Rare and very interesting photos

South African singer Miriam Makeba is photographed in May 1968 with new husband Stokely Carmichael, outside Carmichael's mother's Bronx, New York home. The couple then traveled to their wedding reception, held at the suburban New York home of Tanzanian ambassador Akili B.C. Daniel

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U.S. Navy seaman first class John Coltrane, 1945
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John William Coltrane(September 23, 1926 – July 17, 1967) was an Americanjazzsaxophonist and composer. Working in thebebopandhard bopidioms early in his career, Coltrane helped pioneer the use ofmodesand was at the forefront offree jazz. He led at least fifty recording sessions and appeared on many albums by other musicians, including trumpeterMiles Davisand pianistThelonious Monk. Over the course of his career, Coltrane's music took on an increasingly spiritual dimension. He remains one of the most influential saxophonists in music history. He received many posthumous awards, includingcanonizationby theAfrican Orthodox Churchand aPulitzer Prizein 2007.[1]His second wife was pianist/harpistAlice Coltraneand their son,Ravi Coltrane, is also a saxophonist.
 
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May 2, 1967, when Black Panther Party members went to the California State Capitol to protest a bill proposed by a conservative Republican in the California legislature named Don Mulford who sought to prohibit the public carrying of loaded firearms in the state. A move clearly targeted to disband or weaken the Black Panthers by criminalizing their carryingof weapons. The NRA supported Mumfords bill.
On May 2, 31 members of the Black Panther Party, entered the capitol in Sacramento with loaded guns to protest the proposed policy. With their guns pointed at the ceiling, the party members peacefully entered the legislature to demand their right to carry. The state’s governor at the time was Ronald Reagan, who took a public stance in favor of Mulford’s bill. He praised gun control telling reporters that he saw “no reason why on the street today a citizen should be carrying loaded weapons”
The bill cleared the state’s Senate Judiciary Committee on 1 June 1967 after Mulford testified that it had been very carefully considered and had the support of the National Rifle Association, according to a United Press report published the following day. It was passed by a bipartisan majority of the full Senate and signed into law by Governor Reagan in July.
 
Members of the “Tallahassee Ten” attempting to enter the Savarin Restaurant at the Tallahassee Municipal Airport. On June 13, 1961, an interracial group of eighteen rabbis and ministers participated in a freedom ride to Tallahassee, Florida, sponsored by the Congress of Racial Equality. The riders experienced a few minor confrontations along the way, but were spared major incidents of violence in Florida due to the governor's negotiations with local officials to ensure that the riders were left alone.


On June 15, 1961, shortly before they were scheduled to board an airplane and return to Washington, D.C., the interfaith riders and local activists attempted to integrate the Tallahassee Airport's segregated restaurant. The restaurant closed to avoid serving the riders and eight riders departed as planned for Washington. Ten riders and three local activists remained at the airport and demanded service throughout the night and into the following day.


On June 16, 1961, the group was arrested and charged with unlawful assembly. The riders and activists stood trial on June 22, 1961. Judge John Rudd acquitted the local activists of the unlawful assembly charge but convicted the ten interfaith riders and sentenced them to thirty days in jail or a $500 fine. The riders appealed to the United States Supreme Court but were denied relief.


In August 1964, nine of the interfaith riders returned to Tallahassee to serve their jail sentences. After they were released, the riders enjoyed a meal at the airport restaurant which had been desegregated by federal order just months after their convictions.

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A decade removed from fame and recently out of rehab, a twenty-four year old Frankie Lymon shows off dance moves to a cheering crowd from his old neighborhood in Harlem, New York in 1967. Lymon is also pictured shopping for music and chatting with his neighbor Margaret Williams. Frankie and his group once rehearsed in her apartment. Frankie Lymon was preparing for a comeback before he relapsed and died from a heroin overdose at the age of twenty-five, on February 27, 1968.

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Cecil J. Williams, 1959
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"Back from a 1956 trip photographing South Carolina’s segregated beaches for Jet magazine, Cecil J. Williams stops at a filling station, closed at the time, and drinks from a “WHITE ONLY” water fountain. Image captured by Rendall Harper, a friend of the photographer.
 
Cecil J. Williams, 1959
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"Back from a 1956 trip photographing South Carolina’s segregated beaches for Jet magazine, Cecil J. Williams stops at a filling station, closed at the time, and drinks from a “WHITE ONLY” water fountain. Image captured by Rendall Harper, a friend of the photographer.
I have a shirt with dude on it. I always wanted to know the story behind this.

Thanks
 
South African singer Miriam Makeba is photographed in May 1968 with new husband Stokely Carmichael, outside Carmichael's mother's Bronx, New York home. The couple then traveled to their wedding reception, held at the suburban New York home of Tanzanian ambassador Akili B.C. Daniel

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:cool:
 
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Thomas L. Jennings (1791–1856) was an African American tradesman and abolitionist. He was a free black who operated a dry-cleaning business in New York City, New York and was the first African American to be granted a patent. Jennings' skills along with a patent granted by the state of New York on March 3, 1821 for a dry cleaning process called "dry scouring" enabled him to build his business. He spent his early earnings on legal fees to purchase his family out of slavery, and supporting the abolitionist movement. In 1831, Jennings became assistant secretary to the First Annual Convention of the People of Color in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which met in June, 1831.

Jennings' patent resulted in a considerable amount of controversy. The U.S. patent laws of 1793 stated that "the master is the owner of the fruits of the labor of the slave both manual and intellectual," thus slaves could not patent their own inventions, the efforts would be the property of their master. Thomas Jennings was able to gain exclusive rights to his invention because of his status of being a free man. In 1861 patent rights were finally extended to slaves.

Up to this day Jamaica still wrongly use this man's image as that of their national hero Paul Bogle. They even have him on their currency.

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On the real...While we all like to look at asses, pussies, and tits there's nothing else better than feeding your mind with genuine information. This thread should be in a class of its own. I didn't know anything about the Scottsboro 9 until my master's program. too bad our kids won't know half of what makes us who we are today....Let's keep this thread going....
 
https://www.history.com/news/zora-neale-hurston-barracoon-slave-clotilda-survivor

The Last Slave Ship Survivor Gave an Interview in the 1930s.
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Roughly 60 years after the abolition of slavery, anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston made an incredible connection: She located the last surviving captive of the last slave ship to bring Africans to the United States. Hurston, a known figure of the Harlem Renaissance conducted interviews with the survivor but struggled to publish them as a book in the early 1930s. In fact, they are only now being released to the public in a book called Barracoon: The Story of the Last “Black Cargo” that came out on May 8, 2018.

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Hurston’s book tells the story of Cudjo Lewis, who was born in what is now the West African country of Benin. Originally named Kossula, he was only 19 years old when members of the neighboring Dahomian tribe captured him and took him to the coast. There, he and about 120 others were sold into slavery and crammed onto the Clotilda, the last slave ship to reach the continental United States. The Clotilda brought its captives to Alabama in 1860, just a year before the outbreak of the Civil War. Even though slavery was legal at that time in the U.S., the international slave trade was not, and hadn’t been for over 50 years. Along with many European nations, the U.S. had outlawed the practice in 1807, but Lewis’ journey is an example of how slave traders went around the law to continue bringing over human cargo.
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To avoid detection, Lewis’ captors snuck him and the other survivors into Alabama at night and made them hide in a swamp for several days. To hide the evidence of their crime, the 86-foot sailboat was then set ablaze on the banks of the Mobile-Tensaw Delta (its remains may have been uncovered in January 2018). Most poignantly, Lewis’ narrative provides a first-hand account of the disorienting trauma of slavery. After being abducted from his home, Lewis was forced onto a ship with strangers. The abductees spent several months together during the treacherous passage to the United States, but were then separated in Alabama to go to different plantations.
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“We very sorry to be parted from one ’nother,” Lewis told Hurston. “We seventy days cross de water from de Affica soil, and now dey part us from one ’nother. Derefore we cry. Our grief so heavy look lak we cain stand it. I think maybe I die in my sleep when I dream about my mama.” Lewis also describes what it was like to arrive on a plantation where no one spoke his language, and could explain to him where he was or what was going on. “We doan know why we be bring ’way from our country to work lak dis,” he told Hurston. “Everybody lookee at us strange. We want to talk wid de udder colored folkses but dey doan know whut we say.” As for the Civil War, Lewis said he wasn’t aware of it when it first started. But part-way through, he began to hear that the North had started a war to free enslaved people like him. A few days after Confederate General Robert E. Lee surrendered in April 1865, Lewis says that a group of Union soldiers stopped by a boat on which he and other enslaved people were working and told them they were free.
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Lewis expected to receive compensation for being kidnapped and forced into slavery, and was angry to discover that emancipation didn’t come with the promise of “forty acres and a mule,” or any other kind of reparations. Frustrated by the refusal of the government to provide him with land to live on after stealing him away from his homeland, he and a group of 31 other freepeople saved up money to buy land near the state capital of Mobile, which they called Africatown. Hurston’s use of vernacular dialogue in both her novels and her anthropological interviews was often controversial, as some black American thinkers at the time argued that this played to black caricatures in the minds of white people. Hurston disagreed, and refused to change Lewis’ dialect—which was one of the reasons a publisher turned her manuscript down back in the 1930s. Many decades later, her principled stance means that modern readers will get to hear Lewis’ story the way that he told it.

Interesting knowlege.
 
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