African American Genealogy and History Forum the Griot's Tales

African American Genealogy and History Forum the Griot's Tales A public forum to present material that addresses African American Genealogy and History.

'When you saw me in the boxing ring fighting, it wasn't just so I could beat my opponent. My fighting had a purpose. I h...
07/28/2023

'When you saw me in the boxing ring fighting, it wasn't just so I could beat my opponent. My fighting had a purpose. I had to be successful in order get people to listen to the things I had to say. I was fighting to win the world heavyweight title so I could go out in the streets and speak my mind. I wanted to go to the people, where unemployment, drugs, and poverty were part of everyday life. I wanted to be a champion who was accessible to everyone. I hoped to inspire others to take control of their lives and to live with pride and self-determination. I thought perhaps if they saw that I was living my life the way I chose to live it - without fear and with determination - they might dare to take the risks that could set them free.'
- Muhammad Ali

This is how generational wealth works for the Black community. Romeo is a leader and activist and like his father not af...
07/27/2023

This is how generational wealth works for the Black community. Romeo is a leader and activist and like his father not afraid to invest in our communities.

Black people have always lived in the future, but these two men have joined forces to ensure that the community isn’t left out of it.

How did Microsoft Edge allow such a polarizing use of words on their browser in promoting a noteworthy event for the Yet...
07/26/2023

How did Microsoft Edge allow such a polarizing use of words on their browser in promoting a noteworthy event for the Yetunde Price Resource Center. It is so sad that colored rolls off the tongue of many so easily. Sreeja Banik you are ignorant.

Venus Williams will hold a special auction to showcase the extraordinary works of colored artist Ernie Barnes, with the aim of supporting the Yetunde Price Resource Center (YPRC).

Senator Robert F. Kennedy on a tour of the Mississippi Delta in 1967.Credit...Jack Thornell/Associated Press.Myth buster...
07/15/2023

Senator Robert F. Kennedy on a tour of the Mississippi Delta in 1967.Credit...Jack Thornell/Associated Press.

Myth buster. We have never been looking for a white savior or handout. Just the rights we won in a Civil War as stated in the Civil Rights Act of 1866 that “all persons born in the United States” are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States” and that “such citizens of every race and color ... shall have the same right ... as is enjoyed by white citizens.” That is not a color-blind statement, it meant what it said, the same rights enjoyed by white citizens, period.

AN IMAGE OF HISTORY. It is argued that slavery without Banks and Insurance companies propping up the southern plantation...
07/15/2023

AN IMAGE OF HISTORY. It is argued that slavery without Banks and Insurance companies propping up the southern plantation economy- with mortgage loans and property insurance including insuring the life of a slave, would have died a natural death at least 4 decades earlier. The "Life Department" of Aetna Insurance Company issued Lucinda's 12-month life insurance policy to a white slave owner named William H. Brand. The William H. Brand Papers, a special collection of the Kentucky Historical Society, reveal that Brand was a lawyer and businessman from Lexington, Kentucky and later Columbia, Missouri.

This life insurance document, no. 9, authorized the payout of $600 if Lucinda died sometime within the next year (until January 15, 1854). Lucinda was valued at $1,000 in 1853, or $33,000 in 2020 currency. (Evidently, Brand valued Lucinda very highly, as the average slave valuation two years later, in 1855, was about $600.) In comparison, the value of white life was 40% to nearly 1000% higher, with white life insurance payouts averaging between $1,000-$5,000. Brand's $15 annual premium for Lucinda's life insurance policy allowed him to collect 60% of Lucinda's valuation if she died.

Danette Anthony Reed, international president and CEO of AKA Sorority, revealed the credit system serves as an example o...
07/14/2023

Danette Anthony Reed, international president and CEO of AKA Sorority, revealed the credit system serves as an example of the organization’s financial literacy.

“Everyone doesn’t understand the impact we make financially, so you have to start doing things, so folks know we know how to control our money,” Reed said.

The first Black sorority founded at Howard University in 1908, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., has officially launched its “For Members Only” or FMO Federal Credit Union, the first of its kind. FMOFCU is the first, Black-owned, woman-led sorority digital banking financial institution in U.S. h...

We are our roots. Learn your ancestry. Artist: David Boval. Titled: Asase yaa (female spirit of the earth)
07/13/2023

We are our roots. Learn your ancestry.

Artist: David Boval. Titled: Asase yaa (female spirit of the earth)

The constitution was and is not colorblind nor is any part of it equal. Where are our Black leaders, institutions and or...
07/12/2023

The constitution was and is not colorblind nor is any part of it equal. Where are our Black leaders, institutions and organizations, I don't hear you speaking out? Congressional Black Caucus, National Black Lawyers and the National Bar Association where is your manifesto for your people to follow. We can't hear you, is it because your mouth is full of greed?

Why should we care that fewer Black and Hispanic students will be admitted to elite schools? The answer is simple. The economic ramifications of lower numbers are real. This is not conjecture on my part. An incoming professor at Princeton University studied what happened to Black and Hispanic studen...

From the 1920s through the 1950s, courts did not consider cemeteries to be “public accommodations,” so cemeteries did no...
05/29/2023

From the 1920s through the 1950s, courts did not consider cemeteries to be “public accommodations,” so cemeteries did not qualify for special civil rights protections. But in May 1948, the Supreme Court ruled in Shelley v. Kraemer that state enforcement of racially restrictive covenants in land deeds violated the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. Just a few weeks after SCOTUS ruled in Shelley v. Kraemer, President Harry Truman issued Executive Order 9981, which officially desegregated the military. Although it took years to desegregate battlefield units, the order went into immediate effect at Arlington National Cemetery. One of the first black veterans to be buried in a formerly white section of Arlington was Spottswood Poles, a star of Negro League baseball who enlisted with the infamous Harlem Hellfighters, an all-black unit that fought in the trenches of France during World War I. Poles earned five battlefield star decorations as well as the Purple Heart for his military service. He was interred at Arlington with full military honors in 1962.

James Parks (1843-1929)The first graves at Arlington National Cemetery were dug by James Parks, who was born enslaved on...
05/29/2023

James Parks (1843-1929)
The first graves at Arlington National Cemetery were dug by James Parks, who was born enslaved on the Custis-Lee plantation in 1843 and spent his entire life living and working on the Arlington property. He formally gained his freedom in 1862, under the terms of the will of his former owner, George Washington Parke Custis. As a freed person, he lived in Freedman's Village — an organized community for former slaves, created by the federal government near what is now Section 40 of the cemetery — until 1888.

In May 1861, when Robert E. Lee and Mary Custis Lee vacated their estate and federal troops occupied it, Parks began working for the Army, helping to build Fort McPherson and Fort Whipple. The Army authorized military burials on the Arlington property in May 1864, and subsequently Parks's duties turned from fort-building to gravedigging and cemetery maintenance.

Parks worked at Arlington National Cemetery until June 1925. That year, Congress approved the restoration of Arlington House to the way it had appeared when the Lees lived there. As restoration on the exterior began in 1928, Parks became a crucial source of information on the house and property. Although he was in his 80s, Parks's memory was, by all accounts, sharp and detailed. His recollections, recorded by journalists and military officials, have provided some of the most important firsthand accounts of the history of Arlington House and Arlington National Cemetery. His testimony also offered valuable insights into the Custis-Lee family, slavery at Arlington and life in Freedman's Village.

James Parks married twice and fathered 22 children, five of whom served in World War I. He died on August 21, 1929, at age 86. Prior to his death, the Secretary of War authorized for him to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery even though he was a civilian. On August 23, 1929, Parks's long service to Arlington, in both slavery and freedom, was honored with a full military honors funeral. He is the only person buried at the cemetery who was born on the property. The American Legion paid tribute to him with the plaque at his gravesite, pictured.

Section 15, Grave 2 (near Selfridge Gate)
Copied from the Arlington National Cemetery Website.

African Americans founded Decoration Day at the graveyard of 257 Union soldiers labeled "Martyrs of the Race Course," Ma...
05/29/2023

African Americans founded Decoration Day at the graveyard of 257 Union soldiers labeled "Martyrs of the Race Course," May 1, 1865, in Charleston, South Carolina. There are White people who will argue semantics as reasoning for not recognizing the event in Charleston SC as the first Memorial Day with reasoning that it was not sanctioned by them. However, the "First Decoration Day," as this event came to be recognized by many, involved an estimated ten thousand people, most of them black former slaves. During April, twenty-eight black men from one of the local churches built a suitable enclosure for the burial ground at the Racecourse. In some ten days, they constructed a fence ten feet high, enclosing the burial ground, and landscaped the graves into neat rows. The wooden fence was whitewashed, and an archway was built over the gate to the enclosure. On the arch, painted in black letters, the workmen inscribed "Martyrs of the Race Course."

At nine o'clock in the morning on May 1, the procession to this special cemetery began as three thousand black schoolchildren (newly enrolled in freedmen's schools) marched around the Racecourse, each with an armload of roses and singing "John Brown's Body." The children were followed by three hundred black women representing the Patriotic Association, a group organized to distribute clothing and other goods among the freedpeople. The women carried baskets of flowers, wreaths, and crosses to the burial ground. The Mutual Aid Society, a benevolent association of black men, next marched in cadence around the track and into the cemetery, followed by large crowds of white and black citizens.

All dropped their spring blossoms on the graves in a scene recorded by a newspaper correspondent: "when all had left, the holy mounds — the tops, the sides, and the spaces between them — were one mass of flowers, not a speck of earth could be seen; and as the breeze wafted the sweet perfumes from them, outside and beyond ... there were few eyes among those who knew the meaning of the ceremony that were not dim with tears of joy." While the adults marched around the graves, the children were gathered in a nearby grove, where they sang "America," "We'll Rally Around the Flag," and "The Star-Spangled Banner."

The official dedication ceremony was conducted by the ministers of all the black churches in Charleston. With prayer, the reading of biblical passages, and the singing of spirituals, black Charlestonians gave birth to an American tradition. In so doing, they declared the meaning of the war in the most public way possible — by their labor, their words, their songs, and their solemn parade of roses, lilacs, and marching feet on the old planters' Racecourse.

After the dedication, the crowds gathered at the Racecourse grandstand to hear some thirty speeches by Union officers, local black ministers, and abolitionist missionaries. Picnics ensued around the grounds, and in the afternoon, a full brigade of Union infantry, including Colored Troops, marched in double column around the martyrs' graves and held a drill on the infield of the Race Course. The war was over, and Memorial Day had been founded by African Americans in a ritual of remembrance and consecration.

Narrative Text taken from an article on Snopes dated May 27,2013 by David Mikkelson titled: Was Memorial Day Created By Former Slaves to Honor Union War Dead?

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