People, Locations, Episodes

Sat, 02.02.1861

Joseph Seamon Cotter, Poet born

*Joseph Seamon Cotter, Sr., was born on this date in 1861. He was a Black poet, educator, and playwright.

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Fri, 10.11.1861

Josephine Henderson Heard, Poet, and Teacher born

*On this date in 1861, we mark the birth of Josephine Henderson Heard.  She was a Black teacher and poet.   Josephine Delphine Henderson was born the daughter of two enslaved parents in Salisbury, North Carolina.  After Emancipation, a goal was set for her to become a teacher.   At age 21, she married William Henry Heard in 1882. She held teaching […]

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Fri, 09.26.1862

Carrie Williams Clifford, Writer born

*The birth of Carrie Williams Clifford in 1862 is celebrated on this date. She was an Black writer, editor and activist.

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Sat, 03.21.1863

Journal of Resistance on a Georgia Plantation in 1838-1839 is Published

*On this date in 1863, the book Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838–1839 was published. This is an account by Fanny Kemble of the time spent on her husband’s plantation in Butler Island, Georgia. The account was not published until 1863 after her marriage had ended and the American Civil War had begun. According to PBS, she […]

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Wed, 11.11.1863

Emma Durham Kelley-Hawkins, Writer born

*Emma Dunham Kelley-Hawkins was born on this date in 1863. She was a Black writer and author. Emma Dunham Kelley was born in Dennis, Massachusetts, and raised by her widowed mother in Rhode Island. Kelley married Benjamin Hawkins, an inventor, in 1893. The couple had two children, Gala and Magda. Royalties from Emma’s two novels, […]

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Mon, 01.11.1864

Thomas Dixon Jr., Segregationist, and Author born

*The birth of Thomas Dixon is marked on this date in 1864. He was a White American novelist, segregationist and minister.

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Fri, 05.06.1864

Lena Mason, Minister, and Poet born

Lena Mason, a Black minister and poet, was born on this date in 1864.

She was born in Quincy, Illinois of parents, Reida and Vaughn, who were stanch Christians. Young Mason became a Christian at a very early age, attending the Douglass High School of Hannibal, MO. She also attended Professor Knott’s School in Chicago. She married George Mason in 1883, had six children with only one daughter surviving to adulthood. Mason entered the ministry at the age of 23. During her first three years of ministry she preached to whites exclusively.

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Thu, 03.22.1866

Robert Kerlin, Minister, and Soldier born

*Robert Kerlin was born on this date in 1866.  He was a white-American minister, author, soldier, and activist.  From Harrison County, MO., Robert Thomas Kerlin’s parents were from Kentucky, owners of several small farms.  They raised and sold Berkshire Hog and Southdown Sheep.  Confederate properties were seized due to the American Civil War, and his […]

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Sun, 02.23.1868

W.E.B. Du Bois, Sociologist born

*This date marks the birth of W.E.B. Du Bois in 1868. He was an African American sociologist, one of the most important Black protest leaders in the United States during the first half of the 20th century.

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Tue, 06.02.1868

Adelaide Casely-Hayford, Writer born

*Adelaide Casely-Hayford was born on this date in 1868.  She was a Black African Creole cultural nationalist, educator, writer, and feminist.   Adelaide Smith was born to an elite family in Freetown, British Sierra Leone.  to a mixed-race father (William Smith Jr, of English and royal Fanti parentage) from the Gold Coast and a Creole mother, Anne Spilsbury, of English, Jamaican Maroon, and Sierra Leone Liberated African ancestry. She was the second […]

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Fri, 06.12.1868

Sol White, Baseball Player, and Author born

*”Sol” White was born on this date in 1868. He was a Black professional baseball infielder, manager, writer, and executive, and one of the pioneers of the American Negro Leagues. Born in Bellaire, Ohio, King Solomon White’s early life is not well-documented. According to the 1870 and 1880 U.S. Census, his family (parents and two […]

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Sun, 05.23.1869

Olivia Bush, Writer, and Drama Coach born

Olivia Ward Bush-Banks, an African American writer and drama instructor, was born on this day in 1869.

Born in Sag Harbor, Long Island, New York, Olivia was the daughter of Eliza Draper and Abraham Ward, both of whom were of African and Montauk descent. Ward’s mother died when was about one year old. She and her father moved to Providence, R.I., where he married again, but he handed young Ward over to her mother’s sister, Maria Draper, who reared Olivia as her own child.

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Tue, 06.01.1869

Edward N. Harleston, Poet and Journalist born.

*Edward N. Harleston was born on this date in 1869. He was a Black poet and journalist. Born in Charleston, South Carolina, Edward Nathaniel Harleston worked as a carpenter machinist and owned a funeral home early in his life. After his first wife, Mattie Gadsen, died in 1895, he moved to Atlantic City and became superintendent of […]

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Fri, 07.02.1869

James Corrothers, Writer born

*James Corrothers was born on this date in 1869.  He was a Black poet, journalist, and minister.  James David Corrothers was born in Michigan and grew up in a small town of anti-slavery activists who settled before the American Civil War.  His parents were James Richard Carruthers (spelling later changed by Corrothers), a black soldier […]

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Sat, 04.02.1870

Thomas Blue, Librarian, and Minister born

The 1870 birth of Reverend Thomas F. Blue is celebrated on this date. He was an African American minister, educator, administrator, and librarian.

The son of former slaves, Blue was born in Farmville, Virginia. He graduated from Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute in 1888. He taught in Virginia, and earned a Bachelor of Divinity degree in 1898 from Richmond Theological Seminary. Around the turn of the last century, he was a secretary of the YMCA, serving Spanish-American War soldiers, moving to Louisville in the same capacity from 1899 to 1905.

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New Poem Each Day

Poetry Corner

Gotta love us brown girls, munching on fat, swinging blue hips, decked out in shells and splashes, Lawdie, bringing them woo hips. As the jukebox teases, watch my sistas throat the heartbreak, inhaling bassline, cracking backbone... HIP HOP CHAZAL by Patricia Smith.
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