandria, Virginia[284]
- Tampa Soulwalk, 46-mile route of historic Black landmarks[285]
- St. Paul A.M.E. Church (Tampa, Florida), part of the Tampa Soulwalk; building is now home to a community center and library[286][287]
- Harlem Academy (School #2), part of the Tampa Soulwalk
- Lynching of Robert Johnson in 1934, part of the Tampa Soulwalk and has historical marker[288]
- Oaklawn Cemetery, part of the Tampa Soulwalk
- Greater Bethel Baptist
- Taborian Park at 1324 South Second Street, Waco, Texas. African American park, and baseball field for the Waco Black Taborians, Negro Baseball League.[289] Place held an annual Juneteenth celebrations (since 1913, or possibly farther back to 1909?).[290][291] Blind Lemon Jefferson played there[292] (and maybe also Louis Armstrong and/or others?). Noted on facebook here. The Knights and Ladies of Tabor (but is that the same as International Order of Twelve Knights and Daughters of Tabor?) purchased land and established the park (park fundraising started in 1909). Now part of Baylor University campus. Did Texas Central College used the field there? Did it have a pool? What happened to it?
Museums
[edit]- List of museums focused on African Americans, has missing
- Black Heritage Museum of Arlington in Arlington County (Pike?) [293]
- African American Multicultural Museum, Scottsdale, Arizona, founded 2005 and closed?
- The George Washington Carver Museum, needs citations
- Alabama State Black Archives Research Center and Museum, Huntsville, Alabama, founded 1990.
- Museo de las Américas (San Juan, Puerto Rico) (Draft:Museo de las Américas (San Juan, Puerto Rico)), pre-Columbian to modern art from the Americas; disambiguated from Museo de las Americas
Places and organizations
[edit]- Selinsgrove Center, (alt. names) historic institution in Pennsylvania.[294][295][296][297] Richard Wormser made a documentary film about someone there.
- The Women's Bank (Draft:The Women's Bank) link from Women's Bank
- Lincoln Independent Party (Draft:Lincoln Independent Party)
- Okporo (Draft:Okporo), community in Nigeria
- Rare Ripe Gold and Silver Mining Company (also known as the Rare Ripe Company), a black-owned mine during the California Gold Rush in Browns Valley, California[298]
- Horncut Mine, a black-owned mine during the California Gold Rush in Browns Valley, California[298]
- Old Sardis Baptist Church[299] Enon section of Birmingham Alabama
- West Virginia Athletic Union, from before public education, and sports were desegregated in the state[300]
- Distributed Artificial Intelligence Research Institute (DAIR), founded by Timnit Gebru after being fired from Google[301][302][303]
- People's Party of Georgia
- People's Party of North Carolina
- Add Negro Building - Alabama State Fair in Montgomery[62] (Draft:Alabama State Fair Montgomery), different than Alabama State Fairgrounds
- Add Negro Building - Century of Progress World's Fair in Chicago[62]
- Add Negro Building - Cotton States Exposition in Atlanta[62]
- Add Negro Building - South Carolina Interstate Exposition in Charleston[62]
- Add Negro Building - Tennessee Centennial Exposition in Nashville[62]
- Add "Hall of Negro Life" info – Texas Centennial Exposition in Dallas[62]
- Free Democrat (Draft:Free Democrat), a free soil anti-slavery political organization in the U.S. that served as a third party and was part of the mix in the pre-two party organizing that went on prior to the American Civil War. Newspapers were established with the name.
- Freedmen's Mission Historic Cemetery (Draft:Freedmen's Mission Historic Cemetery) on the campus of Knoxville College.
Legal cases and law
[edit]- Meredith v. Fair, 1961–1962 lawsuit for the desegregation of the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss)[304][305]
- Burglund High School student walkout, part of the Civil Rights Movement and related to the Freedom Riders in August–October 1961; three teenaged students Brenda Travis, Robert Talbert, and Ike Lewis from Burglund High School staged a staged a sit-in at McComb’s Greyhound Station (McComb, Mississippi), and they were imprisoned for almost a month, the local high school students held a walk out for their classmates and to draw attention to the murder of Herbert Lee (activist); event ended in violence and more protest[306][307][308]
- White v. Clements, a Georgia Supreme Court ruling on African American officeholders
- "The South Carolina Plan", from 1944 South Carolina Governor Olin D. Johnston[309]
- 99th Georgia General Assembly (Draft:99th Georgia General Assembly), state legislature term that passed legislation to exclude African American voters. Notable otherwise as well.
- Expulsion act / Removal act (Draft:Expulsion act)
Film and entertainment
[edit]- William Greaves' films
- Here Comes Tomorrow (radio show), radio? show by Richard Durham
- Bird of an Iron Feather, a soap opera edited by Richard Durham that aired Chicago's NPR radio/WBEZ-FM television station with all Black cast. It ran for 21 episodes three times a week beginning in January 1970. The show's title is from an 1847 speech by Frederick Douglas
- Fly Brother With Ernest White II (Draft:Fly Brother With Ernest White II), travel show hosted by Ernest White II
- Culture Quest hosted by art historian and furniture maker Ian Grant (host)[310]
- Crossing South hosted by Jorge Meraz (Draft:Jorge Meraz). Public Television show about travels in Mexico[311]
- Kitchen Queens: New Orleans public television series about female chefs in New Orleans
- Curious Traveler hosted by "Emmy-winning travel journalist" Christine van Blokland
- Family Travel with Colleen Kelly (Colleen Kelly)
- A Prince of His Race (Draft:A Prince of His Race), lost film[312]
- Harlemwood Studios (Draft:Harlemwood Studios), film studio[313]
Lists
[edit]- List of African-American historic places
- African-American officeholders during and following the Reconstruction era has 100s of redlinks
- List of African-American inventors and scientists has many redlinks and unlinked entries
- Every president of Amherst College is a bluelink. The same should be done for Tuskegee University, Tougaloo College, Clark University, Howard University, Shaw University and other major historically black colleges and universities
- Wikipedia:WikiProject African diaspora/African Americans
- Wikipedia:WikiProject African diaspora/BlackPast people
- Wikipedia:WikiProject African diaspora/BlackPast other
Related WikiProject groups
[edit]- Wikipedia:WikiProject Indigenous peoples of North America
- Wikipedia:WikiProject African diaspora
- Wikipedia:WikiProject United States/Hispanic and Latino Americans task force
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Human rights
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by occupation
- Wikipedia:WikiProject Missing encyclopedic articles, a project to create entries missing on English language Wikipedia that are on other language Wikipedia sites
Newspapers
[edit]- List of African-American newspapers and media outlets - has many redlinks
- The Afro-American Press and Its Editors - has many redlinks
- Draft:Elevator (newspaper)
- Oklahoma Guide / The Oklahoma Guide (1892–1922)
- The Oklahoma Safeguard / Oklahoma Safeguard (1894–1915)
- Austin Searchlight newspaper. Ended ca. William P. Mabson's death? If not independently notable let's at least redirect to the appropriate section of his entry? Are there any extant editions?[314]
- Searched (GBooks, Newspaper.com, WP Library) but did not find anything in-depth. S0091 (talk) 19:28, 12 January 2023 (UTC)
- Re copies, this shows that there are at least two copies available at the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History. this also mentions two, so may be all that surviving. Urve (talk) 05:35, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
- Searched (GBooks, Newspaper.com, WP Library) but did not find anything in-depth. S0091 (talk) 19:28, 12 January 2023 (UTC)
- Twin City Star / The Twin City Star, early 20th century newspaper in Minneapolis, Minnesota area for African Americans[315]
- The Standard (Paducah, Kentucky newspaper), (see also Chasteen C. Stumm)
- The Pilot (Nashville, Tennessee newspaper), (see also Chasteen C. Stumm)
- American Baptist (Louisville, Kentucky newspaper), (see also Chasteen C. Stumm)
- The Tribune (Danville, Kentucky), (see also Chasteen C. Stumm)
- Baptist Companion (see also Chasteen C. Stumm)
- The Christian Banner (see also Chasteen C. Stumm, Elizabeth Stumm)
- Bayou State Register, Collie J. Nicholson publisher (sports information director for Grambling College?)
- Southern Advocate, weekly paper for African Americans in north Louisiana edited by S. L. Jones?
- Savannah Journal (1918-?), Dr. Asa H. Gordon served as editor
- Jacksonville Progressive News a former Jacksonville, Florida newspaper [316]
- Alexandria Observer a newspaper that served Alexandria, Louisiana
- Meridian Progress a newspaper in Meridian, Mississippi
- Cullman Tribune historic newspaper in Alabama
- Arizona Sun, newspaper for African Americans in Phoenix during 1940s and 1950s[317]
- Arkansas Traveler (newspaper) late 19th century hunor magazine headed by Opie Read[318] also DAB page Arkansas Traveler
- Carolina Enterprise, newspaper in Goldsboro, North Carolina[319]
- Twin City Star, newspaper in Minneapolis / St. Paul. Alt names? Served African American community[320]
Created
[edit]- ✔️On the Trail of Negro Folk-songs book
- ✔️The Facts of Reconstruction
- ✔️George W. Clayton
- ✔️Ives-Quinn Act, New York State anti-discrimination bill
- ✔️ Ricky Moore (chef); disambiguated from Ricky Moore
- ✔️ Robert Charles Bates
- ✔️ Joseph M. Bartholomew, Sr.
- ✔️ Henry Clifford Boles
- ✔️ Charles Sumner Bowman
- ✔️ Sanford Augustus Brookins
- ✔️ William Wilson Cooke
- ✔️ Kenneth Roderick O'Neal
- ✔️ John Louis Wilson Jr.
- ✔️ John Augustus Nyden
- ✔️ Floyd Orson Wolfenbarger
- ✔️ George Rice Hovey
- ✔️ John E. Hussey
- ✔️ Russell Duncan (professor)
- ✔️ New Orleans University
- ✔️ Marion Colored High School in Sunset, Arkansas
- ✔️ Brumfield School, formerly Union School (Natchez, Mississippi)
- ✔️ Natchez Institute whites-only public school in Natchez, Mississippi
- ✔️ Langston High School (Hot Springs, Arkansas) Langston High School (Arkansas)
- ✔️ Clinton Street High School in Frankfort, Kentucky (1882–1928) "replaced" by Mayo Underwood School
- ✔️ Lincoln School (Paducah, Kentucky) in Paducah, Kentucky
- ✔️ Lincoln High School (disambiguation)
- ✔️ Western High School (Paris, Kentucky)
- ✔️ Paris Western High School
- ✔️ Russell School
- ✔️ Union School (Natchez, Mississippi)
- ✔️ West Virginia State Museum
- ✔️ Museum of the Cherokee Indian
- ✔️Sandfield Cemetery
- *✔️Draft:Sandfield Cemetery (Richland County, South Carolina)
- *✔️Draft:Sandfield Cemetery (Columbus, Mississippi)
- ✔️ Clifton Conference
- ✔️ Giles Beecher Jackson
- ✔️ Kowaliga, Alabama
- ✔️The Man Farthest Down: A Record of Observation and Study in Europe (1912)
- ✔️ George Henry Jackson
- ✔️ Texas Alexander, added image
- ✔️ Scott Newspaper Syndicate
- ✔️ The Cherokee One Feather
- ✔️ George Perley Phenix
- ✔️ Alonzo Graseano Moron
- ✔️ Augustus M. Hodges
- ✔️ Henry Fitzbutler
- ✔️ Roswell M. Field
- ✔️ David Silberman Gurovich
- ✔️ Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia
- ✔️ Ebenezer Baptist Church (Richmond, Virginia)
- ✔️ Appalachian cuisine
- ✔️ Golden J. Zenon, Jr.
- ✔️ George W. Clayton
- ✔️ Clayton School for Boys
- ✔️ Elise Wortley
- ✔️ Grand United Order of True Reformers
- ✔️ Add Negro Building - Appalachian Exposition in Knoxville
- ✔️ Charleston (restaurant)
- ✔️ Chasteen C. Stumm
- ✔️ Joseph Harris Chappell
- ✔️ Albert Henderson Wade Ross
- ✔️ James Myles Hinton
- ✔️ Kim Haas
- ✔️ Policy Man
- ✔️ Hoté Casella
- ✔️ List of presidents of Clark Atlanta University
- ✔️ List of presidents of Huston–Tillotson University
- ✔️ Matthew Simpson Davage
- ✔️ Reuben Shannon Lovinggood
- ✔️ Charles W. Anderson disambig page
- ✔️ A. E. P. Albert
- ✔️ Just a Girl That Men Forget
- ✔️ Negro Development and Exposition Company
- ✔️ Theron Lynd
- ✔️ A. Wilberforce Williams
- ✔️ Detroit Plaindealer
- ✔️ Christopher J. Perry
- ✔️ Susan Greenbaum
- ✔️ Phil S. Dixon
- ✔️ M. W. Gibbs High School, add photo req and fixed redirect
- ✔️ State Normal School for Colored Persons clean up
- ✔️ Union Academy (Columbus, Mississippi)
- ✔️ William Grant High School, expanded
- ✔️ East St. Louis Lincoln High School
- ✔️ Howard High School (disambiguation)
- ✔️ Marlboro Colored High School
- ✔️ Colored School (disambiguation)
- ✔️ Julee Cottage
- ✔️ Tom Rice (film historian)
- ✔️ Anne Cooke Reid
- ✔️ Ersa Poston
- ✔️ Henry Morgan Green
- ✔️ Knoxville Medical College
- ✔️ Coleman College (Louisiana)
- ✔️ Coleman College (disambiguation)
- ✔️ Gibsland–Coleman High School (expanded)
- ✔️ Trees of Peace
- ✔️ Conroe Normal and Industrial College (expanded)
- ✔️ Vienna High and Industrial School
- ✔️ Dr. Henry A. Wise Jr. High School (expanded, updated stats)
- ✔️ Roy Davage Hudson
- ✔️ Still a Brother: Inside the Negro Middle Class (1968)
- ✔️ Ralph Bunche: An American Odyssey (2001)
- ✔️ Jacob L. Reddix
- ✔️ John Lewis Peyton
- ✔️ Edward Owings Towne
- ✔️ Sarah E. Kellogg
- ✔️ Temple B'nai Israel (Natchez, Mississippi)
- ✔️ H. A. Overbeck
- ✔️ Arkansas Traveler (folklore)
- ✔️ Pam Adcock
- ✔️ Frances Boyd Calhoun
- ✔️ Felix LaBauve House
- ✔️ Felix LaBauve
- ✔️ Willis Robards
- ✔️ LeRoy Tyus
- ✔️ Willard Ransom
- ✔️ Curtis Cavielle Taylor
- ✔️ Colored Radical, added infobox
- ✔️ Independent Order of St. Luke, added redirects
- ✔️ Carmen J. Walters
- ✔️ Charles Francis Meserve
- ✔️ New Iberia Senior High School, expanded
- ✔️ Elder Jordan
- ✔️ Tate County Courthouse
Resources
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