BLM Archives - AA-Historics Itesva https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org African Americans in America Wed, 14 Jun 2023 13:39:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.9.1 https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/cropped-man-1-32x32.png BLM Archives - AA-Historics Itesva https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org 32 32 The Struggle and Triumph of African Americans in America https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/the-struggle-and-triumph-of-african-americans-in-america/ Wed, 14 Jun 2023 13:39:20 +0000 https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/?p=361 Since the inception of America, African Americans have faced a long and tumultuous journey in the land of the free. From slavery to segregation, discrimination…

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Since the inception of America, African Americans have faced a long and tumultuous journey in the land of the free. From slavery to segregation, discrimination to police brutality, the history of African Americans in America is a complex and multifaceted story of struggle and triumph. Despite facing systemic oppression, African Americans have made significant contributions to American culture, politics, and society. Through the Civil Rights Movement and beyond, African Americans have fought tirelessly for their rights and equality, and continue to do so today. This article will explore the history of African Americans in America and the ongoing struggle for justice and equality.

Slavery was a pervasive part of the American experience, with African Americans forming the majority of the enslaved population. African Americans endured centuries of oppression, including brutal physical abuse, economic exploitation, and social degradation. During the Civil War, many African Americans escaped slavery and fled to Union lines, though they still faced racism and legal inequality under the Jim Crow laws of the late 19th century.

A Tale of Two Americas: The Journey of African Americans in America

America has been a land of opportunities and dreams for many people, but not everyone has had the chance to experience the same level of freedom and equality. African Americans have been an integral part of America’s history, contributing to its culture, heritage, and economy. However, their journey has been marked by struggles, discrimination, and injustices. From the time of slavery to the civil rights movement, African Americans have fought for their rights and dignity in America. This article explores the journey of African Americans in America, their struggles, achievements, and the challenges that they still face in the present-day.

African Americans Shaping America: Past, Present, and Future

For centuries, African Americans have been an integral part of shaping America’s history, culture, and identity. From the horrors of slavery to the Civil Rights Movement, African Americans have fought tirelessly for their rights and freedoms, contributing to the fabric of America’s society. Today, African Americans continue to face challenges and discrimination, but also make significant contributions to various fields such as politics, entertainment, and sports. This topic explores the past, present, and future of African Americans in America, highlighting their resilience, achievements, and ongoing struggles for equality and justice.

African Americans in America: A History of Struggle and Triumphs in the Land of the Free

The history of African Americans in America is a complex and often painful tale of struggle and triumph. From the horrors of slavery to the civil rights movement, African Americans have faced countless obstacles in their quest for equality and justice. Despite these challenges, they have also made significant contributions to American society in fields ranging from literature and music to politics and sports. This article will explore the complex relationship between African Americans and America, highlighting both the challenges they have faced and the victories they have won.

A Historical and Cultural Perspective

African Americans have played a significant role in shaping America’s history and culture. From the days of slavery to the civil rights movement and beyond, African Americans have contributed to the growth and development of the nation in countless ways. This article explores the impact of African Americans on America from a historical and cultural perspective. We will delve into the struggles and triumphs of African Americans throughout the years, examining how they have influenced the nation’s politics, music, art, literature, and more. By exploring the intersection of African American history and American culture, we can gain a deeper understanding of the complex and vibrant tapestry that makes up this great nation.

The Evolution of African Americans in America: A Journey Through the Country’s Complex History

African Americans have played a significant role in shaping the history of America, a country that has been built on the foundations of diversity, freedom, and democracy. The history of African Americans in America is a complex one, marked by centuries of slavery, segregation, and discrimination. Despite the challenges they have faced, African Americans have made tremendous contributions to the country’s culture, politics, and economy. This article aims to provide an overview of the evolution of African Americans in America, from their arrival as slaves to their fight for civil rights and beyond. Through examining their struggles and successes, we can gain a deeper understanding of the country’s history and the ongoing quest for equality and justice.

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The Triangular Trade https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/the-triangular-trade/ Sun, 07 Nov 2021 12:48:03 +0000 https://themepalacedemo.com/fairtimes/?p=125 Slavery originated in the Americas through the so-called "triangular trade," the name given to the transatlantic trade that took place between Africa, Europe, and the New World.

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Slavery originated in the Americas through the so-called “triangular trade,” the name given to the transatlantic trade that took place between Africa, Europe, and the New World. Europeans brought cloth, arms, and metals to Africa, selling or trading them for captives, who were then shipped as “live goods” from West African ports to North and South America. Many slaves worked on American plantations growing sugar cane, rice, cotton, and tobacco, valuable commodities for which there was always a demand in Europe.

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Deliverance from Slavery https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/deliverance-from-slavery/ Sun, 10 Oct 2021 12:46:39 +0000 https://themepalacedemo.com/fairtimes/?p=134 Virginia was the first English colony to which slaves were brought in the early seventeenth century. However, the "beginning of the end" of slavery was also in Virginia.

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Virginia was the first English colony to which slaves were brought in the early seventeenth century. However, the “beginning of the end” of slavery was also in Virginia. In May 1861, a month after the outbreak of the Civil War, in which 11 states of the slaveholding South opposed the industrial North, three Virginia slaves belonging to the Confederate Army escaped to Fort Monroe, a military fortress at Hampton Harbor that was under the control of the federal government.

The slaves asked the Federation Army for asylum. General Benjamin Franklin Butler, commander in chief, declared the fugitive slaves “war booty” of Federation forces, an inhumane term at first glance, and allowed the fugitives to be retained and assisted.

Thus thousands of African Americans who had fled from the South to Fort Monroe during the war gained their freedom. It was this event that set the stage for the subsequent abolition of slavery.

In early 1863, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, an edict abolishing slavery nationwide. All “persons held as slaves” in the Confederate states were declared free men. The final abolition of slavery occurred with the passage of the 13th and 14th Amendments to the Constitution. The 14th Amendment, passed in 1866, granted all former slaves U.S. citizenship.

In September 2011, Fort Hampton ceased to exist as a defense facility as the Pentagon removed the fort from its balance sheet to save money. Two months later, President Barack Obama – son of a Kenyan native and an American woman of European descent – listed Fort Monroe as a National Historic Landmark.

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Bandits and human rights activists https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/bandits-and-human-rights-activists/ Sat, 14 Aug 2021 12:20:56 +0000 https://themepalacedemo.com/fairtimes/?p=110 In March 1991, Los Angeles resident Rodney King was driving his car while intoxicated. He exceeded the speed limit, the police officers noticed and ordered him to stop.

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In March 1991, Los Angeles resident Rodney King was driving his car while intoxicated. He exceeded the speed limit, the police officers noticed and ordered him to stop. King drove even faster: he was not allowed to meet police officers in that condition. He had been released early from prison for robbery, and another offense would send him back to prison.

The cops caught up with King and he was beaten 55 times with rubber truncheons and tasered twice. A bystander filmed his beating – and took the tape to television.

After the acquittal of the police officer in the Rodney King beating case, a real war broke out in Los Angeles

On April 29, 1992, a jury found the police’s actions lawful – and the greatest racially motivated riots of the twentieth century began in the United States. Sixty-three people were killed and some 5,500 buildings were destroyed. The Los Angeles International Airport stopped its work because the city could not be seen from the air – there was so much smoke over it.

The damage from the riots was $1 billion. The LAPD considers the episode one of the darkest in its history. After it, civil and human rights organizations gained access for the first time to control the actions of law enforcement. The police officers who beat King were found guilty the second time.

Rodney King appeared before protesters and uttered a phrase that is still quoted today: “Why can’t we [blacks and whites] just get along?” He received $3.8 million in compensation from the Los Angeles Police Department, but continued to commit misdemeanors. He spent some of the money he received to fight drug addiction.

King died in June 2012. His daughter Laura created a charitable foundation that runs social programs and pays educational scholarships to young African-Americans.

There are neighborhoods in major U.S. cities where there aren’t even any McDonald’s – why open one if they are bound to be looted. There is poverty, there is crime, there is drug dealing.

The Rodney King case can be considered an illustration of the processes that began in the late 1960s. A policeman used to be king and god, especially when he went into a black neighborhood. Then that changed, with the emergence, for example, of the Black Panthers, radicals who responded to police terror with their own terror.

At the grassroots level, there was no difference between black rights activists and criminals in those years. They could be ideological guys, and in their spare time they could sell drugs. Territorial redistribution and gang warfare were the norm.

Confrontations with the police were inevitable, and here too you have to understand: people who patrol poor and dangerous neighborhoods at the risk of their lives are also, by definition, risky guys. Corruption and sadism were the norm among them. But these police were flesh and blood of the society they were protecting.

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The Museum of African American History has a lot for all of us to see https://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/the-museum-of-african-american-history-has-a-lot-for-all-of-us-to-see/ Mon, 22 Mar 2021 11:56:29 +0000 https://themepalacedemo.com/fairtimes/?p=58 A museum dedicated to African Americans was proposed as early as 1915 by black veterans of the U.S. Civil War.

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A museum dedicated to African Americans was proposed as early as 1915 by black veterans of the U.S. Civil War. Their dream is realized a century later, with the opening of the National Museum of African American History and Culture at the Smithsonian Institution on September 24.

The history of the United States through the eyes of African Americans is reflected in the architectural design. The building has several levels and symbolizes the crown of the West African Yoruban tribe. It is a tribute to the ancestral homeland of many African Americans: that’s where they came to North America on slave ships. And the bronze-colored metal cladding is reminiscent of the metalwork of 19th-century slave masters in Charleston and New Orleans.

The museum is built on National Alley in Washington, D.C., next to the Lincoln Memorial, the site where Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke to 250,000 people in March 1963 at one of the largest pro-human rights rallies in American history.

Historian Lonnie Bunch, the museum’s first director, was interviewed by NBC-4 as the museum was making final preparations for the opening. He said the museum illuminates a crucial part of American history and offers a fresh perspective on what it means to be an American.

“In many ways, African American history, with its resilience of spirit and optimism, is essentially American history,” he said. – The African American experience ensures the integrity of America and makes America live up to its proclaimed ideals.”

Twelve permanent exhibits are located on the museum’s underground and elevated levels. Visitors will be able to travel back in time – to the era of slavery and segregation, then to the 1950s and 1960s, to the civil rights movement – and see the achievements of African Americans in all walks of life.

The size of the new museum also made the rich display possible. There are some 34,000 objects on display in 37,000 square feet of exhibit space. That’s double the size of the nearby Hirshhorn Sculpture Garden Museum.

“Starting on the underground level, visitors will take a journey from slavery to freedom,” says Bunch. – They’ll look at a restored slave shack from South Carolina’s Edisto Island, listen to audio recordings of slavery-era witnesses and see an abolitionist Harriet Tubman psalter (circa 1876). Further featured are a segregationist railroad carriage (circa 1920), a 1940s airplane used to train black pilots during World War II, and a dress sewn in the 1950s by seamstress Rosa Parks, a heroine of the civil rights movement.”

On the upper levels of the museum, visitors will explore collections highlighting the contributions of African Americans to sports, art, science, business, music and literature. Among the most notable exhibits are the trumpet of jazz legend Louis Armstrong, dresses worn by singers Marian Anderson and Ella Fitzgerald, the red Cadillac of rock star Chuck Berry, and memorabilia of prominent athletes Jesse Owens, Muhammad Ali and Venus and Serena Williams.

The past is only part of the story. “The museum also tells a lot about our days and also looks to the future,” Bunch said. – “That’s why its employees are already reflecting on Barack Obama’s presidency, the Black Lives Matter movement and other events and phenomena relevant to African Americans.”

“African American culture has had a great influence in shaping the United States,” Bunch believes. – We want to introduce its richness to the whole world.”

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