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Monday, September 9, 2013

Black History Milestones

de bene esse: literally, of well-being, morally acceptable but subject to future validation or exception


Black History Milestones
  • 1619
    Slavery in America
  • 1793
    Cotton is king
  • 1831
    Nat Turner's Revolt
  • 1831
    Undergrond Railroad
  • 1857
    Dred Scott
  • 1859
    John Brown's raid
  • 1861
    Civil War
  • 1865
    Post-slavery South
  • 1896
    Separate but equal
  • 1900
    Washington Dubois, Carver
  • 1909
    NAACP founded
  • 1916
    Marcus Garvey
  • 1920
    Harlem Renaissance
  • 1941
    African Americans in WWII
  • 1947
    Jackie Robinson
  • 1954
    Brown v. Board of Ed.
  • 1955
    Emmett Till
  • 1955
    Bus Boycott
  • 1957
    Central High School
  • 1960
    SNCC and Sit-Ins
  • 1961
    CORE and Freedom Rides
  • 1962
    Ole Miss
  • 1963
    Birmingham church bombed
  • 1963
    March on Washington
  • 1964
    Civil Rights Act
  • 1964
    Freedom Summer
  • 1965
    March from Selma to Montgomery
  • 1965
    Malcom X assassinated
  • 1965
    Voting Rights Act
  • 1966
    Rise of Black Power
  • 1967
    Loving v. Virginia
  • 1968
    Fair Housing Act
  • 1968
    Dr. King assassinated
  • 1972
    Chisholm runs for president
  • 1978
    Affirmative Action
  • 1984
    Jesse Jackson
  • 1986
    Oprah on air
  • 1992
    Rodney King
  • 1995
    Million Man March
  • 2001
    Colin Powell
  • 2002
    Oscars
  • 2009
    Obama becomes president

Slavery comes to North America, 1619

To satisfy the labor needs of the rapidly growing North American colonies, white European settlers turned in the early 17th century from indentured servants (mostly poorer Europeans) to a cheaper, more plentiful labor source: African slaves. Beginning around 1619, when a Dutch ship brought 20 Africans ashore at the British colony of Jamestown, Virginia, slavery spread quickly through the American colonies. Though it is impossible to give accurate figures, some historians have estimated that 6 to 7 million slaves were imported to the New World during the 18th century alone, depriving the African continent of its most valuable resource–its healthiest and ablest men and women.
After the American Revolution, many colonists (particularly in the North, where slavery was relatively unimportant to the economy) began to link the oppression of black slaves to their own oppression by the British. Though leaders such as George Washington and Thomas Jefferson–both slaveholders from Virginiatook cautious steps towards limiting slavery in the newly independent nation, the Constitution tacitly acknowledged the institution, guaranteeing the right to repossess any “person held to service or labor" (an obvious euphemism for slavery). Many northern states had abolished slavery by the end of the 18th century, but the institution was absolutely vital to the South, where blacks constituted a large minority of the population and the economy relied on the production of crops like tobacco and cotton. Congress outlawed the import of new slaves in 1808, but the slave population in the U.S. nearly tripled over the next 50 years, and by 1860 it had reached nearly 4 million, with more than half living in the cotton-producing states of the South.

Black History Timeline

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