Black American History - MASTERBAKER

The Untold Horrors Of Black Male Slaves By White Women​


The Untold Horrors Of Black Male Slaves By White Women White women were not passive bystanders to the slave economy. They were co-conspirators. They bought, sold, and owned slaves. In fact, about 40% of the slave owners were white women. The more slaves a woman had, the more power she held. Parents gave their daughters more enslaved people than land. So, to a white southern woman, owning slaves became tied to her very identity. This is the true story of how white women treated their black slaves

I got a couple homeboys that aint ready to hear this one :D
 
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Long before they became two of New York’s Finest, Detectives Floyd J. Carter and Randolph F. Edwards were members of the elite fighter pilot group ...


Long before they became two of New York’s Finest, Detectives Floyd J. Carter and Randolph F. Edwards were members of the elite fighter pilot group known as the Tuskegee Airmen.

The Tuskegee Airmen, who got their name from the town they trained in (Tuskegee, Alabama), were a world-class group of pilots who served in the all-Black 332nd Fighter Group and 477th Bombardment Group of the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF).

Like many African Americans in the United States, the Tuskegee Airmen had to fight two foes –the Axis Powers and racial discrimination at home. By the time the Tuskegee Airmen became active in 1941, the U.S. military would take seven more years until its official desegregation.

Det. Edwards was amid his Tuskegee Airmen training, when World War II ended. By the early 1950s he returned to active duty during the Korean War. After proudly serving his country, Det. Edwards returned home to New York City and joined the police department in November 1955. He was 28 years old.

Det. Edwards joined the NYPD at 28-years-old in Nov. 1955. He began his career on patrol in Brooklyn’s 75th Pct. He held numerous investigative assignments within the Detective Bureau before his retirement in the Department Investigations Squad in 1981. Det. Edwards received one Commendation medal in his 26-year career.

Det. Carter, also a Tuskegee Airmen, served the nation for over 31 years in active and reserve roles, including World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam War, and other Cold War era missions.
On March 29, 2007, former U.S. President George W. Bush honored Det. Carter with the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian award in the U.S. He was amongst 300 of the last surviving Tuskegee Airmen.

After serving in the military, Det. Carter became a machinist, and soon after joined the New York City Police Department. In 1953, at the age of 31, he began his career on patrol in the Bronx’s 40th Pct. He was promoted to Detective Second Grade in October 1966. He served in the 32nd and 45th Precinct Detective Squads before his retirement in Oct. 1973. He was awarded two Excellent Police Duty and two Meritorious Police Duty medals during his 20-year career.

The NYPD never forgets their service to their country and to the City of New York.
 
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Inside Black Hebrew Israelites - The way they live will SHOCK you!​

 
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Cynthia Shange - First Black Miss South Africa
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The audiences reaction to Frankie Lymon singing “Little Bitty Pretty One” in 1960 on his first solo tv appearance.​

 
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In 1938, a newly widowed Black woman stepped off a train in Saratoga Springs, New York
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Cassa

Yesterday at 3:28 PM ·

In 1938, a newly widowed Black woman stepped off a train in Saratoga Springs, New York, with just $33 in her pocket. Her name was Hattie Austin Moseley.

No family.
No safety net.
In the middle of the Great Depression.
But what she carried with her was more powerful than circumstance:
a cast-iron skillet, Southern recipes from her Louisiana childhood, and a fierce will to rise.

Hattie had known hardship from the start — her mother died giving birth.
She worked as a maid and in restaurant kitchens to survive.
But when she arrived in Saratoga, she turned her roots into a future.

She opened a small food stand: Hattie’s Chicken Shack — open 24 hours a day.
She served fried chicken, cornbread, biscuits — real comfort food.
And soon, the line started forming: locals, tourists, jockeys, musicians.

Her golden fried chicken and warm heart became legend.
Jackie Robinson stopped by. Cab Calloway came too. Even Mikhail Baryshnikov became a fan.

Within a year, she opened a full restaurant.
And she didn’t stop. She worked tirelessly into her 90s.
At 92, she retired — leaving behind not just a restaurant,
but a legacy.

By 2013, Hattie’s Restaurant was still alive and thriving.
Still serving that same fried chicken — named Best in America by Food & Wine Magazine.

Hattie Moseley didn’t just serve food.
She served dignity. She served hope. She served soul.

Her story is a reminder:
When love meets grit, something beautiful always rises.
 
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Anna Mae Robertson just passed say after celebrating her 101th birthday, marking a century of life and a legacy of service.

Atlanta Black Star

19h ·

Anna Mae Robertson just passed say after celebrating her 101th birthday, marking a century of life and a legacy of service.
A member of the historic 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion—the only all-Black Women’s Army Corps unit deployed overseas during World War II—Robertson helped process over 17 million pieces of mail in just three months.
She received her long-overdue Congressional Gold Medal in 2025.

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Anna Mae Robertson just passed say after celebrating her 101th birthday, marking a century of life and a legacy of service.

Atlanta Black Star

19h ·

Anna Mae Robertson just passed say after celebrating her 101th birthday, marking a century of life and a legacy of service.
A member of the historic 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion—the only all-Black Women’s Army Corps unit deployed overseas during World War II—Robertson helped process over 17 million pieces of mail in just three months.
She received her long-overdue Congressional Gold Medal in 2025.

502966870_18509863504002880_6630858988360170423_n.jpg
Rip
 
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