103rd Annual Meeting and Conference Souvenir Journal

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The Association For The Study Of African American Life And History

®

103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE OCTOBER 3 - 7, 2018 INDIANAPOLIS MARRIOTT DOWNTOWN • 350 WEST MARYLAND ST. • INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA ASALH.ORG #ASALH #ASALH2018 #CARTERGWOODSON



Header Text Goes Here

OFFICERS

Dear Conference Participants:

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Ph.D. President

Welcome to the 103rd Annual Meeting and Conference of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History! As we gather in Indianapolis, we do so under the 2018 national Black History Theme, “African Americans in Times of War,” and in commemoration of the centennial of the end of the First World War—the Armistice of 1918. We are reminded that ASALH was founded by Dr. Carter G. Woodson in 1915 during that very war, which originally engulfed Europe in 1914 and into which the United States entered in 1917, inspired by the slogan “to make the world safe for democracy.”

Greer Stanford-Randle, Ph.D. Vice President for Membership Jim Harper, Ph.D. Vice President for Programs Karsonya Whitehead, Ph.D. Secretary Gilbert Smith Treasurer Sylvia Cyrus Executive Director

The many sessions, as well as keynote speakers, plenaries, Film Festival, tours, luncheons, and Saturday night banquet provide the opportunity to honor the men and women who served in every capacity and in every branch of our national military from the Revolutionary War to the War against Terrorism today. Equally important, this rich conference program provides the opportunity to reflect upon the racial discrimination and injustice experienced in military and civilian life in the centuries-long history of efforts to bring racial equality to America, thus striving to make our own homeland safe for democracy. Indeed the First World War instilled in the minds and hearts of African Americans the conviction to continue the fight for democracy. In 1918, W.E.B. Du Bois declared: “We return. We return from fighting. We return fighting. Make way for Democracy! We saved it in France, and by the Great Jehovah, we will save it in the United States of America or know the reason why.”

EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEMBERS John Ashley, Esq. Dorothy Bailey Jeffrey Banks Gloria Browne-Marshall, Esq. Sundiata Cha-Jua, Ph.D. Zende Clark LaNesha DeBardelaben Natanya Duncan, Ph.D. Barbara Spencer Dunn Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Ph.D. Bettye Gardner, Ph.D. Cheryl Gooch, Ph.D. Sharon Harley, Ph.D. Robert L. Harris, Ph.D. Anton House Lionel Kimble, Ph.D.

The ASALH leadership extends its deepest gratitude to the co-chairs and members of the Academic Program Committee, the chair of the Ad-Hoc National Conference Oversight Committee, the chair, coordinator, and members of the Local Arrangements Committee, the volunteer coordinator and the many volunteers, the Film Festival Committee, the Social Media Committee, and the entire ASALH staff. All that is illuminating and fulfilling in this 103rd conference can be attributed to your long hours of service. On behalf of all the officers and the Executive Council, I extend my sincere appreciation to the individual donors, corporate sponsors, the Honorary Conference Chair and members of the Host Committee. Your generosity makes possible the ability of ASALH to assert with confidence year after year the experience and historical contribution of persons of African descent to the United States and the world. Sincerely,

Gladys Mack Susan Marsh, Esq. Moses Massenburg Edna Medford, Ph.D. Annette Palmer, Ph.D. Janet Sims-Wood, Ph.D. Gladys Vaughn, Ph.D.

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham ASALH National President


ABOUT ASALH OUR MISSION The mission of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) is to promote, research, preserve, interpret and disseminate information about Black life, history and culture to the global community.

OUR VISION The Association for the Study of African American Life and History is to be the premier Black Heritage learned society with a strong network of national and international branches and partners whose diverse and inclusive membership will continue the Carter G. Woodson legacy.

ASALH Former Presidents 1936-1951

Mary McLeod Bethune

1989-1990

Andrew Brimmer

1952-1964

Charles Harris Wesley

1991-1993

Robert Harris, Jr.

1965-1966

Lorenzo J. Greene

1993-1995

Janette Hoston Harris

1966-1967

J. Reuben Sheeler

1995-1997

Bettye J. Gardner

1968-1970

J. Rupert Picott

1997-1999

Edward Beasley

1971-1973

Andrew Brimmer

1999-2001

Samuel DuBois Cook, Sr.

1974-1976

Edgar Toppin

2001-2003

Gloria Harper Dickinson

1977-1980

Charles Walker Thomas

2004-2006

Sheila Y. Flemming-Hunter

1981-1982

Earl E. Thorpe

2007-2009

John E. Fleming

1983-1984

Samuel L. Banks

2010-2012

James B. Stewart

1984-1985

Jeanette Cascone (acting)

2013-2015

Daryl Michael Scott

1986-1988

William Harris

Current

Evelyn Brooks Higgenbotham

THANKS TO THE 2018 ACADEMIC PROGRAM COMMITTEE SUNDIATA CHA-JUA, LIONEL KIMBLE AND ZEBULON MILETSKY 4

103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN


ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY, INC. 2225 Georgia Ave., NW, Suite 331, Washington, DC 20059 Phone (202) 238-5910 Fax (202) 986-1506 Website: www.asalh.org • Email: info@asalh.net

mber 24, 2014 OFFICERS

ASALH Convention Participant: Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Ph.D. President behalf of the Executive Council

Dear ASALH Conference Attendee: Welcome to the 103rd Annual Meeting and Conference of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History, where we will explore the theme, “African Americans in Times of War.”

On of the Association for the Study of African American Our decision to meet in Indianapolis has met this our goal to build and energize our membership in the Midwest. We boast that Greerwe Stanford-Randle, Ph.D. Convention. As we explore year’s nd History, welcome you to our 99th Annual the Joseph Taylor Branch will be chartered in Indianapolis under the leadership of Branch President Monroe Little who also Vice President for Membership al Black history theme, Civil Rights in America, weLocal hopeArrangements to inspire you to reflect the will be chartered in Athens, Georgia, where Maurice Daniels serves as the Committee chair.onBranches Jim Harper, le for equality in Ph.D. America. serves as the President and Dallas/Ft. Worth Texas where Robert Edison and Marvin Dulaney teamed as president and Vice President for Programs

organizer respectively.

As W.E.B Du Bois wisely stated, “There is thanks no such in Williams, the world as the force of aCommittee Organizer and Cathi Cornelius, Volunteer Coordinator Karsonya Whitehead, Ph.D. Special go force to Karyn Local Arrangements Secretary n determined to rise. The human soul cannot be permanently chained.” While the brutal and their teams and to ASALH members, Branch members and community members who teamed up to provide the needed support for used this conference. manization of African Americans was continually to sever black morale, the united effort Gilbert Smith Treasurer around the nation formed a foundation of hope and perseverance that is still ck individuals We are extremely appreciative for the sponsors and host committee whose resources and networks have been invaluable in t in ourSylvia communities today. To counteract systems oppression people Brigadier of African descent Cyrus promoting andof funding this conference. General Wayne Black, Conference Honorary Chairman and Tuskegee Executive Director Airmen ofmovement Indianapolis and President Reginald Duvall assured that d organizations such as the Colored Convention the National Association forveterans and those in active duty are in attendance at our ThankAfrican you for your service. a platform to dvancement of Colored People (NAACP)conference. that provided Americans heir lived experiencesCOUNCIL with the rest of the EXECUTIVE At world. the 2019 Annual Conference in Charleston, we will explore “Black Migrations.” We already feel the excitement as we plan MEMBERS

to return to Charleston, SC. The members of the Charleston Branch have already begun making arrangements for an exciting

LaNesha DeBardelaben

gratitude of the Association for the stellar job that VP Franklin has done over the past 15 years. Join us at this celebration

Cheryl Gooch, Ph.D.

whose collaborative efforts have created and executed a stellar program. We are confident that you will find our many panels,

time.Convention In support of in ourMemphis, 2018 theme and in support aofcity the partnership that we have with the The United States of America Tennessee, rich We are to hold our 99th Annual Johnhonored Ashley, Esq. Vietnam Veterans Commemoration the branch held recognition of veterans and pinning of Vietnam Veterans on Sunday, African American history. While the assassination of 2018 Dr. Martin dramatically September 23, at MotherLuther EmanuelKing AMEJr. Church. Julia-Ellen Davis, president of the branch and the members did an Dorothy Bailey d the atmosphere in Memphis, it remainsoutstanding a thrivingjob. siteThe ofThursday civil rights activism and economic luncheon is a Tribute to Veterans and the Commemoration is sending in a team from DC to recognize veterans and pin Vietnam we Veterans during this Make sure you have a ticket to join in this recognition. Jeffrey Banks unity for African Americans. As you explore these historic grounds, encourage youconference. to on the Gloria numerous musicians that began their careers on Beale Street (including W.C. Handy, Browne-Marshall, Esq. Review the save the date and forms to exhibit, advertise and participate in our annual authors book signing at the end of this her of blues) and the brilliant hits that were written theConference. Lorraine We Motel, ofwork Dr. on organizing a branch in Montgomery, Alabama the site of the journal for theat 2019 have the also site begun Cha-Jua, Ph.D. 2010you conference. Special thanks go toall Bertis English and our members and friends in Alabama for support in this area. n LutherSundiata King Jr’s death. It is our hope that are able to experience that Memphis has r and that these historic surroundings deeply enrich your convention experience. Zende Clark Our beloved editor of the Journal of African American History will retire at the end of this year. Words cannot express the

during thefor JAAH on Thursday We thank the Academic Program Committee its Reception leadership and hardevening. work to Duncan, Ph.D. trate theNatanya participation of our presenters this year. We are confident that all who attend will be The co-editors of the Black History Bulletin continue to produce culturally responsive support for our educators. LaVonne tened and invigorated by the many expositions dialogues thatyou will special Neal andand Alicia Moore, thank fortranspire. the work thatAyou do to support our mission and vision. Fire!!! editor Marilyn ThomasBarbara Spencer Dunn to our Honorary Co-Chairs and members of theis Honorary Committee forstudies furthering Houston working on our digital black journal the and encourages you to review the submission outline so that you can Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Ph.D. articles to our newest peer-reviewed multimedia n of ASALH in Memphis. To the Local submit Arrangements Committee, we extend a deep journal. elt thankBettye you Gardner, for many hours of dedicated service. Ph.D. I also extend thanks to the Academic Program Committee, led by returning co-chairs Lionel Kimble and Sundiata Cha-Jua,

and discussions and thought-provoking. also hope that you will find this meeting motivational and that you To the ASALH staff, consultants, andtours volunteers, knowexciting that your timeless efforts Iare continue to support ASALH and encourage your friends to learn about and support the ongoing work of ASALH. Sharon Harley, Ph.D. y appreciated. We acknowledge and extend a special thank you to our corporate sponsors, partners, andL.supporters who have helped make this possible. Ourtoleadership alsoconvention deserves special thanks. Jeff Banks has done an outstanding job of leading the Conference Organizing Robert Harris, Ph.D.

Committee again this year. The Executive Council, Advisory Board, consultants and volunteers have given their time, talent and treasures ensure that this is aagreat event. A special Finally, we thank all attendees for standing with to ASALH through challenging time.thanks We goes to the hard-working staff of ASALH. Karen May, Byron Dunn, Shania Monroe, Kamila Mack, Petra Williams and, Adrena Ifill. You have been tireless in your support and it is you findLionel this meeting one that empowers you to empower others, and we hope to see you next Kimble, Ph.D. most appreciated. Anton House

or our Centennial Convention in Atlanta, Georgia. Gladys Mack

ely,

Susan Marsh, Esq.

Of course, I also extend special thanks to each of you for your continuing support. Our association needs involved members who accept the challenge of the ASALH mission.

Moses Massenburg

In the spirit of our founder, Dr. Carter G. Woodson,

Edna Medford, Ph.D. Annette Palmer, Ph.D. Janet Sims-Wood, Ph.D.

Michael Scott Gladys Vaughn, Ph.D. nal President

Sylvia Y. Cyrus Sylvia Y. Cyrus Executive Director ASALH Executive Director and ASALH Managing Editor

d disseminate information about Black life, history and culture to the global community...ASALH Mission


COMMITTEES & CHAIRS HOST COMMITTEE Ms. Tanya Bell Indiana Black Expo

Mr. Danny Portee Professional Management Enterprise Inc.

Ms. A’Leila Bundles

Mr. Stephen Reed Thomas & Reed LLC

Ms. Meridth Hammer, Esq. The Hammer Legal Group

Dr. Robert Reed RCR Technology Corporation

Mr. Monroe Little Ms. Carolyn E. Mosby Mid-States Minority Supplier Development Council Mr. Eddie Pillow Pillow Logistics

Mr. Eddie Rivers Esource Mr. Larry Williams, Jr. Indy Black Chamber of Commerce

HONORARY CONFERENCE CHAIR BRIGADIER GENERAL WAYNE BLACK Indiana National Guard Commanding General 81st Troop Command

CONFERENCE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE Karen Adamopoulos

Pamela Morris

Gaynelle Jackson

Gilbert Smith

John H Ashley

Sylvia Cyrus

Lionel Kimble

Grace Terri

Dorothy Bailey

LaNesha DeBardelaben

Monroe Little

Judy Thomas

Jeffrey Banks, Chair

Barbara Dunn

Ezell Marrs

Gladys Vaughn

Sundiata ChaJua

Jim Harper, Co-Chair

Zebulon Miletsky

Karyn Williams

Cathi Cornelius

Lena Hackett

Patricia Payne

Januarie York

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham

Michael Saahir

LOCAL ARRANGMENTS COMMITTEE MEMBERS Karyn D. Williams– LAC

Dr. Cathi Cornelius

Carol Weedon

Sharon Harvey

Coordinator

Lorna Dawe

Melanie Tolbert

Ophelia Wellington

Peggy Hattiex-Penn

Debra Asante

Dr. Monroe Little – LAC Chair Dr. Cathi Cornelius – Volunteer Coordinator Faith Partners Committee Imam Michael Saahir– Chair Sheila Spencer

Committee Karyn D. Williams – Chair Ebony Chappel Rev. Dave Rozzell Kim Hooper Gina Beaven VaRita Maddox

Rev. Dave Rozzell

Social Media Publicity Committee

Rev. Winterbourne Harrison-Jones

Lorna Dawe– Chair

Ellen Sayles Lane

Gina Beaven

Emily Anderson

Michelle Fenton

Program Facilitators Committee

Donna Stokes-Lucas

Karyn D. Williams – Chair Judy Thomas Carol Weeden Sherrell Robinson Gina Beaven

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Traditional Media Publicity

Briana Ingram

Sharon Taylor-Martin Phyllis Cornelius Virgil Boyd Shelia Boyd Gary Holland Ellen Sayles Lane

Poetry Slam Committee Januarie York – Co-Chair Rolonda Lolla – Co-Chair Karyn Williams Lorna Dawe

Janice Glenn

Tours Committee

Jolivette Anderson-Douoning

Donna Stokes Lucas – Chair

Youth Day Committee Patricia (Pat) Payne– Chair Martha Lince Dorothy Benberry Jos Holeman Latosha Rowley

Sharlena Cooks-Fahngon Friday Nite Out Committee Nichelle Hayes – Chair Janice Glenn Dorothy Benberry

Volunteer Committee

Entertainment Committee

Teacher Workshop Committee

Cathi Cornelius –Chair

Al Finnell – Chair

Corey Pettigrew- Chair

Sherlynn Martin

Keesha Dixon

Michele Fenton

Liz Odle

Martha Lince

103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN


MAYOR JOE HOGSETT WELCOME LETTER

2018 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN TIMES OF WAR

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SENATOR JOE DONNELLY WELCOME LETTER

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103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN


ASALH STAFF, VOLUNTEERS, JAAH EDITORIAL BOARD & ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS BLACK HISTORY BULLETIN

ASALH STAFF

Lavonne Neal Co-Editor

Sylvia Y. Cyrus Executive Director

Alicia Moore Co-Editor

Shania Monroe Assistant to the Executive Director Karen May

VOLUNTEERS

FIRE!!! THE MULTIMEDIA JOURNAL OF BLACK STUDIES Marilyn M. Thomas-Houston Editor

Publication & Exhibits Coordinator Byron Dunn

CONSULTANTS

Information Technology

Debra Stepp, Black History Month Luncheon

Management and Membership Clerk

Gaynelle Jackson, Conference Planner Petra Williams, Consultant

Kamila Mack Intern

Terry Spicer, Epiphany Public Relations Clifton Johnson, Graphic Designer Rory Gruler, Spot Web Design

Curtis Baylor Jamila Benson Roy Betts Ann Crawford Carl M. Dunn Louis Hicks Cheryl Gresham Vernon Jackson Sharita Jacobs-Thompson Kenya King Jirmiah Leverette Regina Lewis Christine McNair Oliver McNair Valerie Maholmes Burnis Morris Mary Nobles-Jackson Chris Omoleye Joshua Terry Fannie Thompson James Thompson Velma Williams

JOURNAL OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY Formerly the Journal of Negro History Founded by Carter G. Woodson, January 1, 1916 Editor: V.P. Franklin, University of New Orleans

Associate Editors: Derrick P. Alridge, University of Virginia, Charlottesville Joyce Owens Anderson, Chicago State University Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua, University of Illinois Urbana

Editorial Assistants: Edward D. Collins, Lee Facinani

EDITORIAL BOARD Mary Frances Berry University of Pennsylvania

Michael Omolewa University of Ibadan, Nigeria

Bettye Collier-Thomas Temple University

Nell Irvin Painter Princeton University

Robert L. Harris Cornell University

Brenda E. Stevenson University of California, Los Angeles

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham Harvard University

James B. Stewart Pennsylvania State University

Darlene Clark Hine Northwestern University

P. Sterling Stuckey* University of California, Riverside

Gerald Horne University of Houston

Sheila S. Walker Afrodiaspora

Robin D. G. Kelley University of Southern California

Margaret Washington Cornell University

Genna Rae McNeil University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Lillian S. Williams State University of New York, Buffalo *Deceased

2018 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN TIMES OF WAR

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CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR EDITORS Journal of African American History

V.P. FRANKLIN

CONGRATULATIONS AS YOU COMPLETE 16 YEARS OF DEDICATED SERVICE TO JAAH!

Black History Bulletin

ALICIA MOORE

LAVONNE NEAL

CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR 13TH ANNIVERSARY AS EDITORS!

FIRE!!! The Multimedia Journal of Black Studies

MARILYN THOMAS HOUSTON

CONGRATULATIONS ON PROVIDING DYNAMIC AND EXCITING FORMS OF SCHOLARSHIP!


THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS GOLD SPONSOR

SILVER SPONSOR

BLACK HISTORY HERITAGE TOUR

FILM FESTIVAL SPONSOR

CONFERENCE BAG SPONSOR

SPONSORS

NPS FORUM & OPENING RECEPTION

2018 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN TIMES OF WAR

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We are honored to publish

The Journal of African American History, an official publication of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History. Editor: V.P. Franklin | www.journals.uchicago.edu/jaah

The Journal of African American History (JAAH), formerly The Journal of Negro History, founded by Dr. Carter G. Woodson in January 1916, is an official publication of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH). Now in its second century, the JAAH has become the leading scholarly publication on African American life and history, and publishes original scholarly articles and book reviews on all aspects of the African American experience. Subscriptions are a benefit of membership in the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.

Learn more about our history, social science, humanities, art, and science journals at www.journals.uchicago.edu.

American Art

Metropolitan Museum Journal

Signs: Journal of Women

Archives of American Art Journal

American Journal of Sociology

The Journal of Politics

in Culture and Society






SPECIAL THANKS GO TO THESE SUPPORTERS OF ASALH FRIENDS OF JOHN ASHLEY BETHEL DUKES BRANCH OF ASALH LOC BLACKS IN GOVERNMENT DANIEL A.P. MURRAY AFRICAN AMERICAN CULTURE ASSOCIATION NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE FUND CHARLES HAMILTON HOUSTON INSTITUTE, HARVARD UNIVERSITY ROSETTA ASHLEY LARRY SAVAGE EDDIE BENSON FRANCES SAVAGE DILLARD COMPREHENSIVE HIGH SCHOOL, FT. LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA HARVARD UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL BLACK ASSOCIATION OF LAW SCHOOL STUDENTS DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE ANTHONY LEWIS RANSOM LEE JAMES LEE MCINTOSH ROBERT V. GADDY SARAH SAVAGE


SPECIAL THANKS GO TO THESE SUPPORTERS OF ASALH FRIENDS OF JOHN ASHLEY HOWARD UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY MOORLAND SPINGARN RESEARCH CENTER, HOWARD UNIVERSITY WPFW PACIFICA RADIO VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY U.S. DEPARTMENT OF VETERAN AFFAIRS MR. CHARLES OGLETREE, CHARLES HAMILTON HOUSTON INSTITUTE, HARVARD UNIVERSITY BOWIE STATE UNIVERSITY DAVE CLARK SCHOOL OF LAW, UNIVERSITY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA GALLAUDET UNIVERSITY


CONFERENCE SPONSORS, HERITAGE & CENTENNIAL DONORS Donation Period: September 2017 - August 2018

CONFERENCE SPONSORS

HERITAGE DONORS

Advisory Council On Historic Preservation

Sustaining Life Members Heritage Guardian $150 and up Michael Childs Lucia Bacote James Gloria J. Mims Beatrice K. Thomas James B. Thompson

Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. John Ashley Black Metropolis Research Consortium Ms. A’Leila Bundles

Sustaining Life Members Heritage Defender $100 - $149 Edna L. Davis Alicia Lorraine Moore Anita M. Shepherd Barbara J. Stevens Dwight D. Watson

Citizens Energy Group CNO Financial Group DiversityComm, Inc Duke Energy Esource Resources LLC

Sustaining Life Members Heritage Heros $50 - $100

The Hutchins Center for African & African American Research /Harvard University

A’ Lelia Perry Bundles Emilye Crosby Barbara Spencer Dunn Carl McFee Dunn John E. Fleming Bessie Jackson Shirley Ann Jackson Luther W. Seabrook

IUPUI/Kennedy King Memorial Initiative Monroe and Sheila Little The Links, Inc. (Central Area) Marian University NPS/National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Professional Management Enterprises Inc. J. Mario Pyles Purdue University African American Studies and Research Center RCR Technology Corp. Robert Stanton

Donated Books

Going to the Mountain, Life Lessons From My Grandfather, Nelson Mandela NaDaba Mandella

You Need a Schoolhouse Booker T. Washington, Julius Rosenwald, And the Building of Schools for the Segregated South Stephanie Deutsch

University of Chicago Press Senator Elizabeth Warren Witherspoon Presbyterian Church

(Key: * = Executive Council Member)

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103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN


SECOND CENTURY FUND DONATIONS Donation Period: September 2017 - August 2018

Donations $2000 and up

John H. Ashley* Thomas C. Battle Andre Dupre Barbara Morland

Lafayette Harris Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham Sylvia Hill Lucia Bacote James Gladys W. Mack Rev. Calvin R. Robinson

Donations $1000 - $1999

Dorothy F. Bailey* Jeffrey A. Banks* Martha Biondi Gloria J. Browne-Marshall* Sundiata Kieta Cha-Jua* Zende Lamar Clark* Combined Federal Campaign Willie E. Cooper LaNesha DeBardelaben* Natanya P. Duncan* Barbara Spencer Dunn* Sheila Y. Flemming-Hunter* Bettye J. Gardner* Cheryl Renee Gooch* Sharon Harley* Jim C. Harper* Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham* Lionel Kimble* Gladys W. Mack* Susan Simms Marsh* Edna Greene Medford* Annette C .Palmer* Janet Sims-Wood* Gilbert A. Smith* Greer C. Stanford-Randle* Gladys Vaughn* Karsonya Wise Whitehead* Donations $500 - $999

Johnnetta B. Cole Museum of African American History (Boston)Nineteenth Street Baptist Church Robert Vinson Donations to Carter G. Woodson Birthday

Roy Betts Valerie Cunningham LaNesha DeBardelaben Sharla M. Fett Marla Frederick Albert Hall

Donations to the Black History Bulletin

Terufumi Saigusa Futaba Matthew Holden Susan B Hyatt Donations up to $499

Adult Learning Institute Amazon Smile Donations Charles Amos Taylor Archie Alice M. Aughtry Miriam Ayeni Shirley E. Barnes Frederica H Barrow Lois A. Bell Kathleen Bethel Ferial Bishop Samuel W. Black Bettye R. Brock Lyman Brodie Samuel L Brooks Nancy Burkett Joseph C. Carter Raphael Cassimere Hal S. Chase Dawn Chitty Harriett Green Church Sylvia Y. Cyrus John H Davis Billie Day Miriam DeCosta-Willis Romie Deloatch Ian Densford William Henry Lanier Dorsey Michele T. Fenton Esther H. Francis Marla FrederickYusuf George Arie Gray Cheryl L. Greenberg Gregory Griffin Sheila Harley-Washington

Harriett Harper Ellen Heath Linda M. Heywood Antonio F. Holland Susan B Hyatt Ambrose Jearld Barbara Ferguson Kamara Sandra Kelley Sarah Kellogg Kenya King Mark Lee David Levering Lewis Jennifer Loehlin Maple Springs Baptist Church Matthew Mancini Portia K.Maultsby Timothy W. McLeod James W. Moore Mary Nell Morgan-Brown Network for Good Ronnie A. Nichols Charles Devon Nixon James Pearson Donald H. Peery Keon Pettiway Sharon Gay Pierson Alcee William Polk Devan Justine Presha Alan Joseph Ricca Linda Rogers Charles R. Salter Julie Saville Len Shindel Vera Shorter Linda Y. Smith Margo Smith Candace B. Stepp Billy Jones Taylor John Thornton Joseph Tilseth Torch of Wisdom Foundation, Inc. Knox Tull United Way of the National Capital Area Ruth Rust Walker Phyllis Jean Williams Richard Wolfe Joyce H Wright

Special thanks to all supporters (Key: * = Executive Council Member)

2018 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN TIMES OF WAR

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BLACK HISTORY MONTH LUNCHEON, ASALH BRANCH, JAAH, & WOODSON APPEAL DONORS Donation Period: September 2017 - August 2018

BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON DONATIONS BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON DONATIONS $1000 AND UP John H. Ashley Bettye Collier-Thomas Barbara Morland

BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON DONATIONS $350 - $999 Thomas C. Battle Ferial Bishop Lisa Gregory PG County Truth Branch of ASALH Andrea R. Shehan

BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON DONATIONS UP TO $350 Timuel D. Black Sylvia Y. Cyrus Harriett Green Church Edna L. Davis Franka N. Des Vignes Reba M. Diggs Floyd Donald Elaine Gleaves Eloise Greenfield James Grossman Florence King Henry A. May George McDonald Christine McNair Todd M. Michney Ardie Myers Barbara Wells Seay Mildred F. Shannon Linda E. Softli Knox Tull Margo J. Vickers Olethia D. Weathers Gertrude Williams Joseph K William Petra A. Williams

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ASALH BRANCH DONATIONS

Samuel Lee Lewis Patricia Oldham Kimberly Martin Rehberg Larry O. Rivers

C Delores Tucker Legacy Branch Martha’s Vineyard Branch Memphis Area Branch Our Authors Study Club Branch Paul Laurence Dunbar Branch @ Dayton Ohio Samuel L Banks Branch South Florida Branch

Lillian Serece Williams Francille Wilson

2017 BRANCH DONATIONS SEPT - DEC 2017 - $600

2018 BRANCH DONATIONS UP TO $1200 Atlanta Branch Bethel Dukes Branch Bronx Branch Carter G Woodson Branch Charleston Area Branch Detroit Branch Dr Edna McKenzie Branch Greater Kansas City Black History Study Group Hampton Roads Branch Jacksonville (James Weldon Johnson) Branch Julian Branch Manasota Branch Manhattan Branch Martha’s Vineyard Branch Memphis Area Branch Samuel L Banks Branch

JOURNAL OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY UP TO $1000 Jayne R. Beilke Martha Biondi Myles Berry Caggins Andre Dupre Dwayne Dixon

103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN

JOURNAL OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY RECEPTION PLATINUM DONATIONS $1000 AND MORE Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham

PREMIER DONATIONS $500- $999 Mary Frances Berry Bettye Collier-Thomas Sharon Harley Nell Irvin Painter June O. Patton Lillian Serece Williams Francille Wilson

PATRON DONATIONS $201- $499 Zende Clark Robert L. Harris

SUPPORTER DONATIONS UP TO $200 Sylvia Y. Cyrus Natanya Duncan Bettye J. Gardner Kali Gross Cheryl Hicks Gladys W. Mack Edna Medford Annette C.Palmer Stephanie Ann-Wilms Simpson James Stewart Gladys Vaughn Margaret Washington


The ASALH Family Joins in Thanking

DR. V. P. FRANKLIN FOR HIS STELLAR EDITORSHIP OF THE JOURNAL OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY


LUNCHEON, BANQUET & BREAKFAST SPEAKERS

THE SALUTE TO VETERANS, THURSDAY JUDGE ROBERT L. WILKINS, SPEAKER

“The History Behind the National Museum”

CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON, FRIDAY ZEBULON MILETSKY, MODERATOR Assistant Professor of Africana Studies & History at Stony Brook University

OPENING NIGHT RECEPTION, WEDNESDAY SAMPSON LEVINGSTON, EMCEE Manager, Marketing and Social Media, White River State Park Founder, Through2Eyes.com

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CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON, FRIDAY IBRAM X. KENDI, SPEAKER Professor of History and International Relations and the Founding Director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University

CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON, FRIDAY HEATHER ANN THOMPSON, SPEAKER Pulitzer Prize and Bancroft Prizewinning author, University of Michigan

ABWH/ASALH JOINT LUNCHEON, SATURDAY ERICA ARMSTRONG DUNBAR, SPEAKER

ASALH ECUMENICAL BREAKFAST, SUNDAY REV. WINTERBOURNE HARRISON-JONES

Charles and Mary Beard Professor of History at Rutgers University

Pastor, Witherspoon Presbyterian Church

ASALH ANNUAL BANQUET, SATURDAY JULIEANNA RICHARDSON, SPEAKER

THE SALUTE TO VETERANS, THURSDAY A’LELIA BUNDLES, EMCEE

THE SALUTE TO VETERANS, THURSDAY REV. MARILYN GILL, INVOCATION

THE SALUTE TO VETERANS, THURSDAY SENATOR JOE DONNELLY, GREETER

Journalist and Historian

Executive Director of the Indiana Christian Leadership Conference

103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN

The HistoryMakers, Founding Director

State of Indiana, U.S. Senate


LUNCHEON, BANQUET & BREAKFAST SPEAKERS

CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON, FRIDAY RABBI LEWIS J. WEISS, BENEDICTION Chaplain for Indiana University Health

CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON, FRIDAY REV. DR. DAVID HAMPTON

THE SALUTE TO VETERANS, THURSDAY IMAM DR. UMAR AL-KHATTAB, BENEDICTION

CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON, FRIDAY MINISTER DAVE ROZZELL, EMCEE

President of The Indiana Association of Muslim Imams and Chaplains Inc.

Pastor and Teacher for the Way of Yehowshu`a Fellowship and Ministries

CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON, FRIDAY TARA MORRISON, GREETER

FRIDAY NIGHT OUT NICHELLE M. HAYES MPA, MLS, GREETER

FRIDAY NIGHT OUT JOE “HOT WING” TILLMON, GREETER

FRIDAY NIGHT OUT DAVID WILLIAMS, EMCEE

ASALH ECUMENICAL BREAKFAST, SUNDAY IMAM MICHEAL SAAHIR, EMCEE

Senior Pastor of Light of the World Christian Church

Center for Black Literature & Culture (CBLC), Indianapolis Public Library

Buffalo Soldiers Historical Society

ABWH/ASALH JOINT LUNCHEON, SATURDAY FRANCILLE RUSAN WILSON, EMCEE

ABWH/ASALH JOINT LUNCHEON, SATURDAY CORDELIA LEIWS BURKS, GREETER

ASALH ANNUAL BANQUET, SATURDAY TONY LAMONT, EMCEE

National Director, Association of Black Women Historians

Vice Chair of the Indiana Democratic Party

Radio One

National Park Service (NPS)

News 8

Joseph Taylor Branch

2018 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN TIMES OF WAR

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HONORARY CONFERENCE CHAIR BRIGADIER GENERAL WAYNE BLACK

Indiana National Guard, Commanding General, 81st Troop Command Brigadier General Wayne L. Black is the Commanding General, 81st Troop Command, which consists of more than 2,100 soldiers and airmen. He is overall responsible for all Troop Command elements, including 5 separate companies, an attached Engineer Brigade, separate Engineer Battalion, Field Artillery Battalion, and CBRN Emergency Response Force Package (CERFP). General Black sets the goals and objectives for the command; Directs and supervises the long-range planning of major events and activities; Coordinates with higher headquarters to secure resources; and Directs training and logistics to achieve unit goals. He also serves as the Dual Status Commander for Joint Task Force 81 (JTF 81), when required. General Black began his military career in 1984 upon receiving an ROTC commission from The Citadel in the Field Artillery. He served 11 years on active duty and 23 years in the Indiana Army National Guard. While on active duty, his assignments included service in South Korea; Fort Lewis, Washington; Kirchgoens, Germany; and Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. During this time, he served in battery and battalion level positions. His last position on active duty was as an Operations Research Analyst. In 1996, General Black joined the Indiana Army National Guard and has served in a number of command and staff positions at the State, Division, Brigade and Battalion levels. These positions include: SGS, 38th Infantry Division; S2, 38th Division Artillery; Battalion Executive Officer, 3-139 Field Artillery; G3, Task Force Eagle (SFOR-15); CJVB, Task Force Eagle (SFOR-15); S3, 38th Division Artillery; Battalion Commander, 3-139 FA; Commander, RPAC-N (Afghanistan); G-1, JFHQ-IN; CFMO, JFHQ-IN; and Assistant Adjutant General - Army. Over the course of his military career, his deployments include service in Desert Shield and Desert Storm, Bosnia and Afghanistan. General Black’s military awards and decorations include the Bronze Star, Meritorious Service Medal, Army Commendation Medal, Army Achievement Medal, Ranger Tab, Parachutist Badge and a list of other awards. His military education includes Field Artillery Officer’s Basic and Advanced Courses, Combined Arms Services Staff School, Operations Research/Systems Analysis Course, Command and General Staff Officer’s Course, and the US Army War College. In his civilian career, General Black is a manufacturing supervisor for LSC Communications. He has worked for LSC Communications in Crawfordsville, Indiana since 1995. General Black has a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from The Citadel, a Master of Business Administration from Indiana Wesleyan University, and a master’s degree in Strategic Studies from the U.S. Army War College. General Black is married to Symea and they have three children and four grandchildren.

CARTER G. WOODSON MEDALLION BRENDA E. STEVENSON Brenda E. Stevenson is the Nickoll Family Endowed Chair and Professor of History and African American Studies at UCLA. Her areas of expertise include: African American history; Women’s history; the American South; family History; Atlantic World slavery; History and Film; and Racial/Ethnic Conflict. Her book length publications include: Life in Black and White: Family and Community in the Slave South; The Contested Murder of Latasha Harlins: Justice, Gender and the Origins of the L.A. Riots; and What is Slavery? She is the editor of The Journals of Charlotte Forten Grimke; the co-author of The Underground Railroad; and a contributing editor to The Encyclopedia of Black Women’s History. Stevenson also has authored numerous journal articles, book chapters, review essays, encyclopedia entries and blogs. She currently is completing a book on black slavery and family life. Brenda Stevenson’s other professional accolades include: a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship; the John Blassingame Award for Scholarship and Mentorship from the Southern Historical Society; the Axel Springer Fellowship from the American Academy in Berlin; the John Hope Franklin Senior Fellowship at the National Humanities Center; the Center for Advanced Studies of the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford; the James A. Rawley Book Prize from the Organization of American Historians; the Ida B. Wells Award for Bravery in Journalism; and the Gustavus Meyer Outstanding Book Prize. Her research has been supported as well by the Ford Foundation; the Andrew Mellon Foundation; the American Association of University Women; the UC Chancellor’s Office (Berkeley); the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities; and the Smithsonian Institution. Stevenson also is the recipient of the 2014 UCLA Gold Shield Faculty Award for outstanding teaching, scholarship and service; a recipient of the UCLA Academic Advancement Program 40th Anniversary Faculty Recognition Award; a recipient of a Mentorship Award at the Cross-Generational Dialogues in Black Women’s History Symposium; and has been chosen as the William Andrews Clark Professor for the 2019-2020 academic year at UCLA. Professor Stevenson is the past Chair of the Department of History and the Interdepartmental Program in African American Studies, both at UCLA. She is a Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians; a member of the editorial boards of The Journal of Black Studies, Journal of the Civil War Era and the journal Women, Gender and Families of Color. Professor Stevenson’s expertise often is heard on NPR affiliates, and is featured in documentaries and other nationally syndicated radio and TV informational programs.

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103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN


EXECUTIVE COUNCIL AWARD FOR SPECIAL RECOGNITION MONROE LITTLE A native of Saint Louis, Missouri, Monroe Little is Associate Professor of Africana Studies and History, Emeritus, at Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, where he taught African American history as well as Black Studies courses and served as Director of IUPUI’s Africana Studies Program for over thirty years. He received his B. A. from Denison University (Summa Cum Laude) and his Ph. D. from Princeton University. Professor Little is the recipient of numerous honors and awards, including a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship in Afro-American Studies, a Lilly Foundation Faculty Grant, “Founding Fathers” Award from the 100 Black Men of Indianapolis, the IUPUI “Sprit of Philanthropy” Award, Africana Studies “Trailblazer” Award, “Impact” Award, “Joseph Taylor Diversity” Award, Black Student Union’s “Keeper of the Dream” Award, and the “Director’s” Award” from the Center for Leadership Development, to name a few. He is the author of various scholarly articles in the Journal of African American History, Harvard Educational Review and Ohio Valley History. He authored an article on the African American military experience in Germany from World War I to the Cold War in Crosscurrents: African Americans, Africa and Germany in the Modern World, (eds.) D. McBride, L. Hopkins and C. Blackshire-Belay and another on the personal diary of Dr. Joseph T. Taylor’s World War II military service in The Struggle for Equality: Essays on Sectional Conflict, the Civil War and the Long Reconstruction, (eds.) V. Burton, J. Podair and J. L. Weber. He is editor of The State of Black Indianapolis, the first and, to date, only attempt at a comprehensive study of the social, economic and political status of the Indianapolis African American community, published by the Indianapolis Urban League. Professor Little is a past member of ASALH’s Membership Committee, Executive Council and chairperson of its Awards Committee. He is currently chairperson of ASALH’s Local Arrangements Committee and president of ASALH’s Joseph T. Taylor Branch in Indianapolis, Indiana.

MIRLENE PITRE Merline Pitre, a life member of ASALH is a professor of history, former dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Behavioral Sciences at Texas Southern University and former President of the Texas State Historical Association. She received the B.S. in French from Southern University, the M.A. in French from Atlanta University and the M.A. and Ph.D. in history from Temple University. She has published a number of articles in scholarly journals and also has published five books: (1) Through Many Dangers, Toils and Snares: This book was used for a traveling exhibit on black legislators by the State Preservation Board and was also used to help erect a statue to the 19th Century Black Legislators of Texas in the State Cemetery; (2) In Struggle against Jim Crow: Lulu B. White and the NAACP, 1900-1957, reissued in 2010; (3) Black Women in Texas History (with Bruce Glasrud); (4) Black Southern Women in the Civil Rights Movement (with Bruce Glasrud); both works were winners of the Liz Carpenter Award for the best book on women history for 2008 and 2014 respectively; and (5) her most recent work is Born to Serve: A History of Texas Southern University (May 2018). Pitre’s article, “A Journey Through History” is featured in Telling Histories: Black Women Historians in the Ivory Tower (University of North Carolina Press). She is one of twenty five black female historians featured in the above who discuss the challenges, struggle and opportunities of becoming an historian. Pitre currently serves as the Managing Editor of the African American Handbook of Texas, an online encyclopedia with over 850 entries. Over the years, Pitre has received a number of accolades. In 2009, she was named a Fellow of the Texas State Historical Association and in March 2011, she became the first African American President of the Texas State Historical Association, This means that she is one of more two hundred other distinguished historians of Texas who has received this honor since the organization was established in 1897. In 2013, she was the recipient of the Lorraine Williams Leadership Award given by the Association of Black Women Historians. The next year, she was named a Fellow of the East Texas Historical Association In 2014, she won the Texas Southern University Presidential Achievement Medal for her work in teaching, research and community service. In November 2016, she was named as a History Maker. The History Makers organization collects oral interviews of outstanding African Americans, and is committed to preserving, developing and providing easy access to an internationally recognized archival collection of thousands of African Americans. During the course of her career, Pitre has been active in a number of professional organizations, not the least of which is the Association for the Study of African American Life and History. As a member of ASALH, she had missed only three annual meetings in forty years and has served on the following committees, program, membership and local arrangement, and has presented papers and served as commentators. Also, Pitre is a former member of the Texas Council for the Humanities, past president the of the Southern Conference on African American Studies, a former member of the Nominating Board of the Organization of American Historians and former Chair of the Advisory Committee of the Magazine of History. Pitre is active in the following organizations: The Association for the Study of African American Life and History, The Southern Historical Association, The Organization of American Historians, the Association of Black Female Historians, The Texas State Historical Association, the East Texas Historical Association, and the Southern Conference on African American Studies.

2018 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN TIMES OF WAR

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MARY MCLEOD BETHUNE SERVICE AWARD RUTH HODGE Ruth E. Hodge is a native of Virginia and moved to Williamsport, Pa. in 1953. In 1954, she graduated from Williamsport Area High School and from Lycoming College in Williamsport receiving a B.S. degree in Business Administration in 1958. Ruth married Marcus L. Hodge in 1959 moving to Carlisle, Pa. In 1960, Ruth began employment at Carlisle Barracks, as a Clerk Stenographer and in 1972 she received a Masters’ Degree in Library Science from Shippensburg University. After 33 years, in 1993 she retired as a Librarian with the Federal Government. That same year Ruth was selected as the first African American Archivist at the Pennsylvania State Archives. She published Guide to African American Resources at the Pennsylvania State Archives, in 2000. She has organized and participated in the annual Pennsylvania Black History Conferences. Unfortunately, due to cornea eye surgery requiring four years to heal, Ruth resigned from her position in 2001. Mrs. Hodge has had a burning desire to research African American history most of her life. She joined the Association of the Study for African American Life and History in 1975. As a member she studies, researches, presents, plans and organizes conferences, on the many aspects of African American history. In 2004, Mrs. Hodge proposed to the Carlisle Area School Board renaming the West Building of the Carlisle Educational Center to the “Emma T. McGowan Building” in honor of Mrs. Emma Thompson McGowan, one of the first African American teachers in Carlisle. Mrs. McGowan taught from 1896-1901 and 1918-1943. After approval of the proposal the “Emma T. McGowan Building” was dedicated on April 24, 2005. It is the first and only public building named for an African American in Carlisle. Mrs. Hodge is a member of the Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church, Carlisle, Pa., and serves as Organist and Choir Director, Librarian, Church Historian, a Deaconess, a Missionary, a member of the Women’s Ministry and the Tuesday Street Ministry. She is a Board Member of the Lord’s Day Alliance, Pennsylvania State Sunday Association, Cumberland County Sunday Association and the Carlisle District Sunday Association. Mrs. Hodge has also served as the Historian for the Central Baptist Association.

DR. DOROTHY PORTER WESLEY AWARD W. PAUL COATES RECIPIENT OF THE FIRST DR. DOROTHY PORTER WESLEY AWARD Our 2018 and first recipient of the Dr. Dorothy Porter Wesley Award is Mr. W. Paul Coates. He is the founder and director of Black Classic Press, which specializes in republishing obscure and significant works by and about people of African descent, and Black Classic Press Digital Printing, which produces books and documents using digital print technology. BCP Digital Printing is the only African-American owned book printing company in the United States. He is co-editor of Black Bibliophiles and Collectors: Preservers of Black History. This volume of edited papers resulted from the Black Bibliophiles and Collectors conference Coates and colleagues organized at Howard University in 1983. The conference remains a singular event, bringing together book lovers, scholars, and information professionals in acknowledgement of the active and key role bibliophiles and collectors assumed in documenting the Black past and the research of the African diaspora as well as building collections to support the libraries and special collections; and research of our institutions of higher education.

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103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN


PAUL COATES

For forty years Paul Coates and the Black Classic Press have nursed the Black historical cannon towards truth and healing. In the tireless spirit of Woodson’s Association, BCP has been consistent in amplifying the voices of truth tellers. He has achieved the vision he so eloquently articulated on February 22, 1983 of reviving and circulating “history which chronicles the accomplishments and tenacity of Black men and women and the collective impact the Black mass has had on the world.” The ASALH family salutes Paul Coates and BCP for keeping the memories, intellectual gifts, political convictions, and indignations of our guardian ancestors within our reach. We know of and read J.A. Rogers because of you. By the tireless labor of the Black Classic Press,Walter Mosley, John Henrik Clarke, Amiri Baraka’s energies fill us all. Join BCP in keeping the flame of truth by visiting their website at www.blackclassicbooks.com.


PAST AWARD RECIPIENTS CARTER G. WOODSON SCHOLARS MEDALLION 1993 Benjamin A. Quarles 1994 John Hope Franklin 1995 Dorothy Porter Wesley John Henrik Clarke 1997 Adelaide M. Cromwell 1998 Edgar Toppin 1999 Arvarh E. Strickland 2000 Mary Frances Berry Edna Chappell McKenzie 2001 Bettye Collier-Thomas Darlene Clark Hine 2002 V.P. Franklin 2003 Lerone Bennett, Jr. Robert Harris 2004 Thomas Battle Nell Painter 2005 Walter Hill Monroe Fordham 2006 Sylvia Jacobs 2007 Joseph Harris 2008 Rosalyn Terborg-Penn Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham 2009 Sharon Harley 2010 Juliet Walker

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2011 Vincent Harding 2012 Collin Palmer 2013 Dr. Deborah Gray White 2014 Gerald Horne 2015 David Levering Lewis 2016 Wilma King 2017 William Seraile

LIVING LEGACY AWARD RECIPIENTS 2012 Denise Rolark Barnes Brigadier General Barbaranette T. Bolden Beverly Bond Roslyn Brock Lavern Chatman Brown Peggy Cooper Cafritz Ambassador Suzan Johnson Cook Marion Wright Edelman Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham Allison Hill JC Hayward Mae Jemison Bishop Vashtai McKenzie Eleanor Holmes Norton Bernice Johnson Reagon Julieanna Richardson Paula Whetsel-Ribeau Tracey Web Lynn Whitfield 2013 Mary Frances Berry, PhD Camille Billops Roslyn M. Brock Pauletta Brown Bracy, PhD Minnijean Brown Trickey Queen Quet Marquetta L. Goodwine Eloise Greenfield Antoinette Harrell Olivia Hooker, PhD Lyn Hughes, EdD

Dorothy Jones Cheryl L. Knox Latoya Lucas Naomi Long Madgett Margaret Moore, PhD Mary Moultrie Newatha Myers Consolee Nishimwe Florence Tate Najmah Thomas, PhD Camilla P. Thompson 2014 Dr. Charlene M. Dukes The Honorable Patsy Jo Hilliard Bell Hooks Freeman A. Hrabowski, III Velma Lois Jones Wyman O. Jones, Sr Joyce Ladner Dr. LaSalle D. Leffall, Jr Reginald L. Weaver Raymond A. Winbush 2015 Arnold L. Mitchem Reginald Van Lee Myron A. Gray Rev. Dr. Jonathan L. Weaver Robert G. Stanton The Honorable James E. Clyburn The W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) The Honorable James E. Clyburn 2016 Ingrid Saunders Jones Charles Bibbs 2017 Bettye Collier-Thomas Bryan Stevenson

MARY MCLEOD BETHUNE SERVICE AWARD 1995 Jeanette L. Cascone 1996 Edgar Toppin 1997 Sylvia M. Jacobs

103RD ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE | OCTOBER 3-7, 2018 | INDIANAPOLIS, IN

1998 Roland C. McConnell 1999 Wayland McClellan 2000 Alton Parker Hornsby 2001 Shirley Kilpatrick 2002 Madlyn Calbert Rev. William E. Calbert 2003 Adelaide Cromwell 2004 Rev. Richard T. Adams 2005 Edna McKenzie Elmer Geathers 2006 Bettye Gardner Elizabeth Clark-Lewis 2007 Paul Edwards Lillie Edwards 2008 Barbara Walker Dolores Nehemiah 2009 Bob Hayden 2010 Florence Radcliffe 2011 Daryl Michael Scott 2012 Janet Sims-Wood 2014 Barbara Spencer Dunn 2016 La Vonna I. Neal Lois L. Watson


PAST AWARD RECIPIENTS EXECUTIVE COUNCIL AWARD FOR SPECIAL RECOGNITION 2008 John H. Bracey, Jr. Gloria Harper Dickinson James Turner Laura Ann Wilkinson Farmers Insurance Group Our Authors Study Club, Inc. 2009 Vincent de Forest Faye McClure 2010 James Johnson Rev. Kenneth Hammond Everett B. Ward Dorothy Redford Rev. David Forbes Elsie Scott Marvin Pittman Charlie Nelms Ethel Jones Bynum

Charles C. Brewer Madlyn Calbert Rev. William Calbert Vincent deForest Cora Dixon Elmer D. Geathers James “Buddy” Griggsby, III Frederick J. Laney Robert Stanton 2011 Howard Dodson Thomas C. Battle Carl M. Dunn Robert L. Harris 2012 Constance Tate 2013 Addie Richburg Frank Smith Charles “Alan” Spears 2014 David C. Driskell

2015 Sheila Flemming-Hunter Daryl Michael Scott 2016 Dorothy F. Bailey Louis Hicks

JOHN HOPE FRANKLIN LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD 2015 John Lewis

RAYS OF LIGHT Charles F. Bolden, Jr. Anthony Browder Lonnie G. Bunch, Ph.D. W. Paul Coates Johnnetta B. Cole John W. Franklin Ayanna Gregory Dick Gregory*

Federal Government Employees, You can help the Association for the Study of African American Life and History continue its work to research, preserve and promote Black history and culture. When you give a donation to ASALH through payroll deduction in the 2019 Combined Federal Campaign, you invest in an organization that is devoted to research, education and the status of culture and history of people of African descent. Now in its centennial year, ASALH, the founders of Black History Month, is invigorated to begin its second century of service but we need your help.

Donate to ASALH - CFC #12541.

Asa. G Hilliard III* The Honorable Patsy Jo Hilliard Freeman A. Hrabowski, III Catherine L. Hughes Leonard Jeffries Harriett G. Jenkins* Senator Edward Kennedy, Sr.* James W. Loewen Joe Madison Bette McLeod Robert Moses The Honorable Eleanor Holmes Norton Rodney H. Orr Jonathan Pourzal Rep. Louis Stokes* Shelley Stokes-Hammond Mattie I. Taylor Davita Vance-Cooks Frances Cress Wesling* *Deceased





PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY TRUTH BRANCH OF ASALH CONGRATULATES ASALH ON THE OCCASION OF ITS 103RD ANNUAL CONFERENCE & MEETING CELEBRATING KIAMSHA’S 18TH YEAR FACILITATING ASALH’S D ANNUAL YOUTH DAY! DR. CARTER GODWIN WOODSON’S LEGACY LIVES ON! DOROTHY F. BAILEY, PRESIDENT ALLEN JACKSON, TREASURER



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Join us at ASALH for a reception and book signing with

SANDRA M. BOLZENIUS author of

Glory in Their Spirit: How Four Black Women Took On the Army during World War II A volume in the series Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 3:00–4:00 p.m. University of Illinois Press booths 5 & 6 Refreshments will be served

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AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES from TEMPLE UNIVERSITY PRESS

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Mediating America

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Black and Irish Press and the Struggle for Citizenship, 1870–1914 BRIAN SHOTT Available January

An Eisenhower Foundation Book

Seeking book proposals for Black Male Studies: A Series Exploring the Paradoxes of Racially Subjugated Males TOMMY J. CURRY, series editor, Professor of Philosophy and Africana Studies at Texas A&M University

Books published in this series would strive to create empirically informed theories of Black men and boys that can motivate our understanding of Black males beyond problem and pathology. The series also welcomes innovative comparative and international projects drawing parallels between Black males and the experiences of other racialized males affected by deportation, genocide, poverty, and regional conflict and war. Prospective authors should contact series editor Dr. Tommy J. Curry, tjcurry@tamu.edu, to discuss their work in progress for inclusion in the series. Online 20% discount

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The AfricAn AmericAn episcopAl hisToricAl collecTion A joint project of Virginia Theological Seminary and the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church

Preserving the legacy of black Episcopalians in personal papers, parish histories, organizational records, photographs, videos, and publications

GRANT PROGRAM

Travel reimbursement grants are available to individuals who would like to use the AAEHC for research. Faculty, graduate students, undergraduates, independent researchers, and Episcopal clergy and laypersons are encouraged to apply. Funds may be used for transportation, meals, lodging, photocopying, and other research costs. A brief sampling of the collection’s strengths: • • • • • • • • • •

The Afro-Anglican conferences The histories of black Episcopal parishes Networking and mentorship among black clergy The history of the Union of Black Episcopalians The history of the Conference of Church Workers Among Colored People The history of the Bishop Payne Divinity School that educated African Americans for the priesthood during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries The editing of the Lift Every Voice and Sing hymnal The work of artist Allan Rohan Crite The Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity The contributions of various individuals to the Episcopal Church, such as The Rt. Rev. John Thomas Walker, The Rt. Rev. Walter Decoster Dennis, Ms. Verna Dozier, The Rev. Canon Harold T. Lewis, The Rev. Canon Thomas W. S. Logan, Sr., and Canon Diane Porter.

For more information, please visit www.vts.edu/aaehc or email askaaehc@vts.edu.

To make a tax-deductible financial contribution, visit www.vts.edu/give. The AAEHC is a joint project of the Virginia Theological Seminary and the Historical Society of the Episcopal Church. It is curated in the seminary’s Bishop Payne Library.






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A TRIBUTE TO HARI JONES 1958-2018 A brilliant and prolific voice was silenced when Hari Jones passed away in Washington D.C. on June 22, 2018. Jones was a national treasure whose body of work enriched the lives of those both in the private and public sectors. Born November 1, 1958 in Pauls Valley, OK., Jones was a precocious and exceptionally bright child. A natural and accomplished athlete, he ran track, wrestled and played football both in middle and high school. He graduated from Pauls Valley High School in 1976, where soon after he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. He successfully served a total of 21 years within the Marine Corp reaching the ranks of Staff Sergeant and ultimately Captain prior to his retirement. While serving in the military, he also earned a Bachelor’s Degree from the University of Oklahoma. His passion to educate people on the vital roles African Americans assumed during the Civil War reverberated throughout the academia and media worlds. Jones’ extensive resume garnered him the respect and attention he acquired as well as a sought after authority figure and expert on African American Civil War history. He regularly presented at ASALH conference and always when the themes related to the civil war and African American in Times of War He served as Assistant Director and Curator at the African American Civil War Freedom Foundation and Museum in Washington, D.C. Served on the Board of Directors of the National Civil War Museum in Harrisburg, PA Prolific and award-winning lecturer having earned national attention and recognition for his lecture series entitled: “The Lost Story” Content developer for the National Park Service (NPS) Museum at the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site in Tuskegee, AL as well as content developer for the American Civil War Center exhibit: “Take Our Stand” Content adviser for the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) exhibit: “Discovering the Civil War” In addition to Jones’ impressive career as a history consultant and content developer/adviser, he appeared in over 50 television programs and documentaries in the likes of: CSPAN, FOX News, PBS, American Heroes Channel, History Channel, Smithsonian Channel along with appearances on many other national outlets. Some of his most notable television appearances entailed: “Who Do You Think You Are?” (episode featuring actress and singer, Vanessa Williams) “Legends and Lies” (Executive Producer- Bill O’Reilly) “The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross,” hosted by Henry Louis Gates (Peabody Award) His ultimate goal was to enlighten, educate, and elevate the minds of those whose path God afforded him to cross. His legacy of telling the important untold stories about our American History was a gift many of us were blessed to sit at a table, auditorium or in our living rooms to hear; it is our hope through your generosity that generations to come can also have that same opportunity to hear one of the greatest voices of our time. “And in the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years.” —Abraham Lincoln Jones certainly lived a life that counted and with your help we can continue to make it count for future generations.

EXCERPTS FROM HARIJONES.COM



TOWERING FREEDOM FIGHTER FOR CIVIL RIGHTS T. R. M. HOWARD Doctor, Entrepreneur, Civil Rights Leader

By David T. Beito and Linda Royster Beito Foreword by Jerry W. Mitchell T.R.M. Howard tells the remarkable story of one of the early leaders of the Civil Rights Movement. A renaissance man, T.R.M. Howard (1908-1976) was a respected surgeon, key black community leader, and successful businessman. In the midst of Jim Crow, Howard founded hospitals and black community organizations, organized civil rights rallies and boycotts, championed black enterprise, mentored Medgar Evers and Jesse Jackson, fought the Ku Klux Klan, and helped lead the fight for justice for Emmett Till and others. 348 Pages | 6 X 9 Inches | Index | Hardcover: $34.95 | Paperback: $19.95

“T.R.M. Howard was a towering freedom fighter. Too often forgotten! The powerful and insightful book, T.R.M. Howard, corrects the historical record and keeps his precious memory fresh for us!” —Cornel R. West, Professor of the Practice of Public Philosophy, Harvard Divinity School; Class of 1943 University of Professor Emeritus, Center for African American Studies, Princeton University “Dr. Howard was a history maker, and this book brings him to life as a man of courage whose actions and views on civil rights shaped American history.” —Juan A. Williams, author, Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954–1965 “T.R.M. Howard's wonderfully told story about an important personality sadly unknown to most students of the Civil Rights Movement is a more than welcome corrective. Dr. Howard's life and accomplishments need to be better known!” —Julian Bond, late Chairman, NAACP “T.R.M. Howard fills a gap. Too often today we conflate the civil rights movement with the legend of Martin Luther King, Jr. In fact there were countless others who fought for racial justice within an indifferent—and often hostile—society. This is the richly detailed story of one such man. T.R.M. Howard, in both his heroism and his human contradictions, is a human face on America's greatest freedom movement. And, quite beyond its historical importance, this book is a gripping and moving read.” —Shelby Steele, author, The Content of Our Character and A Dream Deferred

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93RD ANNUAL BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON

FEBRUARY 16, 2019 | THE WASHINGTON RENAISSANCE HOTEL THE 2019 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK MIGRATIONS W W W.A S A L H.O R G #A S A L H #B L A C KH I STO RYL U N C H E O N #C A RTE R G W O O D S O N


93RD ANNUAL BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON

SAVE THE DATE

Featured Authors Event SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2019 10 A.M. - NOON WASHINGTON RENAISSANCE HOTEL 999 9TH STREET NW WASHINGTON, D.C. THE 2019 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK MIGRATIONS FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO REGISTER FOR THIS EVENT, GO TO ASALH.ORG/LUNCHEON

W W W.A S A L H.O R G #A S A L H #B L A C KH I STO RYL U N C H E O N #C A RTE R G W O O D S O N


SAVE THE DATE

The Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH®) was founded in 1915 by Dr. Carter Godwin Woodson, the recognized “father” of Black History. The mission is to promote, research, preserve, interpret, and disseminate information about Black life, history, and culture to the global community.


2019 CALL FOR PAPERS 2019 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK MIGRATION 104TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE OCTOBER 2 – 6, 2019 EMBASSY SUITES BY HILTON IN NORTH CHARLESTON, SC. The 2019 ASALH Academic Program Committee invites proposals for individual papers, entire sessions, presentations, performances, films, round-tables, workshops, conversations, or alternative formats dealing with the 2019 theme, “Black Migrations.” ASALH’s 2019 theme Black Migrations emphasizes the movement of people of African descent to new destinations and subsequently to new social realities. While inclusive of earlier centuries, this theme focuses especially on the twentieth century through today. Beginning in the early decades of the twentieth century, African American migration patterns included relocation from southern farms to southern cities; from the South to the Northeast, Midwest, and West; from the Caribbean to US cities as well as to migrant labor farms; and the emigration of noted African Americans to Africa and to European cities, such as Paris and London, after the end of World War I and World War II. Such migrations resulted in a more diverse and stratified interracial and intra-racial urban population amid a changing social milieu, such as the rise of the Garvey movement in New York, Detroit, and New Orleans; the emergence of both black industrial workers and black entrepreneurs; the growing number and variety of urban churches and new religions; new music forms like ragtime, blues, and jazz; white backlash as in the Red Summer of 1919; the blossoming of visual and literary arts, as in New York, Washington, D.C., Chicago, and Paris in the 1910s and 1920s. The theme Black Migrations equally lends itself to the exploration of the century’s later decades from spatial and social perspectives, with attention to “new” African Americans because of the burgeoning African and Caribbean population in the US; Northern African Americans’ return to the South; racial suburbanization; inner-city hyperghettoization; health and environment; civil rights and protest activism; electoral politics; mass incarceration; and dynamic cultural production. The Program Committee seeks a diverse slate of presenters representing a variety of personal and institutional backgrounds, perspectives, and voices. We are interested in proposals that probe the theme within the traditional fields of economic, political, diplomatic, intellectual, and cultural history; the established fields of urban, race, ethnic, labor, and women’s/gender history as well as southern, Appalachian, and western history; and the rapidly expanding fields of sexuality, LBGT, and queer history; environmental and public history; African American intellectual history; carceral state studies; and transnational and global studies across all fields, topics, and thematic emphases. We seek to foster a culture of inclusion in the ASALH program and encourage submissions from anyone who is interested in presenting, including students, new professionals, first-time presenters, and those from allied professions. We seek to foster a culture of inclusion in the ASALH program and encourage submissions from anyone who is interested in presenting, including students, new professionals, first-time presenters, and those from allied professions. We encourage proposals focusing on research, teaching, and public education that broadly addresses our theme and related aspects of the global Black experience as creatively as possible. Our theme is the opening of opportunities for scholars working across a variety of temporal, geographical, thematic, and topical areas in Black history, life and culture. We are interested in proposals that probe the theme and related topics within the fields of economic, political, diplomatic, intellectual, and cultural history; the fields of urban, rural, race, ethnic, labor, and women’s/gender history; the rapidly expanding fields of sexuality, LBGTQ, and queer history; environmental and public history; and cultural studies including literarure and the visual and performing arts. DEADLINES FOR SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS ARE AS FOLLOWS:

Early Bird submission deadline for individual papers and organized panels is April 1st. After this date, all individual and panel submissions will be accepted until the deadline of April 30th. All proposals must be submitted electronically to ASALH through the All Academic online system. For complete panels submitted by April 1st, day and time preferences can be requested and will be granted on the basis of first come, first served. Please refer to the ASALH website for Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for submission requirements for the various kinds of sessions. Audio\Visual: Only panel proposal submitters will receive complimentary audio/visual equipment on a first-come, first-served basis. For proposals for the Film Festival and for the Film Media Sessions, please refer to the ASALH website for further information and submission requirements. For proposals for Poster Sessions, please refer to the ASALH website for further information and submission requirements.

2018 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN TIMES OF WAR

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ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY 104th Annual ASALH Conference • October 2-6, 2019 Embassy Suites by Hilton in North Charleston, SC 2019 Black History Theme: Black Migration

REGISTRATION DEADLINE: July 31, 2019

AUTHORS BOOK SIGNING

Completed Applications Require ALL of the Following: 1. Author must be a member of ASALH 2. A completed Request Form (with additional pages if necessary). 3. The membership fee and the additional processing fee of $50.00 are non-refundable. 4. A signed copy of the book(s) intended for sale at the Book-Signing Event. 5. All steps must be completed in order for your application to be processed.

October 3, 2019 6:00 pm

AUTHOR INFORMATION WILL BE PRINTED EXACTLY AS PROVIDED Prefix_____ First________________________________________________ M.I.____ Last __________________________________________________ Suffix ______ Name of author as it appears on book _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Address _________________________________________________________ City____________________________________ State__________ Zip ______________ Day (

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Email _____________________________________________________________________ Website_________________________________________________________ Facebook _____________________________________________________________ Twitter _____________________________________________________________ Authors or their representatives are responsible for procuring, shipping and selling books for the event. ASALH is not responsible for any business transactions related to the sales of the books. ASALH reserves the right to reject books that are contrary to its scholarly mission and tradition. No books will not be returned. Registration includes one-half of an eight-foot table. Registration does not include conference fees. Additional instructions will be sent to the email address that appears above. I also agree to the use of my image and/or likeness by ASALH to promote the Author Signing Event. I, (please print) __________________________________________________________________________________ , agree to the terms as outline in this form. Signature ____________________________________________________________________________________ Date _______________________________________

BOOK INFORMATION

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ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY 104th Annual ASALH Conference • October 2-6, 2019 Embassy Suites by Hilton in North Charleston, SC 2019 Black History Theme: Black Migration

EXHIBITORS

EXHIBITOR AND ADVERTISER REGISTRATION FORM EXHIBIT HALL HOURS: Thursday 12 noon - 9:00 p.m., Friday 8 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. EXHIBIT SPACE ASSIGNMENTS: Spaces Are Filled In Order Of Receipt Of Completed Applications And Full Payment Early Bird Payment received before May 31, 2019

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THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY ®

Save The Date 105TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE SEPTEMBER 23 - 27, 2020

Montgomery, Alabama 2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

RENAISSANCE MONTGOMERY HOTEL & SPA AT THE CONVENTION CENTER VISIT WWW.ASALH.ORG OR CALL 202.238.5910 FOR MORE INFORMATION


2017 ASALH BRANCH AWARDS BR ANCHES WHO HAVE MADE A $600 CONTRIBUTION OR MORE Roland McConnell ($1,900) Manasota ($1,000)

Memphis ($600)

Prince George’s Truth ($1,000)

Our Authors Study Club ($600)

Bronx ($600)

Paul Laurence Dunbar ($600)

Bethel Dukes Branch ($600)

Samuel L. Banks ($600)

Carter G. Woodson ($600)

Charleston ($600)

Hampton Roads ($600)

Greater Kansas City Black History

Martha’s Vineyard ($600)

Study Group ($600)

BR ANCH WITH LARGEST NUMBER OF MEMBERS Manasota (228)

BR ANCH WITH LARGEST NUMBER OF LIFE MEMBERS Chicago (22)

THE LARGEST NUMBER OF SUSTAINING LIFE MEMBERS Roland McConnell (2)

LARGEST NUMBER OF INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS Dorothy Turner Johnson (7)

OUTSTANDING BR ANCH PROGR AMS AWARD Bethel Dukes

Memphis

C. Delores Tucker

Paul Laurence Dunbar

Martha’s Vineyard

OUTSTANDING YOUTH PROGR AMMING AWARD Hampton Roads

Louisa

Martha’s Vineyard

Margaret and Robert Garner

OUTSTANDING COLLABOR ATIVE PROGR AMMING AWARD Roland McConnell

Bronx

Samuel Banks

Manhattan

Julian


ASALH PRESS The Mis-Education of the Negro By Carter G. Woodson Special rate available for bulk orders.

Woodson’s Appeal In 1921, five years before he established Negro History Week, Carter G. Woodson produced a manuscript on race relations that the world has never before seen. We want to share it with you and a select number of others who support our efforts to keep Woodson’s legacy of African American history alive.

Message in the Music Edited by Derrick P. Alridge, James B. Stewart, and V.P. Franklin Message in the Music brings together wide-ranging, critical, and detailed essays that examine Hip Hop as one of the most influential cultural phenomena of the past half-century.

The Negro in Sports Edwin Bancroft Henderson “Henderson’s book is a true forerunner of a race and gender perspective in American sports history.”

- Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University

The History of Chi Eta Phi Sorority, Volume I: 1932-1967 Volume II: 1968-1997

The History of the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World: 1896-1954

Reflections on Carter G. Woodson with Drs. John Hope Franklin and Adelaide M. Cromwell

Visit www.asalh.org/shop for our complete list of books

For more information contact info@asalh.net or call 201-238-5910







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