People, Locations, Episodes

Fri, 08.30.1901

Roy Wilkins, Journalist, and Administrator born

On this date, Roy Wilkins, an African American journalist and civil rights activist, was born.

learn more
Mon, 09.09.1901

Louise Thompson Patterson, Activist, and Professor born

*Louise Alone Thompson Patterson was born on this date in 1901.  She was a Black social activist and college professor.    From Chicago, Illinois, Patterson became a professor at Hampton Institute, a historically black college (HBCU) in Virginia, by age twenty-two.  She worked there for five years before moving to Harlem, New York, where she pursued social work but eventually became a central figure in the […]

learn more
Fri, 10.25.1901

Louis L. Redding, Lawyer born

Louis L. Redding, prominent African American lawyer and civil rights pioneer, was born on this date in 1901.

learn more
Mon, 11.11.1901

Dora Tamana, South African Activist born

*On this date, in 1901, Dora Tamana was born. She was a Black South African activist.   She was born Dora Ntloko at Nqamakwe, in Hlobo, Transkei, near Dutywa, then part of Cape Colony, South Africa. Her grandfather was a Methodist preacher, but as a teenager, she converted, with her family, to the Israelite denomination. […]

learn more
Fri, 05.02.1902

Mabel Hampton, Dancer, and Activist born

*Mabel Hampton was born on this date in 1902.  She was a Black lesbian activist, a dancer, and a philanthropist.  Born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Hampton was only two months old when her mother died. She was then raised by her grandmother, who died when Hampton was seven.  In 1909, the seven-year-old Hampton was put on a train to New York […]

learn more
Sat, 05.10.1902

Joachim Prinz, Rabbi, and Activist born

*Joachim Prinz was born on this date in 1902. He was a White German American Rabbi outspoken against Nazism and an activist for the American Civil Rights movement.

learn more
Wed, 07.23.1902

Rose Ingram, Sharecropper Farmer born

*Rose Lee Ingram was born on this date in 1902.  She was a Black farmer (sharecropper) and widowed mother of 12 children, who was at the center of one of the most explosive capital punishment cases in United States history.   Ingram farmed adjoining lots in Georgia with white sharecropper John Ed Stratford. Ingram bred Stratford’s livestock. On […]

learn more
Fri, 08.01.1902

Jeanne “Jane” Nardal, Activist, and Teacher born.

*Jeanne “Jane” Nardal was born on this date in 1902. She was an Afro Caribbean writer, philosopher, teacher, and political commentator. Jane Nardal was from Martinique, West Indies, the fourth of seven daughters (Paulette, Emilie, Alice, Lucy, Cécile, Andrée) born to Paul Nardal, a black engineer, and Louise Achille, a métisse (mixed) schoolteacher, musician, and organizer. Her parents […]

learn more
Sun, 02.15.1903

The Mississippi State Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs, Inc. Begins

*The Mississippi State Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs, Inc. (MSFCWC) is celebrated on this date in 1903. MSFCWC is an African American women’s club located in Mississippi. Educators Ursula J. Wade Foster, Mattie F. Rowan, and Lizzie Coleman created the club in 1903. They were inspired by visiting the annual session of the Southeastern Association […]

learn more
Mon, 04.13.1903

Floria Pinkney, Garment Worker and Activist born

*Floria Pinkney’s birth on this date in 1903 is celebrated. She was a Black garment worker union activist and leader. Floria Pinkney was born in Connecticut. Her parents were originally from Florida and migrated to Connecticut at the turn of the century. Pinkney’s mother was a self-employed dressmaker. Shortly after Pinkney’s birth, her then-widowed mother […]

learn more
Sun, 06.28.1903

George Padmore, Pan-Africanist born

*George Padmore was born on this date in 1903.  He was an Afro Caribbean Pan-Africanist, journalist, and author.   Malcolm Ivan Meredith Nurse, better known by his pen name George Padmore, was born in the Arouca District, Tacarigua, Trinidad, of the British West Indies. His paternal great-grandfather was an Asante warrior who was taken prisoner and sold into slavery in Barbados, where his grandfather was born.  His father, James […]

learn more
Sat, 09.05.1903

The ‘Talented Tenth,’ a definition

*On this date in 1903, The Talented Tenth is briefly defined.  This term designated a leadership class of Blacks in the early 20th century. Northern white philanthropists created the term, then publicized by W. E. B. Du Bois in an influential essay of the same name, which he published in 1903.  It appeared in The Negro Problem, a collection of essays written […]

learn more
Fri, 09.18.1903

William Alphaeus Hunton Jr., Scholar born

*William Alphaeus Hunton, Jr. was born on this date in 1903. He was an African American scholar and a political activist.

learn more
Sat, 09.26.1903

Grace Lorch, Teacher and Activist born

*Grace Lorch was born on this date in 1903. She was a teacher and activist. Grace Lonergan was born to William and Delia Lonergan in Boston, Massachusetts. She and her brother Thomas grew up in a working-class household where her father was a railroad worker, and her mother was a homemaker. Lonergan became a public […]

learn more
Thu, 10.01.1903

James R. Stewart, Teacher and Pan-Africanist born

*James R. Stewart was born on this date in 1903. He was a Black teacher, administrator, and Pan-African activist. James Robert Stewart was born in Moorhead, Mississippi, the son of a wealthy plantation owner; his uncle Professor William Stewart taught in Centreville, Mississippi. He began school in Morehead and moved to Cleveland in 1915, where he studied […]

learn more
Prev Page Next Page

New Poem Each Day

Poetry Corner

If the drum is a woman why are you pounding your drum into an insane babble why are you pistol whipping your drum at dawn why are you shooting... IF THE DRUM IS A WOMAN by Jayne Cortez.
Read More