THE 2021 BLACK HISTORY THEME
THE BLACK FAMILY: Representation, Identity, and Diversity
ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY®
106TH ANNUAL MEETING & VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES
SEPTEMBER 14-30, 2021
THE 400 YEARS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COMMISSION
I FEAR FOR MY LIFE: THEY THAT MOURN
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 | 12:30-1:20 P.M. EST
HANNIBAL B. JOHNSON, ESQ. MODERATOR
DR. REX M. ELLIS PANELIST
DR. CHENELLE JONES PANELIST
DR. CHERYL T. GRILLS PANELIST
Attorney and Author
Chair 400 Years of African-American History Commission
Assistant Dean Franklin University
Director, Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts
Columbus, Ohio
Psychology Applied Research Center
400 Years of African-American History Commission
Williamsburg, Virginia
ADVERTISEMENT- 4 0 0TH COMMISSION FLYER Loyola Marymount University
1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Commission Tulsa, Oklahoma
Los Angeles, California
Law enforcement (or the lack thereof) left the enslaved wholly unprotected. State-sanctioned post-emancipation systems of anti-Blackness shackled the mind and exploited the body. Jim Crow-era public officials acquiesced in levels of physical brutality too heinous for words. Ongoing acts, benign and malignant, implicit and explicit, continue to deny, dismiss, and dishonor our humanity. We mourn. We hear you. We hear the mournful cries of the beleaguered and the broken, often through intermediaries—families, friends, and activists; the voices that seek to arouse America from her social justice slumber. We hear a faint, fading, yet formidable chorus punctuating our all-toocomfortable silence with, “I fear for my life!” We hear you. We are survivors of oppression, some of which still lingers. The Black family finds itself vulnerable on many fronts, and prominently in the criminal justice arena. Studies show that Black people, and especially Black men, represent heightened threats, and therefore, ready targets, for some in law enforcement. The Black family—the whole Black community—must be on high alert. The criminalization of Black bodies leads all too often to elimination, and justice is seldom to be found. Not surprisingly, “I fear for my life” has become a constant refrain for Black Americans who encounter law enforcement officers. How could it be otherwise? That same phrase, used in the past tense, “I feared for my life,” is too often exploited by law enforcement officers as justification for the unjustifiable: the needless taking of a life. Something is amiss. We now turn our mourning and hearing into doing. In this session, the 400 Years of African-American History Commission and its guest scholars will explore this fear paradox. Whom should we fear and why? How do we take fear out of the equation? What must we do to perfect our union?
400 Years of African American History Commission c/o National Alliance of Faith and Justice | P.O. Box 77075 | Washington, DC 20013 www.400yaahc.gov | office@400yaahc.gov | (202) 661-3521
Header Text Goes Here
September 14, 2021 Dear Conference Participants: Welcome to the 106th Annual Meeting and Conference of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History! Our national conference, which is co-hosted by the coalition of ASALH’s Florida branches, focuses on the 2021 theme—The Black Family: Representation, Identity, and Diversity. I invite you, wherever you are in the world on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday between September 14th and 30th, to fully partake of the featured sessions, speakers, workshops, exhibits, films, awards, and so much more. Like last year, we will experience everything in a virtual way. And together we will be mindful of the continuing COVID pandemic that has transformed the lives of not only Black families but the entire family of humanity. In this sixth and last year of my presidency of ASALH, I am excited to showcase a program that provides the opportunity to reflect upon the meaning of “familial” life in all its many iterations among African Americans in the past and present. Sessions will explore our historic experiences as a people, whose families reveal a wondrous diversity, treasures of artistic creativity, and tireless perseverance in the face of racial discrimination. We will see and listen to brilliant scholars, fascinating community leaders, health policy experts, the descendants of some of Black History’s greatest heroes, prominent church leaders, gifted filmmakers, and award-winning music and television celebrities. Their words will weave a rich and fluid tapestry of family identities. And together we will be mindful that we form both the many and the one, who can say: “We are all the Black Family.” The ASALH leadership promises you an illuminating, fulfilling, and inspiring 106th conference. This is possible because of the long hours, weeks, and months of service and preparation by the chairs, co-chairs, and members of various committees: Academic Program Committee; National Conference Oversight Committee, Development Committee; ASALH TV Committee and videographer; Film Festival Committee, and the Marketing and PR/ Social Media Committee. I want to express a special word of appreciation to the coalition of Florida Branches for your devoted support, and my heartfelt “thank you” to the entire ASALH staff. Finally, on behalf of all the officers and the Executive Council, I extend my sincere gratitude to the individual donors, corporate sponsors, and members of the Host Committee. Your generosity makes possible the ability of ASALH to fulfill with confidence year after year its mission of bringing knowledge of the strivings and historical contributions of persons of African descent to the United States and the world. Sincerely,
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham ASALH National President
THE BLACK FAMILY:
United by History, Restored by Storytelling
COMING TO
FALL 2021
In collaboration with Archival Alchemy® sponsored by New York Life.
Explore your unique African American heritage and family history on ASALH-TV! This national program aims to demonstrate how oral storytelling, genealogy, and familial archiving can serve as a return and a way forward. The Black Family: United by History, Restored by Storytelling will include pre-recorded workshops and Q&A sessions, as well as panel discussions. This program highlights the legacy of Black family reunions by encouraging families of all backgrounds to build and renew their own familial traditions and stories. Be sure to subscribe to ASALH-TV on YouTube. Visit www.asalh.org/family-history for more info on this project!
AssociAtion for the study of AfricAn AmericAn Life and History®
NATIONAL PARKS CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION
IT’S A FAMILY AFFAIR: THE BLACK FAMILY AND THE
CE TER A FINANCIAL /PRUDENTIAL PARTNER CORPOR ATE FIGHT FORAD CIVIL RIGHTS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2021 | 4:00-6:00 P.M. EST
ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT -NATIONAL PARK CONSERVATION A SSOCIATION
ALAN SPEARS, MODERATOR National Park Service
PHILIP HOWARD Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail
FREDRIKA NEWTON
Legacy of Huey P. Newton
MARVEL PARKER Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail
REENA EVERS-EVERETTE
Medgar & Myrlie Evers Institute
NATIONAL PARKS CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION 777 6th Street, NW, Suite 700 | Washington, DC 20001-3723 Main phone: 202.223.6722 | Toll free: 800.628.7275 Email: npca@npca.org | Web: npca.org
ABOUT A SALH Established on September 9, 1915 by Dr. Carter G. Woodson, we are the Founders of Black History Month and carry forth the work of our founder, the Father of Black History. We continue his legacy of speaking a fundamental truth to the world–that Africans and peoples of African descent are makers of history and co-workers in what W. E. B. Du Bois called, “The Kingdom of Culture.” ASALH’s mission is to create and disseminate knowledge about Black History, to be, in short, the nexus between the Ivory Tower and the global public. We labor in the service of Blacks and all humanity. ASALH is the world’s oldest learned society devoted to the research, education, culture, and history of people of African descent. Dr. Carter G. Woodson is the recognized “Father” of Black history. From its inception, ASALH has remained the paramount organization dedicated to promoting scholarship involving the life and history of African Americans.
OUR VISION The vision of 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 Woodson legacy.
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.
STRUCTURE The Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH®) is head-quartered in Washington, D.C., 301 Rhode Island Ave, NW in Washington, DC. The Association operates as local, state, and international branches promoting greater knowledge of African American history through a program of education, research, and publishing.
ASALH FORMER PRESIDENTS 1936-1951, Mary McLeod Bethune 1952-1964, Charles Harris Wesley 1965-1966, Lorenzo J. Greene 1966-1967, J. Reuben Sheeler 1968-1970, J. Rupert Picott 1971-1973, Andrew Brimmer 1974-1976, Edgar Toppin 1977-1980, Charles Walker Thomas 1981-1982, Earl E. Thorpe 1983-1984, Samuel L. Banks 1984-1985, Jeanette Cascone (acting) 1986-1988, William Harris
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1989-1990, Andrew Brimmer 1991-1993, Robert Harris, Jr. 1993-1995, Janette Hoston Harris 1995-1997, Bettye J. Gardner 1997-1999, Edward Beasley 1999-2001, Samuel DuBois Cook, Sr. 2001-2003, Gloria Harper Dickinson 2004-2006, Sheila Y. Flemming-Hunter 2007-2009, John E. Fleming 2010-2012, James B. Stewart 2013-2015, Daryl Michael Scott Current, Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
ABOUT A SALH CONFERENCE The ASALH Annual Conference is an occasion to explore the history and culture of people of African descent. Our conference brings together more than one thousand people, including educators, students, community builders, business professionals, and others who share an abiding interest in learning about the contribution of African Americans to this nation and the world. For over a century, our conference has featured a rich program, which now includes scholarly sessions, professional workshops, plenaries, a Film Festival, and other presentations that analyze and illuminate a critical theme in the Black experience. Our 2021 virtual conference will offer attendees sessions featuring ASALH members who are prominent figures in Black cultural studies, as well as students from many disciplines. Sessions will be on the theme and many aspects of Black life, history, and culture.
ABOUT THE THEME The black family has been a topic of study in many disciplines—history, literature, the visual arts and film studies, sociology, anthropology, and social policy. Its representation, identity, and diversity have been reverenced, stereotyped, and vilified from the days of slavery to our own time. The black family knows no single location, since family reunions and genetic-ancestry searches testify to the spread of family members across states, nations, and continents. Not only are individual black families diasporic, but Africa and the diaspora itself have been long portrayed as the black family at large. While the role of the black family has been described by some as a microcosm of the entire race, its complexity as the “foundation” of African American life and history can be seen in numerous debates over how to represent its meaning and typicality from a historical perspective—as slave or free, as patriarchal or matriarchal/matrifocal, as single-headed or dual-headed household, as extended or nuclear, as fictive kin or blood lineage, as legal or common law, and as black or interracial, etc. Variation appears, as well, in discussions on the nature and impact of parenting, childhood, marriage, gender norms, sexuality, and incarceration. The family offers a rich tapestry of images for exploring the African American past and present.
MEMBERSHIP ALL ASALH MEMBERS ENJOY: • Discounted conference registration • FREE online posting of jobs and events • Ability to participate in the Authors’ Book Signing • Ability to present papers at the Annual Conference • Digital copies of the JAAH, BHB, and Fire!!! • One vote in the Executive Council Elections and more • ASALH branch members receive free print copies of the JAAH during the membership year For more information on member benefits and to become a member, visit www.asalh.org/join and click on JOIN.
The Association for the Study of African American Life and History (EIN: 53-0219640) is a tax-exempt 501 (c)(3) organization. Contributions to ASALH are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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A SALH S TAFF, PUBLIC ATION EDITORS & BOARDS ASALH STAFF
CONSULTANTS
Sylvia Y. Cyrus Executive Director
7 Pointe, Black History Month Festival
Crystal R. Boswell Operations Manager
Gaynelle Jackson, Conference Planner
Danyell Taylor Development
Kay Phillips, NPS Project Manager Rory Gruler, Spot Design Clifton Johnson, Graphic Designer Ryan Heathcock, Videographer Terrance Friday, Conference Technology Specialist
Jasmine Thomas Database
Delani Weaver, Web Content Specialist Adrienne Weisent-Jones, Graphic Designer
BLACK HISTORY BULLETIN La Vonne Neal Co-Editor Alicia Moore Co-Editor
LUNCHEON PLANNING COMMITTEE Sharita Jacobs-Thompson, Co-Chair Gladys Vaughn, Co-Chair Cheryl Gresham Valerie Maholmes Louis Hicks
HOWARD UNIVERSITY INTERNS Shafantae Desinord, Network to Freedom Project Manager Amber Anderson
FIRE!!! THE MULTIMEDIA JOURNAL OF BLACK STUDIES Marilyn M. Thomas-Houston Editor
JOURNAL OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY Formerly the Journal of Negro History Founded by Carter G. Woodson, January 1, 1916 Editor, Pero G. Dagbovie, Michigan State University Assistant Editor and Book Review Editor, LaShawn D. Harris, Michigan State University
Associate Editors: Derrick P. Alridge, University of Virginia, Charlottesville Daina Ramey Berry, University of Texas at Austin Editorial Assistants: Maria Hammack, University of Texas, Austin Ajamu Dillahunt-Holloway, Michigan State University
EDITORIAL BOARD Leslie Alexander, University of Oregon Shawn L. Alexander, University of Kansas Erica Armstrong Dunbar, Rutgers University Davarian L. Baldwin, Trinity College Mia Bay, University of Pennsylvania Keisha N. Blain, University of Pittsburgh Stephanie Y. Evans, Clark Atlanta University Tiffany M. Gill, University of Delaware Thavolia Glymph, Duke University Cheryl D. Hicks, University of Delaware
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David H. Jackson, Jr., Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Martha S. Jones, Johns Hopkins University Ibram X. Kendi, American University Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Harvard University Kevin Mumford, University of Illinois Celia E. Naylor, Barnard College, Columbia University Russell Rickford, Cornell University Stephanie J. Shaw, The Ohio State University Nikki M. Taylor, Howard University Ula Y. Taylor, University of California, Berkeley
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
E XECUTIVE COUNCIL & COMMIT TEES OFFICERS
Dr. Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, President
Mr. Gilbert A. Smith, Treasurer
Mrs. Barbara Spencer Dunn, Vice President for Membership
Dr. Karsonya Wise Whitehead, Secretary
Dr. Lionel Kimble, Jr., Vice President for Programs
Ms. Sylvia Y. Cyrus, Executive Director
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEMBERS
Mr. Jeffrey A. Banks
Dr. Maurice Gibson, Esq.
Dr. Edna Greene Medford
Ms. Denise Rolark Barnes
Ms. Aaisha Haykal
Dr. Zebulon V. Miletsky
Professor Gloria J. BrowneMarshall
Dr. Anton D. House
Dr. Annette Palmer
Dr. Sundiata Kieta Cha-Jua
Dr. Eric R. Jackson
Ms. Camesha Scruggs
Dr. Randal M. Jelks
Rev. Anita M. Shepherd
Ms. Gladys W. Mack
Dr. Gladys Gary Vaughn
Mrs. Susan Simms Marsh, Esq.
Dr. David Walton
Mr. Moses Massenburg
Dr. Tara White
Ms. Zende Lamar Clark Dr. Natanya P. Duncan Mr. Charles Ezra Ferrell
CONFERENCE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham
Edna Greene Medford
Hazel Gillis
Sylvia Cyrus
Camesha Scruggs
Leontyne Middleton
Jeff Banks
Tara White
Jacqueline Hubbard
Lionel Kimble
Hilary Green
Kisha King
Zebulon Miletsky
Shawn Alexander
Pierre Loomis Williams
Gladys Gary Vaughn
Aaisha Haykal
Rose Chandler
Lopez Matthews
Karen Adamopoulos
Takeia Anthony
Anita Shepherd
David G. Wilkins
AWARDS COMMITTEE
Edna Green Medford, Chair
Anton House
Camesha Scruggs, Vice-Chair
David Walton
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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THANK YOU TO OUR HOS T COMMIT TEES ACADEMIC PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Co-Chair: Tara White Co-Chair: Shawn Alexander Vice Chair: Hilary Green Vice President for Programs: Lionel Kimble
Takeia Anthony
Cherisse R. Jones-Branch
Michael Blum
Thura Mack
Deidre Bennett Flowers
Lopez D. Matthews
Jarvis Ray Givens
Zebulon Vance Miletsky
LaShawn Harris
Adreonna Nicole SimmonsBennett
Aaisha Haykal Eric R. Jackson Ida E. Jones
Rose C. Thevenin Dwight Watson
2021 BLACK HISTORY MONTH HOST COMMITTEE
National Council of Negro Women
Eric and Linda White
The Links Incorporated
National Museum of African American History and Culture
National Education Association
Ardie Myers
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. 3rd District
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham
Metropolitan AME Church, Washington, D.C. Treasury Department Federal Credit
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.
Gladys Gary Vaughn Barbara Morland
DC Lottery
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE HOST COMMITTEE
Emerald Host Conference Sponsors The Powell-Williams Law Firm, P.A. University of Central FloridaDean Office College of Arts and Humanities EYESEEIMAGES John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art Eastern Area of The Links, Incorporated 10
New College of Florida
Anita Shepherd
Florida International University, George and Hazel Gillis Division of Diversity, Equity, Conference Host Patrons and Inclusion Margaret and Bob Seidler Black Health Matters Zende Clark Knowledge for Living Susan Simms Marsh Ruby Host Conference WIJSF, Inc. Sponsors Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham
The Loomis Group
Gladys Gary Vaughn
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Foundation, Inc.
Jeffrey Banks
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS & SUPPORTERS GOLD SPONSORS
S IL V E R S PON S OR S
C O N F E RE NC E SU P P O RT E R S
F IL M F E S T I V A L S PO NS OR
2 0 2 1 B L AC K H I S TO R Y F ES T I VA L SP O NSOR S
UK
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B R ANC
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BR
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ALH
B E T HE
AS
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DI AM O N D S P ON S O R
ANC
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FLORIDA HONORARY CO-CHAIRS
LYMAN BRODIE
JAMES STEWART, PH.D FORMER ASALH PRESIDENT MANASOTA BRANCH
CONGRESSMAN AL LAWSON DISTRICT 5
AUDREY GIBSON STATE SENATOR DISTRICT 6
ENID PINKNEY
GERALDINE F. THOMPSON STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 44
TRACIE DAVIS STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 13
ANGELA “ANGIE” NIXON STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 14
DOROTHY TURNER JOHNSON BRANCH
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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DONORS Contributors $50-$99 James Aluoch Valerie Bass Kathleen E. Bethel William Brockwell Edgar Brookins Katherine Carlson Alvin Coleman Deborah L. Dandridge Marsha J. Darling Billie Day Cora Dixon Kathryn Erbe Dorothy M. Foster Jennifer Goldberg Arthur Haywood Louis C. Hicks Eloise Hoyt Frank D. Jackson Charles Johnson Marianne M. Krainock Mark Lee Clyde Ledbetter Kelly McCoy Judith McGriff Chris McQuade-Wright Gina Mitchell Akida J. Moore Marianne Porter Meredith Powers Geoff Proud Katherine Purcell Samuel Reyes Annie Robbins Adrian Robinson Christele Robinson Julia Scher Eileen W. Sheehan Maurice Shines Alaina Sugar Pat Thornton Barbara Waller Solomon B. Watson PhRMA $100-$199 Yvonne B. Acey Selma Alston Miriam Ayeni Frederica H. Barrow Ferial Bishop Sandra Boswell Diana Burnett Maurita Coley Barbara G. Cuffie Ella J. Davis
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Booker T. DeVaughn Cora Dixon Jean P. Ficklin Kenneth S. Greenberg Constance Green-Johnson Patrice Grimes Shiela F. Harmon Kenneth E. Hinson Patricia N. House Amy Hurwitz Mark S. Jackson Lauri Johnson Violet M. Johnson Dana Jones Joyce E. King Sharon S. MacDonald Valencia Matthews Nicole Monson Patricia Moore Burnis R. Morris Theresa Nolten Karen Nunley Patricia Oldham Renata R. Pinkney Alcee W. Polk Shelby Reed Susan Rishworth Charles R. Salter Etta Sample Tara Scully Mark Shedden Stephen Thomsen Brenda Tyson Doba Villatore Carlotta Webb Hirut Worku Maximum Consulting $200-$499 Romie Deloatch Percy Edwards V.P. Franklin Alease R. Gant Maurice D. Gipson* Kathie House Gerald D. Jaynes John L. Lanier Billy Miller Nina Nsereko Paula Truss Deborah Willis Paula Willis TOP Jewish Foundation $500-$999 AAHGS- James Dent Walker Chapter
Jualynne E. Dodson
Bettye J. Gardner Richard Katz Presti M. Lo Elizabeth McKune Gladys R. Myatt Deborah M. Smith Louise Toppin General William William Ward & Joyce Lewis Matthew Weisenberg $1000-$3999 Evan Baker Jeffrey A. Banks* Denise Rolark Barnes* Thomas C. Battle Gloria J. Browne-Marshall* Kristin Buser Sundiata K. Cha-Jua* Zende L. Clark* Natanya P. Duncan* Barbara Spencer Dunn* Charles E. Ferrell* Aaisha Haykal* Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham* Kathie House Anton D. House* Eric R. Jackson* Randal M. Jelks* Lionel Kimble* Clarence E. Lang Gladys W. Mack* Valerie Maholmes Susan Simms Marsh* Edna Greene Medford* Zebulon V. Miletsky* Abbie Monjoin Barbara Morland Annette C. Palmer* Mona J. Roberts Anita M. Shepherd* Gilbert A. Smith* David M. Walton* Reginald L. Weaver Tara White* Karsonya Wise Whitehead* Network for Good Schwab Charitable The Whitehead Foundation $4000 and more Gladys G. Vaughn* The Benevity Community Impact Fund Tides Foundation Combined Federal Campaign
Susatining Life Member Contributors $50 Kathleen E. Bethel Mary L. Brown Bessie Jackson Peggy S. Jackson LaVerne P. Johnson Genna R. McNeil Anita M. Shepherd Bernita S. Waller Phyllis Watkins Janis Wiggins $100 Alberta Brown Adrienne A. Cannon Robert L. Harris Reginald F. Hildebrand Frank D. Jackson Arvarh Strickland $101-$250 Emanuel J. Abston A’Lelia Bundles Michael Childs Billie Day Alferdteen Harrison Alferdteen Harrison Bernita S. Waller Francille Wilson $500 and more John Bracey Reagon B. Johnson Dolphine W. Pierce ASALH Branch Donations Donation ASALH of Tampa Bay Branch, $300 ASALH South Florida, Inc. $600 Athens Branch of ASALH (GA), $600 Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH, $600 Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH, White Eric, $100 Carter G Woodson Branch of ASALH, $600 Central Florida Dorothy Turner Johnson Branch of ASALH, $100 Charleston Branch, $600 Cleveland Branch, $600 Greater Kansas City Black History
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
DONORS Study Group (ASALH Branch), $600 Hampton Roads Branch of ASALH, $600 Harper Councill Trenholm Branch of Montgomery, $600 James Weldon Johnson Branch of ASALH Jacksonville, FL, $600 James Weldon Johnson Branch of ASALH Jacksonville, FL, Turner Jasmine Elizabeth Yemiko, $50 Joseph T. Taylor Branch of ASALH, $600 Julian Branch of ASALH $300 Louisville, Kentucky Carter G. Woodson Branch of ASALH $100 Manasota Branch of ASALH, $1,100 Manhattan Branch of ASALH, $1,100 Memphis Area Branch of ASALH, $500 Mobile AL Branch, $100 Our Authors Study Club Branch of ASALH (Los Angeles), $1,200 Paul Laurence Dunbar Branch at Dayton Ohio of ASALH, $520 Philadelphia Heritage Branch of ASALH, $700 Philadelphia Heritage Branch of ASALH, Selma Young, $100 Prince Geoges County Truth Branch of ASALH (MD), $1,100 Romare Bearden Branch of ASALH of Charlotte, NC, $600 St. Petersburg Branch of ASALH, $100 W. Marvin Dulaney Branch of ASALH, $600 ASALH TV Production $400-$500 Sundiata Kieta Cha-Jua* Lionel Kimble* North Carolina Central University ASALH Book Prize $100-$1000 Derrick P. Alridge Carol Anderson Kenneth E. Hinson Ingrid Monson Lynn Rainville
Woodson Birthday Campaign $50-$250 Janice Brodie Alexander X. Byrd William D. Fisher Benjamin Foster Kenneth Marcus Cecelia Moore Preston N. Williams Woodson House Ornament Donations $100 and more Takeia Anthony Martha E. Barrett Lee Butler Linda Butner David Davidson Jyvette Dobson Valada Flewellyn Robert L. Harris Stacy L Henderson-Shaw Antonio F. Holland J.L. Holloway Bettie Hudson Toni-Mokjaetji Humber Michael Jones Kisha B. King Elnora E. Lewis Reid K. McDowell Christine McNair Oliver McNair Faizah Mixson Khamil L. Ojoyo Valerie L Patterson Juanita Powell-Williams Georgia R. Pribanic Anita M. Shepherd Katherine Scott Sturdevant The Real Rosewood Foundation Dwight D. Watson The Journal of African American History $50-$250 Frederica H. Barrow Charles Carlson Charla T. Glass Kisha B. King Larry O. Rivers Mary L. Romney-Schaab Francille Wilson February Festival Sponsors $50-499 Sarah D. Elias Kent B. Amos
Pamela Curtis Rodney Hawkins Christa Hayburn Laura Lott William Payne Gina Simms Constantina Turk $500-$1499 Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. 3rd District Phi Omega William Seraile Denise Rolark Barnes* Freeman A. Hrabowski $1,500 Robert L. Harris Black Women’s Agenda, Inc. Prince George’s Community College $2500-$4999 Barbara Morland Ardie Myers Linda Crichlow White DC Lottery and Charitable Games Control Board Metropolitan African American Episcopal Church National Council of Negro Women National Education Association National Museum of African American History and Culture The Links Incorporated Treasury Department Federal Credit Union Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, IncHeadquarters $5,000 Fort Myer Construction Corporation United Bank $10000-$15000 Omega Life Membership Foundation Inc AARP-Corporate Office Denny’s Corporation Merck & Co., Inc Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Incorporated TD Bank
Conference Sponsors and Patrons Up to $999 Karen R. Adamopoulos Takeia Anthony Joan Cartwright, WIJSF, Inc. Zende L. Clark* Frederick W. Coleman Sylvia Y. Cyrus* Susan Simms Marsh* Margaret Seidler Pierre L. Williams, The Loomis Group Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Foundation, Inc. Knowledge for Living, Inc. $1000-$2500 Jeffrey A. Banks* Valada Flewellyn Hazel D. Gillis Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham* Norma B. Hutcheson Anita M. Shepherd* Mark Smith ASALH of Tampa Bay (Branch) Black Health Matters Foundation Florida International University Jacksonville NAACP John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art National Center for Faculty Development & Diversity New College of Florida The Powell-Williams Law Firm, P.A. University of Central FloridaDean Office College of Arts and Humanities University of Central FloridaDean Office College of Arts and Humanities 400 Years of African American History Commission America250 Foundation Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH College Board National Office National Parks Conservation Association *EC Members
$20000 and more A&E Networks Bank of America Johnson & Johnson
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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SCHEDULE AT A GL ANCE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2021 EST 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA PRESS
12:30 p.m. - 1:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: AMERICA250 FOUNDATION
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
2:30 p.m. - 3:20 p.m. EST
HINE-HORNE BOOK ROUNDTABLES: SANDY DARITY & A. KIRSTEN MULLEN
4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. EST
PLENARY SESSION: IT’S A FAMILY AFFAIR: THE BLACK FAMILY AND THE FIGHT FOR CIVIL RIGHTS
6:15 p.m. - 7:45 p.m. EST
FILM FESTIVAL: MAMA GLORIA
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 EST 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: AFRO PUBLISHING WITHOUT WALLS
12:30 p.m - 1:15 p.m. EST
HINE-HORNE BOOK ROUNDTABLE: ALISON PARKER, "UNCEASING MILITANT: THE LIFE OF MARY CHURCH TERRELL"
12:30 p.m. - 1:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA PRESS
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
2:30 p.m. - 3:20 p.m. EST
PRESIDENTIAL SESSION: BLACK WOMEN AND THE FAMILY IN THE CIVIL WAR ERA
4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. EST
PLENARY SESSION: BLACK FAMILIES AND PUBLIC POLICY: NEW FRONTIERS IN THE FIGHT FOR BLACK FAMILIES
6:00 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: DR. KAREN COOK-BELL
6:30 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: JADA WRIGHT-GREENE
7:00 p.m. - 7:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: WANDA S. LLOYD
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. EST
FILM FESTIVAL: KINDRED SPIRITS: ARTISTS HILDA WILKINSON BROWN AND LILIAN THOMAS BURWELL
7:30 p.m. - 7:45 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: JUDGE ROHULAMIN QUANDER
8:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. EST
ASALH EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING
FOR FULL CONFERENCE SCHEDULE VISIT A SA LH .ORG/SCHE DULE / 14
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
SCHEDULE AT A GL ANCE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2021 EST 9:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. EST
ASALH BRANCH MEETING AND WORKSHOP SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2021 EST
11:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
12:30 p.m - 1:15 p.m. EST
HINE-HORNE BOOK ROUNDTABLE: MIA BAY "TRAVELING BLACK"
12:30 p.m - 1:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS
1:30 p.m. - 2:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
2:30 p.m. - 3:20 p.m. EST
PRESIDENTIAL SESSION: BLACK FAITH LEADERS: A LEGACY OF SERVICE
3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. EST
PLENARY SESSION: BLACK HISTORY AND FAMILY LEGACIES
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2021 EST
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 EST 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: SCHOLAR'S CHOICE
12:30 p.m. - 1:20 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
12:30 p.m. - 1:20 p.m. EST
KEY SESSION: I FEAR FOR MY LIFE: THEY THAT MOURN
1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
HINE-HORNE BOOK ROUNDTABLE: JARVIS GIVENS, "FUGITIVE PEDAGOGY: CARTER G. WOODSON AND THE ART OF BLACK TEACHING"
1:30 p.m - 2:20 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
ASALH INFORMATION PROFESSIONALS BUSINESS MEETING
2:30 p.m. - 3:20 p.m. EST
KEY SESSION: STATE OF THE FIELD: NEW INTERNATIONAL HISTORIES OF BLACK WOMEN
4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. EST
PLENARY SESSION: BLACK PEOPLE, HEALTH AND WELLNESS: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
6:00 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: NIK RIBIANSZKY
6:30 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: DERRICK P. ALRIDGE
7:00 p.m. - 7:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: PAULA AUSTIN
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. EST
FILM FESTIVAL: BREAKWATER STUDIO - THE POWER OF SHORT FILMS
7:30 p.m. - 7:45 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: ANITA D. RUSSELL
8:00 p.m. - 8:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: LATRICE ROLLINSROLLINS AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: LATRICE
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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SCHEDULE AT A GL ANCE THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 EST 12:30 p.m. - 1:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: CETERA INVESTMENTS
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
HINE-HORNE BOOK ROUNDTABLE: BRANDI BRIMMER, "CLAIMING UNION WIDOWHOOD: RACE, RESPECTABILITY, AND POVERTY IN THE POST-EMANCIPATION SOUTH"
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
2:00 p.m. - 3:20 p.m. EST
KEY SESSION: CREATING BLACK FAMILIES: BLACK MARRIAGE AND BLACK LOVE
3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. EST
ASALH POSTER SESSION
4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. EST
PLENARY SESSION: FROM ROOTS TO ANCESTRY: DOING BLACK FAMILY HISTORY
6:00 p.m. - 6:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: KEVIN MCGRUDER
6:30 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: MORNA LAHNICE HOLLISTER
7:00 p.m. - 7:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: MAXINE SMITH
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. EST
FILM FESTIVAL: I'M JUST A LAYMAN IN PURSUIT OF JUSTICE
7:30 p.m. - 7:45 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: JAMES B. WINGO
8:00 p.m. - 8:15 p.m. EST
AUTHOR'S BOOK EVENT: CHERISSE R. JONES-BRANCH
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2021 EST
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11:30 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
12:30 p.m - 1:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
HINE-HORNE BOOK ROUNDTABLE: TYRONE MCKINLEY FREEMAN: "MADAM C. J. WALKER’S GOSPEL OF GIVING BLACK WOMEN’S PHILANTHROPY DURING JIM CROW"
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
2:30 p.m. - 3:20 p.m. EST
KEY SESSION: AFRICAN-AMERICAN FAMILIES IN FLORIDA THROUGH PUBLIC HISTORY
3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. EST
PLENARY SESSION: ILLUMINATING THE BLACK FAMILY IN HISTORY: A RETROSPECTIVE ON HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR.
6:15 p.m. - 7:45 p.m. EST
FILM FESTIVAL: RACIALLY CHARGED: AMERICA'S MISDEMEANOR PROBLEM
8:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. EST
FILM FESTIVAL: GEOGRAPHIES OF KINSHIP
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
SCHEDULE AT A GL ANCE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2021 EST 12:30 p.m. - 1:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1:30 p.m - 2:15 p.m. EST
CONCURRENT SESSIONS
2:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. EST
HINE-HORNE BOOK ROUNDTABLE: V. P. FRANKLIN'S "YOUNG CRUSADERS"
4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. EST
PLENARY SESSION: THE CENTENNIAL ANNIVERSARY OF THE TULSA RACE MASSACRE AND ANTI-BLACK VIOLENCE
7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. EST
ASALH AWARDS CEREMONY
7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. EST
FILM FESTIVAL: INVISIBLE HISTORY: MIDDLE FLORIDA'S HIDDEN ROOTS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2021 EST 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. EST
EXHIBITOR SESSION: GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY PRESS
6:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. EST
ASALH ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING
Special Thanks ASALH THANKS OUR 106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
ACADEMIC PROGRAM COMMITTEE Co-Chair: Tara White Co-Chair: Shawn Alexander Vice Chair: Hilary Green Vice President for Programs: Lionel Kimble Takeia Anthony Michael Blum
Aaisha Haykal Eric R. Jackson
Deidre Bennett Flowers Jarvis Ray Givens LaShawn Harris
Ida E. Jones Cherisse R. Jones-Branch Thura Mack
Lopez D. Matthews Zebulon V. Miletsky Adreonna N. Simmons-Bennett Rose C. Thevenin Dwight Watson
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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SESSIONS NATIONAL PARK CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION PLENARY
IT’S A FAMILY AFFAIR:
THE BLACK FAMILY AND THE FIGHT FOR CIVIL RIGHTS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2021 | 4:00-6:00 P.M. EST
ALAN SPEARS, MODERATOR National Park Service
PHILIP HOWARD
MARVEL PARKER
Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail
Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail
FREDRIKA NEWTON
REENA EVERS-EVERETTE
Legacy of Huey P. Newton
Medgar & Myrlie Evers Institute
BLACK FAMILIES AND PUBLIC POLICY:
NEW FRONTIERS IN THE FIGHT FOR BLACK FAMILIES THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 | 4:00-6:00 P.M. EST
ANDRE M. PERRY The Brookings Institution
NIKOLE HANNAH-JONES Howard University
NOLIWE ROOKS Brown University
CATHERINE COLEMAN FLOWERS
Center for Rural Enterprise and Environmental Justice
DOROTHY A. BROWN Emory University
BLACK HISTORY AND FAMILY LEGACIES SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2021 | 3:30-5:30 P.M. EST
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MICHELLE DUSTER
A’LELIA BUNDLES
KENNETH B. MORRIS, JR.
Direct Descendant of Ida B. Wells-Barnet
Direct Descendant of Madam C.J. Walker
Direct Descendant of Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
SESSIONS SPONSORED BY THE 400 YEARS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY COMMISSION
I FEAR FOR MY LIFE: THEY THAT MOURN
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 | 12:30-1:20 P.M. EST
HANNIBAL B. JOHNSON, ESQ. MODERATOR 400 Years of African-American History Commission
DR. REX M. ELLIS
DR. CHENELLE JONES
DR. CHERYL T. GRILLS
Chair, 400 Years of AfricanAmerican History Commission
Assistant Dean Franklin University
Director, Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts Psychology Applied Research Center
1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Commission
BLACK PEOPLE, HEALTH AND WELLNESS: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 | 4:00-6:00 P.M. EST
VANESSA NORTHINGTON GAMBLE
STEPHANIE Y. EVANS
DAVID R. WILLIAMS
DR. THADDEUS J. BELL
George Washington University
Georgia State University
Harvard University
Closing the Gap in Health Care, Inc.
FROM ROOTS TO ANCESTRY: DOING BLACK FAMILY HISTORY CO-SPONSORED WITH JAMES DENT WALKER CHAPTER OF AFRO-AMERICAN HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 | 4:00-6:00 P.M. EST
ELIZABETH CLARK-LEWIS
KENDRA FIELD
DEBRA NEWMAN HAM
GINA PAIGE
Howard University
Tufts University
Morgan State University (Retired)
African Ancestry, Inc.
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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SESSIONS 2021 ASASH FLORIDA KEY SESSION
AFRICAN AMERICAN FAMILIES IN FLORIDA THROUGH PUBLIC POLICY SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2021 | 2:30-3:20 P.M. EST
CHARLENE FARRINGTON
RODNEY L. HURST, SR.
DR. TAKEIA ANTHONY
JADA WRIGHT-GREENE
BRANDON NIGHTINGALE
South Florida Branch
James Weldon Johnson Branch
Kentucky State University
Museum Activist, Writer
Bethune-Cookman University
ILLUMINATING THE BLACK FAMILY IN HISTORY A RETROSPECTIVE ON HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR.
RECIPIENT OF ASALH’S INAUGURAL LUMINARY AWARD
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2021 | 3:30-5:30 P.M. EST
HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR.
JOHN LEGEND
S. EPATHA MERKERSON
Harvard University
Award-winning Artist & Philanthropist
Award-winning Actor & Advocate of Health Awareness
EVELYN BROOKS HIGGINBOTHAM ASALH President, Harvard University
THE CENTENNIAL ANNIVERSARY OF THE TULSA RACE MASSACRE AND ANTI-BLACK VIOLENCE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2021 | 4:00-6:00 P.M. EST
JOHN W. FRANKLIN National Museum of African American History & Culture (Retired)
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KARLOS K. HILL
MELISSA STUCKEY
University of Oklahoma
Elizabeth City State University
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
SESSIONS
Saturday, Sept. 25, 2021 12:30 P.M. PST / 3:30 P.M. EST ON ASALH-TV WATCH HERE: HTTPS://WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/C/ASALHTV
CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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AUTHOR ’ S BOOK TALK E VENT
SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 6:00 PM - 6:15 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 6:30 PM - 6:45 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 6:00 PM - 6:15 PM EST
KAREN COOK-BELL
JADA WRIGHT-GREENE
WANDA S. LLOYD
SEPTEMBER 16, 2021 7:30 PM - 7:45 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 6:00 PM - 6:15 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 6:30 PM - 6:45 PM EST
ROHULAMIN QUANDER
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NIK RIBIANSZKY
DERRICK ALRIDGE
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
AUTHOR ’ S BOOK TALK E VENT
SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 6:30 PM - 6:45 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 8:00 PM - 8:15 PM EST
PAULA C. AUSTIN
ANITA D. RUSSELL
LATRICE S. ROLLINS
SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 6:00 PM - 6:15 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 6:30 PM - 6:45 PM EST
KEVIN MCGRUDER
MORNA LAHNICE HOLLISTER
SEPTEMBER 21, 2021 7:00 PM - 7:15 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 7:00 PM - 7:15 PM EST
MAXINE SMITH
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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AUTHOR ’ S BOOK TALK E VENT
MEMBER'S BOOKSHELF The Members Bookshelf is where ASALH members can have their books posted for others to learn about with links to purchase them. You must be a member to submit your book to the bookshelf.
WWW.ASALH.ORG/BOOKSHELF
SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 7:30 PM - 7:45 PM EST
JAMES B. WINGO
SEPTEMBER 23, 2021 8:00 PM - 8:15 PM EST
CHERISSE JONES-BRANCH
Tera W. Hunter Bound in Wedlock The first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century. Uncovering the experiences of African American spouses in plantation records, legal and court documents, and pension files, Tera W. Hunter reveals the myriad ways couples adopted, adapted, revised, and rejected white Christian ideas of marriage. Setting their own standards for conjugal relationships, enslaved husbands and wives were creative and, of necessity, practical in starting and supporting families under conditions of uncertainty and cruelty.
Thavolia Glymph The Women's Fight We encounter women as they stood their ground, moved into each other's territory, sought and found common ground, and fought for vastly different principles. Some women used all the tools and powers they could muster to prevent the radical transformations the war increasingly imposed, some fought with equal might for the same transformations, and other women fought simply to keep the war at bay as they waited for their husbands and sons to return home.
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106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
E XHIBITORS
Support our Virtual Exhibitors VISIT ASALH.ORG/EXHIBITORS TO RECEIVE EXCLUSIVE DEALS AND DISCOUNTS AT ASALH VIRTUAL BOOTHS.
SEPTEMBER 14 @ 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 14 @ 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM EST
THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA PRESS
AMERICA250 FOUNDATION
SEPTEMBER 16 @ 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 16 @ 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM EST
AFRO PUBLISHING WITHOUT WALLS
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA PRESS
SEPTEMBER 18 @ 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 21 @ 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS
THE SCHOLAR’S CHOICE
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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E XHIBITORS
SEPTEMBER 21 @ 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 23 @ 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPPI
SEPTEMBER 23 @ 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM EST HOSTED BY TIBY SAUNDERS OF CETERA INVESTORS
SEPTEMBER 30 @ 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST
SEPTEMBER 30 @ 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM EST
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA PRESS
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA PRESS
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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY PRESS
MCFARLAND PUBLISHING
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
A SALH AWARDS EACH YEAR, ASALH PRESENTS SEVERAL AWARDS TO RECOGNIZE COMMUNITY LEADERS AND THOSE WHO MAKE SIGNIFICANT CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE PRESERVATION OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY. C A R T ER G . WO O D S O N S C HO L AR S ME D A L L I O N
Established in 1993, the Carter Godwin Woodson Scholars Medallion is presented to a scholar whose career is distinguished through at least a decade of research, writing, and activism in the field of African American life and history. F R E E D O M S CH O L A R A WA R D
A Freedom Scholar seeks to empower and inspire. A Freedom Scholar provides a direct benefit to African-American communities locally or nationally. ASALH has initiated the Freedom Scholar award to honor early scholars of any discipline who can demonstrate that their field of study is having a direct positive impact on the life of African-Americans. M A R Y M C LE O D BE TH U N E S E R V IC E A WA R D
This award was established in tribute to Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune because of her dynamic leadership and her years of contributing to education, women’s history, and African-American life and culture. Dr. Bethune served as the first woman president of ASALH from 1936 to 1951 and is one of the most outstanding women role models in our history. L I V I N G L E G AC Y A WA R D
In partnership with Farmers Insurance, the ASALH Living Legacy Awards honor African American women and men across the country engaged in extraordinary work to improve communities, institutions, organizations and family life. I N A U G UR A L N A T IO NA L L UM I N AR Y A WA R D
The ASALH Luminary Award was established to recognize the outstanding work and contributions related to the mission and goals of ASALH, including the local branch, by a person in the locale of the annual convention. C O U N C I L AW A R D O F SP E C I A L R E C O G NI T IO N
ASALH established the Award of Special Recognition to acknowledge the contributions of individuals, institutions and corporations that make a substantial contribution to the success of ASALH in pursuing the mission of its founder, Dr. Carter G. Woodson. T H E DO R O T HY PO R T E R WE S L E Y AW AR D
The Dorothy Porter Wesley Award was established in 2018 by the Information Professionals of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) to honor and document the outstanding work of Information Professionals; Bibliophiles, Librarians, Archivists, Curators and Collectors. Many of our Information Professionals have also played a major role in supporting the work of ASALH, by serving in leadership roles and as members. O UT ST AN DI N G B R A N CH PR O GR A M MIN G AW A R D
The Outstanding Branch Programming Award honors ASALH Branches. This award is established as a tribute to the valued worth Dr. Carter Godwin Woodson placed on Branches, not as a separate entity, but as part of our living narrative as Black people. The collective work carried out by our community representing people across the nation and around the world to promote, preserve, interpret and disseminate information about Black life, history and culture. The award is presented each year to an official Branch of ASALH that through its annual programming most effectively exhibits the mission and vision of ASALH and influences first its local sphere of influence, to include personal family, school, church, and community-at- large, nationally and globally. THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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AWARD RECIPIENT S GENEVA GAY C AR T E R G . WO O D S O N S C HO L AR S ME D A L L I O N
Geneva Gay recently retired from her esteemed position as a professor of education at the University of Washington–Seattle. There, she instructed prospective teachers on the topic of her seminal work Culturally Responsive Teaching: Theory, Research, and Practice. Dr. Gay began her teaching career as a high school social studies teacher in Akron, Ohio. When she decided to pursue a PhD, she found that there were no doctoral programs in the country in multicultural education. Instead, she studied cultural anthropology, which set the stage for her internationally known theory and best practices in multicultural education. Her work is focused on curriculum design, staff development, classroom instruction, and intersections of culture, race, ethnicity, teaching, and learning. Dr. Gay has written professional books and innumerable articles on the topic of culturally responsive pedagogy.
CHRISTOPHER BONNER F RE E DO M S C H OL AR A WA R D
Christopher J. Bonner specializes in African American history and the nineteenth-century United States. He published his first book, the highly acclaimed Remaking the Republic: Black Politics and the Creation of American Citizenship, in March 2020. The book explores Black activists’ efforts to secure legal rights through the vague, powerful concept of citizenship. His work has also been featured in the collection New Perspectives on the Black Intellectual Tradition and at Black Perspectives, the blog for the African American Intellectual History Society. Professor Bonner teaches courses on African American politics and culture, slavery and emancipation in the Atlantic world, the transformation of the United States during the nineteenth century, and race and ethnicity in early America. He was a featured historian on CNN's six-part documentary Lincoln: Divided We Stand. He received his PhD from Yale University.
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106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
AWARD RECIPIENT S KHALID EL-HAKIM F RE E DO M S C H OL AR A WA R D
Khalid el-Hakim, PhD, is the founder and curator of the Black History 101 Mobile Museum, a collection of over 10,000 original artifacts of Black memorabilia dating from the trans-Atlantic slave trade era to hip-hop culture. el-Hakim has been called the "Schomburg of the hip-hop generation" because of his passionate commitment to carrying on the rich tradition of the Black Museum Movement. He has received national and international attention for his innovative work exhibiting Black history outside of traditional museum spaces and teaching teachers how to use primary sources to engage their students. Recently, el-Hakim received the Top 100 Educators award from the Global Forum for Education and Learning and was recognized as one of the 100 Men of Distinction by Black Enterprise magazine. As the nation's premiere Black history traveling exhibit, the Mobile Museum visited its forty-first state this year as a main attraction for Juneteenth in Burlington, VT.
AISHA JOHNSON F R E E D O M S CH O L A R A WA R D
Aisha Johnson is an educator and revelator of Southern Intellectual History and an advocate for untold stories. She is committed to archival research, the production of minority librarians and archivists for cultural preservation, and redefining the scholar. She entered the information profession more than ten years ago and has become experienced in program administration, evaluation, and development as well as curriculum development for innovative instruction. As an archival manager, she promoted her Breeding Scholars Initiative, which introduces high school and undergraduate college students to primary source research placing emphasis on synthesis. Johnson currently serves as assistant professor and program director of the Master of Library Science program for the School of Library and Information Sciences at North Carolina Central University. She received her PhD from Florida State University and in 2020 received the Distinguished Alumni Award from its College of Communication and Information.
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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AWARD RECIPIENT S SHEILA FLEMMING M AR Y MC L E O D BE T HU N E SE RV I C E A W AR D
A PhD in African and African American history, Sheila Flemming is Founder and President of the Black Rose Foundation for Children. Its mission is to provide resources to organizations seeking to empower children. She serves as associate editor of Phylon: The Clark Atlanta University Review of Race and Culture. She has taught at several universities, including Bethune-Cookman University and the University of Maryland. Flemming has spent most of her career in the academy as a historian, dean, and vice president. She is the author of Bethune-Cookman College 1904-1994: The Answered Prayer to a Dream, and she has contributed articles on African and African American women, Nelson Mandela, Mary McLeod Bethune, and Black women’s health. She and her daughters (attorney Alero Afejuku and Dr. Ayo Gathing) authored two children’s books and recently penned an article on love lessons for Black girls. She is archivist for the African Heritage Studies Association and former President of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.
BESSIE MAE JACKSON M AR Y MCL EO D BE T HU N E SE RV I C E A W AR D
Bessie Mae Jackson is a lifelong educator. A life member of ASALH, she served as national secretary and is the New York state director and former president of the Bronx Branch. She received a B.S. degree in early childhood education in 1966 and a master’s degree in curriculum development in 1976 from Columbia University Teachers College. While in college, she founded the NYC Day Care Workers Union Local 1707. After graduation, she joined the NYC Board of Education as a first- grade teacher. Ms. Jackson retired in 1988 but never really stopped working. She took on the roles of activist, founder of the African American History and Culture Center in the Bronx, host of the Smiling Through Tears talk show about racial injustice, playwright, poet, and advocate. In 2020 at age 94, after 16 years of advocacy to create a new NYS holiday to honor those who fought to end slavery, she witnessed the enactment of Abolition Commemoration Day.
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106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
AWARD RECIPIENT S LOPEZ D. MATTHEWS JR. M AR Y MCL EO D BE T HU N E SE RV I C E A W AR D
Lopez D. Matthews Jr., Ph. D., is the manager of the Digital Production Center and digital production librarian for the Howard University Libraries and the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center. He is also an adjunct professor at Coppin State and Bowie State Universities, where he teaches courses in African American, United States, and World History. He is a commissioner on the Maryland Commission on African American History and Culture and a member of the board of directors of the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of African American History and Culture in Baltimore, Maryland. He has published several articles and is the author of Howard University in the World Wars: Men and Women Serving the Nation. In 2020, he became a senior advisor to the US Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation Leadership Group.
ELIZABETH CLARK-LEWIS L IV IN G L E G A C Y A WA R D
Elizabeth Clark-Lewis, PhD, is a professor of history and served as public history program director at Howard University. She completed her BA and MA at Howard University and holds a doctorate from the University of Maryland. She was awarded fellowships from the Smithsonian Institution and the, Shomacher and Ford Foundations. Her academic appointments include Banneker Professor, George Washington University; Visiting Professor, Pennsylvania State University; and Professor, Northern Virginia Community College. Professor Clark-Lewis has served on the executive boards of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History, Organization of American Historians, National Council on Public History, African American Experience Fund,; and Landmarks Committee–National Park Service, and, as the national director of the – Association of Black Women Historians. A founder of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Association, Clark-Lewis has authored or co-authored eight books and co-produced Freedom Bags, a PBS documentary recently featured at the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival.
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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AWARD RECIPIENT S DERRICK P. ALRIDGE C AR T E R G . WO O D S O N S CH O L A R S M E D A L L IO N
Derrick P. Alridge, PhD, is an Educational and Intellectual Historian. His work explores African American education and the Civil Rights Movement. Alridge is the Philip J. Gibson Professor of Education and an affiliate faculty member in the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies at the University of Virginia. He is the author of The Educational Thought of W. E. B. Du Bois: An Intellectual History (2008); co-editor of The Black Intellectual Tradition: African American Thought in the Twentieth Century (2021) with Cornelius Bynum and James B. Stewart; and co-editor of Message in the Music: Hip-Hop, History, and Pedagogy (2011). Alridge is a former fellow of the National Endowment for the Humanities and, former postdoctoral fellow of the National Academy of Education and Spencer Foundation, and he serves as a Carter G. Woodson Distinguished Lecturer for the Association for the Study of African American Life and History.
ERICA ARMSTRONG DUNBAR CAR T E R G. W O O DSO N S C HOL A R S M EDA L L I O N
Erica Armstrong Dunbar, PhD, is the Charles and Mary Beard Distinguished Professor of History at Rutgers University. She currently serves as the national director of the Association of Black Women Historians, the only professional organization focused on Black women’s history. Dunbar’s first book, A Fragile Freedom: African American Women and Emancipation in the Antebellum City, was published by Yale University in 2008. Her second book, Never Caught: The Washingtons’ Relentless Pursuit of Their Runaway Slave, Ona Judge (Simon & Schuster) was a finalist for the National Book Award in nonfiction and a winner of the 2018 Frederick Douglass Book Prize. The young readers’ version of Never Caught (Aladdin/Simon and Schuster) was published in January 2019. Later that same year, Dunbar published She Came To Slay: The Life and Times of Harriet Tubman, an accessible biography of one of the most remarkable social activists of the nineteenth century.
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106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
AWARD RECIPIENT S HENRY LOUIS GATES INAUGU R AL NA T I ON A L LUM IN A R Y A WA R D
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University. An Emmy and Peabody Award-winning filmmaker, literary scholar, journalist, cultural critic, and institution builder, Gates has authored or co-authored more than twenty books; has created more than twenty documentary films; and is the recipient of several honorary degrees. Among his many awards and recognitions, Gates was a member of the first class awarded a Genius Grant by the MacArthur Foundation in 1981, and in 1998 he became the first African American scholar to be awarded the National Humanities Medal. A native of Piedmont, West Virginia, Gates graduated summa cum laude from Yale University, and earned his MA and PhD in English literature from Clare College at the University of Cambridge in 1979. In 2011, his portrait, by Yuqi Wang, was hung in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C.
KENNETH M. HAMILTON L IV IN G L E G A C Y A WA R D
Kenneth M. Hamilton is a native of Wichita, Kansas. He earned a M. A. Degree in history from Kansas State University and a PhD in history from Washington University in St. Louis. After graduating from college, Professor Hamilton taught for two years in the Topeka, Kansas, public schools. He has also taught at Washburn University, Kansas State University, Forrest Park Community College in St. Louis, and Washington University, and he worked as Washington University’s director of graduate student recruitment. For twelve years, Professor Hamilton taught in the Black Studies and History Departments at The Ohio State University. During the past thirty-one years, he has taught at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, where he is currently professor and director of ethnic studies. He has published the books Black Towns and Profit, and Booker T. Washington in American Memory. Professor Hamilton has been affiliated with the Association for the Study of African American Life and History for over forty years.
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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AWARD RECIPIENT S JARVIS R. GIVENS C O U N C IL AW A R D O F S P E CIA L R E C O GN IT I O N
Jarvis R. Givens is an Assistant Professor of Education and African American Studies, and the Suzanne Young Murray Assistant Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. His first book, Fugitive Pedagogy: Carter G. Woodson and the Art of Black Teaching, was published in 2021 by Harvard University Press. He is currently building The Black Teacher Archive, an online portal that will house digitized records documenting the more than onehundred- year history of "Colored Teacher Associations." Professor Givens's research has been supported by fellowships and grants from the Ford Foundation, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the William F. Milton Fund. Professor Givens earned his PhD in African American studies from the University of California, Berkeley.
FRED O. SMITH SR. COUN CI L A W A R D O F SP E C I A L R EC O G N I T I O N
Fred O. Smith Sr., a retired Georgia Department of Labor official, currently serves as executive director of the East Athens Development Corporation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting the uplift of impoverished individuals and families. Smith spent more than thirty years in state government, retiring in 2013 as district director of the Georgia Department of Labor. His district was responsible for career and unemployment services to citizens in twenty-seven Georgia counties. Prior, he was a regional representative in the Labor Department’s Career Development Division in Atlanta, where he provided technical assistance and support to the state workforce areas. Previously, he worked for the Georgia Department of Community Affairs, where in 1993 he designed and coordinated DCA’s Family Self-Sufficiency Program. A savings incentive program, FSS encouraged and supported economic independence by families receiving federal assistance. Under Smith’s leadership, numerous low-income family members gained jobs or better jobs, furthered their education, and started escrow savings accounts.
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106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
AWARD RECIPIENT S JANET SIMS-WOOD THE DO ROT HY P OR T E R W ES LE Y AW AR D Award presented by Information Professionals of ASALH
Janet Sims-Wood was the Assistant Chief Librarian for Reference/Reader Services at the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (MSRC), Howard University, Washington, D.C. She has taught at the University of Maryland and has served as a children’s librarian with the D.C. Public Library System, and currently works part-time for the Prince George’s (MD) Community College Library as an Associate Professor/Adjunct Faculty Librarian. Dr. Sims-Wood is a founding Associate Editor of SAGE: A Scholarly Journal on Black Women. She served on the editorial boards of the online Black history journal, HUArchivesNet. She served nine years she served as National Vice President and Chair of the Membership Committee. She also served as President of the Washington, D. C. based Bethel Dukes Branch, ASALH. Dr. Sims-Wood is a Life Member of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History and the Association of Black Women Historians.
MARTHA'S VINEYARD BRANCH O UT ST AN DI N G B R A N CH PR O GR A M MIN G AW A R D
The branch structure of ASALH reflects Carter G. Woodson’s belief that our mission, to create and disseminate knowledge about Black history, could not be realized solely by academics. He envisioned branches as a means of extending ASALH’s reach across the country and beyond. Branches collect primary materials about Black History to celebrate national and local African American achievers and local and national happenings. Invitations are extended to members and to the public to participate in theme-based events, programs and activities. Branches attend monthly membership meetings,support Annual Meeting and Conferences, and other National initiatives.
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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PA S T AWARD RECIPIENT S CARTER G. WOODSON SCHOLARS MEDALLION
1993 Benjamin A. Quarles 1994 John Hope Franklin 1995 Dorothy Porter Wesley John Henrik Clarke
2001 Shirley Kilpatrick
2010 Juliet Walker
2002 Madlyn Calbert Rev. William E. Calbert
2011 Vincent Harding 2012 Collin Palmer
1997 Adelaide M. Cromwell
2013 Deborah Gray White
1998 Edgar Toppin
2014 Gerald Horne
1999 Arvarh E. Strickland
2015 David Levering Lewis
2000 Mary Frances Berry Edna Chappell McKenzie
2016 Wilma King
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
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2009 Sharon Harley
2017 William Seraile 2018 Brenda Stevenson 2019 Bernard Powers MARY MCLEOD BETHUNE SERVICE AWARD
1995 Jeanette L. Cascone 1996 Edgar Toppin
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL AWARD OF SPECIAL RECOGNITION
2008 John H. Bracey, Jr.
2003 Adelaide Cromwell
Gloria Harper Dickinson
2004 Rev. Richard T. Adams
Laura Ann Wilkinson
2005 Edna McKenzie Elmer Geathers
Our Authors Study Club, Inc.
2006 Bettye Gardner Elizabeth Clark-Lewis
Faye McClure
James Turner Farmers Insurance Group
2009 Vincent de Forest
2010
2007 Paul Edwards Lillie Edwards
James Johnson
2008 Barbara Walker Dolores Nehemiah
Dorothy Redford
2009 Bob Hayden
Marvin Pittman
2010 Florence Radcliffe
Ethel Jones Bynum
2011 Daryl Michael Scott 2012 Janet Sims-Wood 2014 Barbara Spencer Dunn
Rev. Kenneth Hammond Everett B. Ward Rev. David Forbes Elsie Scott Charlie Nelms Charles C. Brewer Madlyn Calbert Rev. William Calbert Vincent deForest Cora Dixon Elmer D. Geathers James “Buddy” Griggsby, III Frederick J. Laney
1997 Sylvia M. Jacobs
2016 La Vonna I. Neal Lois L. Watson
1998 Roland C. McConnell
2018 Ruth Hodge
Howard Dodson
1999 Wayland McClellan
2019 Ida Jones Brenda Simmons-Hutchins
Carl M. Dunn
2000 Alton Parker Hornsby
Robert Stanton 2011 Thomas C. Battle Robert L. Harris 2012 Constance Tate
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
PA S T AWARD RECIPIENT S 2013
Bishop Vashtai McKenzie
Addie Richburg
Eleanor Holmes Norton
Frank Smith
Bernice Johnson Reagon
Charles “Alan” Spears
Julieanna Richardson Paula Whetsel-Ribeau
2014
Tracey Web
David C. Driskell
Lynn Whitfield
2015 Sheila Flemming-Hunter
2013
Daryl Michael Scott
Mary Frances Berry
2016 Dorothy F. Bailey Louis Hicks
Raymond A. Winbush 2015 Arnold L. Mitchem Reginald Van Lee Myron A. Gray Rev. Dr. Jonathan L. Weaver Robert G. Stanton The Hon. James E. Clyburn The W.K. Kellogg Foundation
The Hon. Eleanor Holmes Norton Rodney H. Orr Jonathan Pourzal Rep. Louis Stokes Shelley Stokes-Hammond
Roslyn M. Brock
Ingrid Saunders Jones
Davita Vance-Cooks
Pauletta Brown Bracy
Charles Bibbs
Frances Cress Wesling
2017
Lori Leah Croom
Goodwine
Michelle Duster
Eloise Greenfield
Margot Shetterly
Antoinette Harrell
2019
Olivia Hooker
Lonnie G. Bunch
Lyn Hughes Dorothy Jones Cheryl L. Knox
Mirlene Pitre
Robert Moses
Mattie I. Taylor
Queen Quet Marquetta L.
Monroe Little
Bette McLeod
2016
2017
Edgar Brookins
Joe Madison
Camille Billops
Minnijean Brown Trickey
2018
James W. Loewen
Latoya Lucas
Bettye Collier-Thomas Bryan Stevenson
JOHN HOPE FRANKLIN LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
2015 John Lewis
ASALH LUMINARY AWARD
2019 Inaugural Winner Rev. Nelson B.Rivers, III FREEDOM SCHOLAR AWARD
2019 Inaugural Winners Tiffany G. B. Packer Sarah Lewis
2019
Naomi Long Madgett
Rep. James Clyburn
Margaret Moore
David L. and Yvonne B. Acey
RAYS OF LIGHT
Mary Moultrie
2015
Newatha Myers
Charles F. Bolden, Jr.
Consolee Nishimwe
Anthony Browder
Florence Tate
Lonnie G. Bunch
THE ASALH BOOK PRIZE 2021 Inaugural Winners William Darity, Jr. and Kirsten Mullen
Najmah Thomas
W. Paul Coates
Camilla P. Thompson
Johnnetta B. Cole
THE DOROTHY PORTER
LIVING LEGACY AWARD
2012 Denise Rolark Barnes Brigadier General Barbaranette T. Bolden Beverly Bond
2014
Roslyn Brock
Dr. Charlene M. Dukes
Lavern Chatman Brown
The Hon. Patsy Jo Hilliard
Peggy Cooper Cafritz
Bell Hooks
AMB Suzan Johnson Cook
Freeman A. Hrabowski, III
Marion Wright Edelman
Velma Lois Jones
Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham
Wyman O. Jones, Sr
Allison Hill
Joyce Ladner
JC Hayward
LaSalle D. Leffall, Jr, MD
Mae Jemison
Reginald L. Weaver
John W. Franklin
WESLEY AWARD PRESENTED BY THE
Ayanna Gregory
ASALH INFORMATION
Dick Gregory
PROFESSIONALS
Asa. G Hilliard III
2018 W. Paul Coates
The Hon. Patsy Jo Hilliard Freeman A. Hrabowski, III Catherine L. Hughes Leonard Jeffries Harriett G. Jenkins Sen. Edward Kennedy, Sr.
2019 Charles L. Blockson 2020 Ms. Deborah L. Dandridge
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
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106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
Asalh Film festival SPONSORED BY BETHEL DUKES BRANCH OF ASALH AND BRANCH MEMBERS
SEPTEMBER 14TH - 25TH, 2021 Keeping with our 2021 Black History theme: The Black Family: Representation, Identity, & Diversity, this year's film selection gives voice to the daily lives of individuals and unsung heroes.
September 14, 2021, 7:00pm - 9:00pm
September 25, 2021, 1:30pm - 3:30pm
SHOT: CAUGHT A SOUL
September 25, 2021, 6:15pm - 7:45pm
RACIALLY CHARGED
September 25, 2021, 8:00pm - 9:30pm
GEOGRAPHIES OF KINSHIP
September 28, 2021, 1:30pm - 3:30pm
DREAMS OF EMMETT TILL
September 28, 2021, 7:30pm - 9:30pm
INVISIBLE HISTORY: MIDDLE FLORIDA'S HIDDEN ROOTS VISIT WWW.ASALH.ORG/FILM
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ALH
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SPECIAL THANKS TO THE 106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTS
Welcome Remarks from Senator Audrey Gibson
Welcome Remarks from Hazel Gillis, James Weldon Johnson Branch
Welcome Remarks from David Wilkins, President of Manasota Branch
Welcome Remarks from Charlene Farrington, President, South Florida Branch
ASALH of Tampa Bay Leontyne Middleton, President Dorothy Turner Johnson Branch Central Florida Karen Adamopoulos, President James Weldon Johnson Branch Jacksonville, FL Hazel Gillis, President Manasota Branch David G. Wilkins, President Greetings from Florida
St. Petersburg Branch Jacqueline Hubbard, Esq., President South Florida Branch Charlene Farrington, President
BR ANCH PRESIDENT S
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JOHN L. LANIER Charles A. Brown Branch of Birmingham (Alabama)
ANGELIA BENDOLPH Mobile Branch (Alabama)
BERTIS D. ENGLISH Harper Councill Trenholm Sr. Branch (Montgomery, Alabama)
JAN GORDON Our Authors Study Club Branch (Los Angeles, California)
KAREN ADAMOPOULOS Central Florida Dorothy Turner Johnson Branch (Florida)
HAZEL GILLIS James Weldon Johnson Branch (Jacksonville, Florida)
DAVID G. WILKINS, ESQ. Manasota Branch (Florida)
CHARLENE FARRINGTON South Florida Branch (Florida)
JACQUELINE WILLIAMS HUBBARD, ESQ. St. Petersburg Branch (Florida)
LEONTYNE MIDDLETON Tampa Bay Branch (Florida)
FREDA SCOTT GILES Athens Branch (Georgia)
SEAN JONES Atlanta Branch of ASALH (Georgia)
CAROLYN S. BLACKSHEAR Savannah Yamacraw Branch (Georgia)
LIONEL KIMBLE Chicago Branch (Illinois)
SUSAN HALL DOTSON Joseph T. Taylor Branch (Indiana)
BARBARA BOYD Louisville Branch (Kentucky)
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
BR ANCH PRESIDENT S
KARA TUCINA OLIDGE Charles Deslondes Branch (New Orleans, Louisiana)
JACQUELINE B. WOODY Prince George’s County Truth Branch (Maryland)
ANDRE M. LEE Roland McConnell Branch (Maryland)
MICHAEL CHILDS Samuel L. Banks Branch (Maryland)
MARY CHAVIS RADCLIFFE The Julian Branch of Baltimore County (Maryland)
THELMA M. JOHNSON Martha’s Vineyard Branch (Massachusetts)
DAVID HEAD Detroit Branch (Michigan)
LARRY LESTER Greater Kansas City Black History Study Group (Missouri)
REV. GERALD L. TRUEHART, II
DEIRDRE FOREMAN Manhattan Branch (New York)
DENA ROBINS Bronx Branch (New York)
SHIRLEY FELDER Sullivan County Branch (New York)
GREGORY MIXON Romare Bearden Branch (Charlotte, North Carolina)
MARCIA GARRISON Margaret & Robert Garner Branch (Cincinnati, Ohio)
GLORIA ROSE Cleveland Branch (Ohio)
OMOPE CARTER-DABOIKU
Dr. Carter G. Woodson Greater Trenton Branch (New Jersey)
Paul Laurence Dunbar (Dayton, Ohio)
THE 2021 BL ACK HISTORY THEME , THE BL ACK FAMILY: REPRESENTATION, IDENTIT Y, AND DIVERSIT Y
49
BR ANCH PRESIDENT S
RONALD B. SAUNDERS Dr. Edna McKenzie Branch (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
REGINA J. VAUGHN Philadelphia Branch (Pennsylvania)
DANA Y. KING, ESQ. Phila-Montco Branch (Pennsylvania)
JEROME C. HARRIS Charleston Area Branch (South Carolina)
YVONNE B. ACEY Memphis Area Branch (Tennessee)
IDA LEE CAREY W. Marvin Dulaney D/FW Branch (Texas)
AUDREY PERRY WILLIAMS Hampton Roads (Virginia)
ERNEST PORTER Louisa Branch (Virginia)
MICHELLE EVANS OLIVER Our Ancestors Legacy Richmond Branch (Virginia)
IDA JONES Bethel Dukes Branch (Washington, D.C.)
TRAVAUGHN LOVICK C. DeLores Tucker Legacy Branch (Washington, D.C.)
ELNORA LEWIS Carter G. Woodson Branch (Washington, D.C.)
JOIN AN A SALH BR ANCH We have branches throughout the United States. In order to join a branch, you must first be a member of ASALH National, then you must pay the branch dues (if applicable). If interested, contact the branch representative of your choice listed on our branch directory for their meeting notices. Take your receipt to the meeting to show proof of your National Membership. Then you are eligible to join the branch. DAVID HARRIS Huntington Tri-State Branch (West Virginia)
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Visit ASALH.org/Join for more information.
106TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE CO-HOSTED BY THE ASALH FLORIDA BRANCHES | SEPTEMBER 14-30
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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: Pero G. Dagbovie | www.journals.uchicago.edu/jaah
Founded in 1916 as The Journal of Negro History by Dr. Carter G. Woodson, The Journal of African American History (JAAH) is the leading scholarly publication in the field of African American history. The JAAH publishes original scholarly articles and book reviews on all aspects of the African American experience and it embraces ASALH’s mission of promoting, researching, preserving, interpreting, and disseminating “information about Black life, history, and culture to the global community.” 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.
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Robert Hamilton the morehouse college king collection series on civil and human rights
a better life for their children
Julius Rosenwald, Booker T. Washington, and the 4,978 Schools That Changed America
Photographs and Stories by Andrew Feiler Foreword by Congressman John Lewis
seen/unseen
Hidden Lives in a Community of Enslaved Georgians
Christopher R. Lawton, Laura E. Nelson, and Randy L. Reid new perspectives on the civil war era
in search of liberty African American Internationalism in the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic World
Edited by Ronald Angelo Johnson and Ousmane K. Power-Greene race in the atlantic world, 1700–1900
audacious agitation The Uncompromising Commitment of Black Youth to Equal Education after Brown Vincent D. Willis
building beloved communities
canaan, dim and far
Hildi Hendrickson
Adam Lee Cilli
The Life and Work of Rev. Dr. Paul Smith
Black Reformers and the Pursuit of Citizenship in Pittsburgh, 1915–1945
@UGAPress
complexion of empire in natchez Race and Slavery in the Mississippi Borderlands Christian Pinnen early american places
generations of freedom
Gender, Movement, and Violence in Natchez, 1779–1865 Nik Ribianszky early american places
a weary land
Slavery on the Ground in Arkansas Kelly Houston Jones early american places
ugapress.org
NEW FROM UNC PRESS Permanent Markers
Arise Africa, Roar China
The Ballad of Robert Charles
272 pages $29.95 paper
408 pages $34.95 cloth
264 pages $27.95 paper
Race, Ancestry, and the Body after the Genome Sarah Abel
Half in Shadow
The Life and Legacy of Nellie Y. McKay Shanna Greene Benjamin 280 pages $24.95 paper
The Record of Murders and Outrages
Racial Violence and the Fight over Truth at the Dawn of Reconstruction William A. Blair
Black and Chinese Citizens of the World in the Twentieth Century Yunxiang Gao
The Earliest African American Literatures
A Critical Reader Edited by Zachary McLeod Hutchins and Cassander L. Smith 216 pages $24.95 paper
Grotesque Touch
Chronicling Stankonia
Women, Violence, and Contemporary Circum-Caribbean Narratives Amy K. King
136 pages $19.95 paper
Tears, Fire, and Blood
184 pages $19.95 paper
The Rise of the Hip-Hop South Regina N. Bradley
White Evangelical Racism
The Politics of Morality in America Anthea Butler A Ferris and Ferris Book 176 pages $24.00 cloth
Nixon’s War at Home
The FBI, Leftist Guerrillas, and the Origins of Counterterrorism Daniel S. Chard 384 pages $32.95 cloth
Twice Forgotten
African Americans and the Korean War, an Oral History David P. Cline 416 pages $30.00 cloth
No Common Ground
Confederate Monuments and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice Karen L. Cox A Ferris and Ferris Book 224 pages $24.00 cloth
Tainted Tap
Flint’s Journey from Crisis to Recovery Katrinell M. Davis 280 pages $24.95 paper
The Black Man in Brazilian Soccer
248 pages $39.95 paper
The United States and the Decolonization of Africa James H. Meriwether 320 pages $29.95 paper
Black Smoke
African Americans and the United States of Barbecue Adrian Miller A Ferris and Ferris Book 328 pages $30.00 cloth
Beyond Slavery’s Shadow Free People of Color in the South Warren Eugene Milteer Jr. 376 pages $29.95 paper
White Philanthropy
Carnegie Corporation’s An American Dilemma and the Making of a White World Order Maribel Morey 328 pages $34.95 paper
At the Threshold of Liberty Women, Slavery, and Shifting Identities in Washington, D.C. Tamika Y. Nunley 272 pages $27.95 paper
Mario Filho
Southern History across the Color Line, Second Edition
368 pages $24.95 paper
262 pages $24.95 paper
Translated by Jack A. Draper III
The Colored Conventions Movement
Black Organizing in the Nineteenth Century Edited by P. Gabrielle Foreman, Jim Casey, and Sarah Lynn Patterson 392 pages $29.95 paper
Nell Irvin Painter
Thirteen Clocks
How Race United the Colonies and Made the Declaration of Independence Robert G. Parkinson Published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 256 pages $20.00 paper
Searching for the New Orleans Riot of 1900 K. Stephen Prince
Black Marxism, Revised and Updated Third Edition
The Making of the Black Radical Tradition Cedric J. Robinson 496 pages $29.95 paper
Race, Removal, and the Right to Remain
Migration and the Making of the United States Samantha Seeley Published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 368 pages $34.95 cloth
Nonviolence before King
The Politics of Being and the Black Freedom Struggle Anthony C. Siracusa 290 pages $29.95 paper
Behold the Land
The Black Arts Movement in the South James Smethurst 248 pages $29.95 paper
Beyond the Boundaries of Childhood
African American Children in the Antebellum North Crystal Lynn Webster 208 pages $24.95 paper
The Souls of Womenfolk
The Religious Cultures of Enslaved Women in the Lower South Alexis Wells-Oghoghomeh 320 pages $24.95 paper
To Address You as My Friend
African Americans’ Letters to Abraham Lincoln Edited by Jonathan W. White 304 pages $29.95 cloth
Capitalism and Slavery, Third Edition Eric Williams
272 pages $24.95 paper
Run Home If You Don’t Want to Be Killed
The Detroit Uprising of 1943 Rachel Marie-Crane Williams 304 pages $22.95 paper
at bookstores or 800-848-6224 • uncpress.org • uncpressblog.com
NEW IN PAPERBACK Gone Home
Race and Roots through Appalachia Karida L. Brown 264 pages $24.95 paper
Edna Lewis
At the Table with an American Original Edited by Sara B. Franklin 272 pages $19.00 paper
Color and Character
West Charlotte High and the American Struggle over Educational Equality Pamela Grundy 248 pages $17.95 paper
The Wilmington Ten
Violence, Injustice, and the Rise of Black Politics in the 1970s Kenneth Robert Janken 256 pages $27.95 paper
May We Forever Stand A History of the Black National Anthem Imani Perry 296 pages $18.00 paper
Colored Travelers
Mobility and the Fight for Citizenship before the Civil War Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor 240 pages $22.95 paper
Race for Profit
How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor 376 pages $20.00 paper
Freedom Farmers
Agricultural Resistance and the Black Freedom Movement Monica M. White 208 pages $19.95 paper
Voices of the Enslaved
Love, Labor, and Longing in French Louisiana Sophie White Published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture 352 pages $29.95 paper
40
Save % on all UNC Press books. Visit www.uncpress.org and use promo code 01DAH40. Free U.S. shipping on orders of $75 or more. Expires October 31, 2021. Sign up for monthly new book announcements. Visit www.uncpress.org.
6300West Port Bay Road, Suite 101 ,Wolcott, NY 14590 Phone: 800-782-0077 . Email: information@scholarschoice.com
These are just a few of the many discounted books that we are offering in our full virtual exhibit. Please paste the link below in your browser to see our full exhibit: http://scholarschoice.com/Portals/35/PDFs/ASALH21virtualexhibit.pdf
Basic Books
Bloomsbury Publishing
Fortress Press
McFarland & Co., Inc.
Polity Press/John Wiley & Sons
Princeton University Press
.
Boydell & Brewer
Duke University Press
University of Minnesota Press
Penguin Random House
Simon & Schuster
St. Johann Press
www.press.uillinois.edu
Passing the Baton
Journalism and Jim Crow
Black Women Track Stars and American Identity CAT M. ARIAIL Sport and Society
White Supremacy and the Black Struggle for a New America EDITED BY KATHY ROBERTS FORDE AND SID BEDINGFIELD Foreword by Alex Lichtenstein The History of Communication
The Mark of Slavery Disability, Race, and Gender in Antebellum America JENIFER L. BARCLAY Disability Histories
A Matter of Moral Justice Black Women Laundry Workers and the Fight for Justice JENNY CARSON The Working Class in American History
The Spirit of Soul Food Race, Faith, and Food Justice CHRISTOPHER CARTER
Black Indians and Freedmen The African Methodist Episcopal Church and Indigenous Americans, 1816–1916 CHRISTINA DICKERSONCOUSIN
Mobilizing Black Germany Afro-German Women and the Making of a Transnational Movement TIFFANY N. FLORVIL A Black Perspectives Best Black History Book of 2020 Black Internationalism
Energy Never Dies Afro-Optimism and Creativity in Chicago AYANA CONTRERAS
Women, Gender, and Families of Color JOURNAL EDITOR: AYESHA HARDISON
When Sunday Comes Gospel Music in the Soul and Hip-Hop Eras CLAUDRENA N. HAROLD Music in American Life
THE NEW BLACK STUDIES SERIES Afro-Nostalgia Feeling Good in Contemporary Black Culture BADIA AHAD-LEGARDY
The Black Intellectual Tradition African American Thought in the Twentieth Century EDITED BY DERRICK P. ALRIDGE, CORNELIUS L. BYNUM, AND JAMES B. STEWART
Black Queer Freedom Spaces of Injury and Paths of Desire GERSHUN AVILEZ A 2020 Seminary Co-op Notable Book
Madam C. J. Walker’s Gospel of Giving Black Women’s Philanthropy during Jim Crow TYRONE MCKINLEY FREEMAN Foreword by A’Lelia Bundles A 2020 Seminary Co-op Notable Book
Laughing to Keep from Dying African American Satire in the Twenty-First Century DANIELLE FUENTES MORGAN
The Poetics of Difference Queer Feminist Forms in the African Diaspora MECCA JAMILAH SULLIVAN
Surviving Southampton African American Women and Resistance in Nat Turner’s Community VANESSA M. HOLDEN Women, Gender, and Sexuality in American History
Soul on Soul The Life and Music of Mary Lou Williams TAMMY L. KERNODLE With a new preface Music in American Life
Peace Be Still How James Cleveland and the Angelic Choir Created a Gospel Classic ROBERT M. MAROVICH Music in American Life
Being La Dominicana Race and Identity in the Visual Culture of Santo Domingo RACHEL AFI QUINN Dissident Feminisms
COMPUGIRLS How Girls of Color Find and Define Themselves in the Digital Age KIMBERLY A. SCOTT Dissident Feminisms
Journal of Civil and Human Rights JOURNAL EDITOR: SUZANNE SINKE
Visit our website for exhibit discounts and special offers
LEGENDARY BLACK ARTISTS
N E W I N PA P E R
N E W I N PA P E R N E W I N PA P E R
SAVE 40% USING SOURCE CODE 21E8881 OR REQUEST AN EXAM COPY:
www.ucpress.edu
Pre-1900 Americana, including: rare books | manuscripts | maps | graphic arts
Digitized Materials
Research Resources
Archival Collections | Image Bank Online Exhibits
Fellowships Subject Guides | Publications
clements.umich.edu
ASALH’s 106th Annual Conference Presents Exhibitor
Tiby Saunders, Wealth Manager/Financial Advisor Cetera Investors of Philadelphia, PA
Thursday, September 23, 2021, at 1:00 to 3:00 PM Retirement & Legacy, No More Mystery, Your Plans & Strategies
Is my Pension or 401k enough? What about Social Security? Will inflation affect my ability to retire? Is my emergency savings sufficient? Help will my taxes go up?!
These are some relevant issues that we need to discuss and consider for retirement as well as organizing your financial affairs. Featuring:
Tiby Saunders – Discussing Retirement Planning and Strategies Herb Phillips, Vice President, Prudential Annuities -Fixed Lifetime Income Strategies
Office: 1800 JFK Blvd., Suite 800 Philadelphia, PA 19103 215‐568‐2078 ext. 111; Fax 215‐253‐5158
Email: Tiby.Saunders@Ceterainvestors.com Website: www.TibySaunders.Ceterainvestors.com
Cetera Investors is a marketing name of Cetera Investment Services. Securities and Insurance Products are offered through Cetera Investment Services LLC (doing insurance business in CA as CFG STC Insurance Agency LLC), member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory services are offered through Cetera Investment Advisers LLC.
JOIN A
PURPOSE DRIVEN UNIVERSITY ??????
At Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, everyone is welcome. The university is committed to diversity and inclusion in its student body AND in faculty and staff hiring. Join us at the #1 College by the Sea where you can be part of a close-knit community with a coastal lifestyle in a tropical setting. A list of open positions can be found at the QR code. Apply today and find your purpose with us. tamucc.edu/human-resources
Save the date. Black History month at the Island University. DR. TERRENCE ROBERTS Of the Little Rock Nine February 10, 2022
THE TORN FABRIC OF AMERICA, THE RACIAL DIVIDE BLACK AND WHITE DR. EVE TAYLOR
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Chaplain & Civil Rights Activist, Dr. Eve Taylor, Pens her Provocative Book on America’s Troubling History with Race, The Torn Fabric of America, The Racial Divide, Black and White. Dr. Eve Taylor, an expert on race relations and a civil rights activist who worked to continue the work of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Rep. John Lewis, has seen first-hand how racism has ripped at the fabric of the United States. Her experience coupled with the recent events of police brutality against African Americans spurred the author to pick up her pen once again and chronicle America’s racial past and present in her new book, The Torn Fabric of America, The Racial Divide Black and White. The new book is currently available on Amazon.
Slavery Root Cause and Effects.
Ǥ
Expect the Unexpected
Who came up with the idea that enslaving Africans after they were brought on the American soil on the slave ships would be a good idea? CONTACT INFO • • •
ADDRESS : Ǥ Ǥ ͳͷͳͳͷ ǡ ʹʹ͵ͳͷ CALL US: (571) 334-2871 EMAIL : ͵͵ͷ̷ Ǥ WWW.drevetaylor.com
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 2021 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.
CHARLENE FARRINGTON
ASALH, the founders of Black History Month, is invigorated to continue its second century of service but we need your help.
Donate to ASALH - CFC #12541.
JOHN WRIGHT HOUSE ROSEWOOD, FLORIDA
Lizzie Robinson Jenkins, President/Founder | www.rosewoodflorida.com
OUTSTANDING BLACK WOMEN OF YALOBUSHA COUNTY Their stories and contributions to a Mississippi community These women standing on the steps of the courthouse in Water Valley, Mississippi, many years ago are much like the women featured in this book who made a way out of no way — and not just any way — but a good way.
Compiled and Edited by Dottie Chapman Reed Now available at www.blackwomenofyalobusha.com Contact: reed2318@bellsouth.net / 678.525.5408
NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION AFRICAN AMERICAN BOOKLIST
BLACK WHEELS MICHAEL HALPERIN
A HEROIC STORY RIPPED FROM FORGOTTEN BLACK HISTORY A perfect book for teens 13-19. Inspired by a true story. In 1896 a Black fifteen year-old farm boy joins the 25th Infantry Bicycle Corps on a searing 1900-mile bicycle trek across the American heartland to prove the bicycle as a weapon of war. During the journey the boy learns about bigotry, comradeship and love.
BLACK WHEELS, YA novel is available at Amazon. ISBN-13: 978-1401084431
CONGRATULATIONS
D R . E L I Z A B E T H C L A R K - L E WI S
R E C I P I E N T O F T H E A S A L H L I V I N G L E G A C Y A WA R D
“ T H E E D U C A T I O N O F A N Y P E O P L E S H O U L D B E G I N WI T H T H E P E O P L E T H E M S E L V E S , "
D R . C A R T E R G . WO O D S O N
- Dr. TaKeia Anthony, Dr. Trichita Chestnut, Dr. Vedet Coleman-Robinson (future), Dr. Richlyn Goddard, Dr. Ida Jones, Dr. Joy Kinard, Dr. Lopez Matthews, Jr., Dr. Kenvi Phillips, Dr. Ashley Robertson-Preston
2022 CALL FOR PAPERS
Call for Papers
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES National Virtual Conference February 14-19, 2022
Abstracts, not to exceed two (2) pages, should be submitted that relate to any aspect of the African and African American experience. Subjects may include, but are not limited to: unequal earning capacity, mental health, legal system, police brutality, community violence, shootings, discrimination, education, employment, family, substance abuse, poverty, workplace inequalities, health, emergence of an underclass, and other topics. Please indicate the time required for presentation of your paper (25 minutes OR 45 minutes). ABSTRACTS WITH TITLE OF PAPER, PRESENTER’S NAME, HOME AND INSTITUTION/ORGANIZATION ADDRESS AND E-MAIL SHOULD BE POSTMARKED BY: Saturday, November 13, 2021. SEND ABSTRACTS TO: NAAAS & Affiliates PO Box 545 Westbrook, ME 04098-0545 Telephone: 207/856-2500 Fax: 207/856-2800 Email: naaasconference@naaas.org www.NAAAS.org
Donate $100 or more to receive a limited-edition 2021 Woodson House Holiday Ornament* AND your name will be listed in the 107th Annual Meeting and Conference Souvenir Journal. The ASALH Black History Holiday ornament commemorates the Woodson House new visitor entrance, which is scheduled to open to the public in 2022. *Ornaments will ship October 2021
DONATE $100 TODAY
SOCIAL
JUSTICE Social Justice Terms
WORKSHOP WEDNESDAYS
SEP 15TH 6-8PM SOCIAL JUSTICE 101: UNDERSTANDING THE LANGUAGE OF RACIAL OPPRESSION
Presented by
ASALH & The Howard University Social Justice Consortium Sponsored by the Mellon Just Futures Initiative ●
FOR MORE DETAILS & TO REGISTER:
September 15
ASALHWORKSHOPS.EVENTBRITE.COM
Join us for PART I of our virtual Workshop Wednesdays series on social justice. Led by LISA BROCK, PH.D., founder of the Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership, a lifelong activist, and retired Professor of Transnational Black History.
AssociAtion for the study of AfricAn AmericAn Life and History® The Howard University Social Justice Consortium (SJC) is a cross-organizational, cross-institutional, interdisciplinary partnership that is concerned with educating society and developing the critical consciousness people need to analyze injustice in their own communities and develop innovative and collaborative action-oriented remedies.
SOCIAL
JUSTICE Social Justice Terms
WORKSHOP WEDNESDAYS
SEP 22ND 6-8PM EST SOCIAL JUSTICE 102: UNDERSTANDING THE LANGUAGE OF BLACK LIBERATION
Presented by
ASALH & The Howard University Social Justice Consortium Sponsored by the Mellon Just Futures Initiative ●
FOR MORE DETAILS & TO REGISTER:
September 15
ASALHWORKSHOPS.EVENTBRITE.COM
Join us for PART II of our virtual Workshop Wednesdays series on social justice. Led by LISA BROCK, PH.D., founder of the Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership, a lifelong activist, and retired Professor of Transnational Black History.
AssociAtion for the study of AfricAn AmericAn Life and History® The Howard University Social Justice Consortium (SJC) is a cross-organizational, cross-institutional, interdisciplinary partnership that is concerned with educating society and developing the critical consciousness people need to analyze injustice in their own communities and develop innovative and collaborative action-oriented remedies.
SOCIAL
JUSTICE Social Justice Terms
WORKSHOP WEDNESDAYS
SEP 29TH 6-8PM EST HISTORY OF POLICING IN (BIPOC) COMMUNITIES OF COLOR AND ITS IMPLICATIONS TODAY
Presented by
ASALH & The Howard University Social Justice Consortium Sponsored by the Mellon Just Futures Initiative ●
FOR MORE DETAILS & TO REGISTER:
September 15
ASALHWORKSHOPS.EVENTBRITE.COM
Join us for PART III of our virtual Workshop Wednesdays series on social justice. Led by LISA BROCK, PH.D., founder of the Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership, a lifelong activist, and retired Professor of Transnational Black History.
AssociAtion for the study of AfricAn AmericAn Life and History® The Howard University Social Justice Consortium (SJC) is a cross-organizational, cross-institutional, interdisciplinary partnership that is concerned with educating society and developing the critical consciousness people need to analyze injustice in their own communities and develop innovative and collaborative action-oriented remedies.
SOCIAL
JUSTICE Social Justice Terms
WORKSHOP WEDNESDAYS Presented by
OCT 6TH 6-8PM EST THIS IS WHAT DEMOCRACY LOOKS LIKE: STREET HEAT, VOTING AND THE POWER OF COMMUNITY MAPPING
ASALH & The Howard University Social Justice Consortium Sponsored by the Mellon Just Futures Initiative ●
FOR MORE DETAILS & TO REGISTER:
September 15
ASALHWORKSHOPS.EVENTBRITE.COM
Join us for PART IV of our virtual Workshop Wednesdays series on social justice. Led by Serena Sebring, Ph.D., of UBUNTU!, Southerners on New Ground (SONG), DurhamBeyondPolicing, Movement for Black Lives (M4BL), the Rising Majority, and the National Bail Out Collective.
AssociAtion for the study of AfricAn AmericAn Life and History® The Howard University Social Justice Consortium (SJC) is a cross-organizational, cross-institutional, interdisciplinary partnership that is concerned with educating society and developing the critical consciousness people need to analyze injustice in their own communities and develop innovative and collaborative action-oriented remedies.
SOCIAL
JUSTICE Social Justice Terms
WORKSHOP WEDNESDAYS Presented by
OCT 13TH 6-8PM EST EXPLORING THE IMPACT OF MASS INCARCERATION: HUMANS OF LIFE ROW AND THE WORK OF ETHICAL STORYTELLING
ASALH & The Howard University Social Justice Consortium Sponsored by the Mellon Just Futures Initiative
●
September 15
FOR MORE DETAILS & TO REGISTER: ASALHWORKSHOPS.EVENTBRITE.COM
Join us for PART V of our virtual Workshop Wednesdays series on social justice. Led by Alice Kim, MA., the Director of Human Rights Practice at the University of Chicago’s Pozen Center for Human Rights and Co-Director of the Prison+Neighborhood Art Project’s Justice, Policy and Culture Think Tank AND Emily Hooper Lansana, MA, Senior Director of Community Arts for the Logan Center for the Arts at the University of Chicago.
AssociAtion for the study of AfricAn AmericAn Life and History® The Howard University Social Justice Consortium (SJC) is a cross-organizational, cross-institutional, interdisciplinary partnership that is concerned with educating society and developing the critical consciousness people need to analyze injustice in their own communities and develop innovative and collaborative action-oriented remedies.
THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY
Save The Date
107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE
SEPTEMBER 25- OCTOBER 2, 2022
Montgomery, Alabama RENAISSANCE MONTGOMERY HOTEL & SPA AT THE CONVENTION CENTER 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY® WWW.ASALH.ORG OR CALL 202.238.5910
Call for Papers
2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS THE 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE SEPTEMBER 25 – OCTOBER 2, 2022 MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | RENAISSANCE MONTGOMERY HOTEL & SPA The theme for 2022 focuses on the importance of Black Health and Wellness. This theme acknowledges the legacy of not only Black scholars and medical practitioners in Western medicine, but also other ways of knowing (e.g., birthworkers, doulas, midwives, naturopaths, herbalists, etc.) throughout the African Diaspora. The 2022 theme considers activities, rituals and initiatives that Black communities have done to be well. In order to foster good health and wellness Black people have embarked on self-determination, mutual aid and social support initiatives to build hospitals, medical and nursing schools and community clinics. Clinics were established by individuals, grassroots organizations and mutual aid societies, such as the African Union Society, National Association of Colored Women and Black Panther Party, to provide spaces for Black people to counter the economic and health disparities and discrimination that are found at mainstream institutions. These disparities and anti-Blackness led to communities developing phrases such as “When white folks catch a cold, Black folks get pneumonia.” Black Health and Wellness not only includes one’s physical body, but also emotional and mental health. At this point in the 21st century, our understanding of Black health and wellness is broader and more nuanced than ever. More importantly, in the still overhanging shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic, Black people should and do use data and other information-sharing modalities to document, decry, and agitate against the interconnected, intersecting inequalities intentionally baked into systems and structures in the U.S. for no other reason than to curtail, circumscribe, and destroy Black well-being in all forms and Black lives. Moreover, Black communities must look to the past to provide the light for our future, by embracing the rituals, traditions and healing modalities of our ancestors. These ways of knowing require a decolonization of thought and practice. The Association for the Study of African American Life and History’s Academic Program Committee seeks a diverse slate of presenters and panels representing a variety of professional and institutional backgrounds, perspectives, and voices. We are interested in detailed, comprehensive, and descriptive proposals that outline the theme, scope, and aim of participants. The committee particularly seeks presentations that probe the traditional fields of economic, political, medicine, psychology, intellectual, and cultural history; the established fields of urban, race, ethnic, labor, and women’s/gender history as well as southern and western history; along with the rapidly expanding fields of sexuality, LGBTQIA, and queer history; environmental and public history; African American intellectual history; literature; and the social sciences.We look forward to proposals that center Black/African Diasporic health from multiple ontologies and epistemologies, embrace decoloniality and engage embodiment. We encourage proposals from scholars working across a variety of temporal, geographical, thematic, and topical areas in Black history, life and culture. We seek to foster a space of inclusion in the ASALH program and encourage submissions from anyone interested in presenting including: historians, students, new professionals, first-time presenters, activists, and clinicians, community healers, health researchers, and practitioners. The All-Academic system will be open in January 2022. Deadlines for submission of proposals are as follows: Early Bird Submissions will be accepted via All-Academic until March 18, 2022 at 11:59 p.m. (EST). Responses to Early Bird submissions will be sent out by April 18, 2022 at 11:59 p.m. (EST). After this date, the committee will accept all submissions until the deadline of April 30, 2022 at 11:59 p.m. (EST). Regular submissions will be responded to by June 15, 2022 at 11:59 p.m. (EST).
ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY®
107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE SEPTEMBER 25, 2022 - OCTOBER 2, 2022
MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | RENAISSANCE MONTGOMERY HOTEL & SPA 2 0 2 2 B L A C K H I S T O RY TH E M E : B L A CK H EA L TH A N D WE LL N ES S
AUTHORS BOOK TALK EVENT REGISTRATION FORM
Author's Book talk Event September 22, 2022 | 6:00 p.m. CST Date and times are subject to change.
REGISTRATION DEADLINE: AUGUST 31, 2022
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. Paid membership fee and paid additional processing fee of $60 are non-refundable. 4. A signed copy of the book intended for sale at the Author's Book Signing Event. 5. All steps must be completed in order for your application to be processed.
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 ______________ Phone _________________________ Email ________________________________________ Website _________________________________________________________ Facebook____________________________ Twitter_____________________________ Instagram_____________________________ 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 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 provided 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
Title: ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Brief Description: ________________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Name of Publisher: ______________________________________________________________________________________________ Please submit additional titles separately.
PAYMENT INFORMATION $60.00
Registration Fee Must be a 2022 Current Member
Method of Payment:
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RETURN THIS FORM TO: 301 Rhode Island Avenue, NW, Suite 2204 | Washington, D.C. 20001 202-238-5910 | exhibits@asalh.org | www.asalh.org/conference
ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY®
107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE SEPTEMBER 25, 2022 - OCTOBER 2, 2022
MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | RENAISSANCE MONTGOMERY HOTEL & SPA 2 0 2 2 B L A C K H I ST O R Y T H EM E: B LA C K H E A L TH A N D W E L L N E S S
DIGITAL ADVERTISER REGISTRATION FORM All ads must be 300 dpi, camera ready CMYK or grayscale and submitted electronically to programads@asalh.org no later than August 15, 2022
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Note: There will be a charge of $100 or more for all ads submitted non-camera ready. If you do not receive confirmation from ASALH that we’ve received your ad, email programads@asalh.org Prices are subject to change.
ADVERTISERS: PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT CLEARLY Prefix____ First________________________________ M.I.____ Last___________________________________________ Suffix____ Company Name ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Address _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ City_____________________________________________________________________ State____________ Zip ________________ Phone__________________________________________________ Email_________________________________________________ Goods/Services__________________________________________ Website _______________________________________________ Facebook____________________________ Twitter_____________________________ Instagram_____________________________ FOR ADVERTISERS ONLY: I, (print name)___________________________________________, certify that I have read the Contracts and Liabilities Agreement and agree to adhere to the terms and conditions outlined for this conference. Signature______________________________________________________________________________________ Date____________
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ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY®
107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE SEPTEMBER 25, 2022 - OCTOBER 2, 2022
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Association for the Study of EST 1915 African American Life and History
Black History Kit &
Theme Posters 2022 Celebrating Black Health & Wellness
Three High-Quality 1/'2- Posters Suitable for Framing The Black History Kit is 55 includes :
Individual Posters :
Copy of the Black History Month Bulletin
Three Posters $35
With suggestions on sharing and teaching content pertaining to the theme
One Poster $15
One copy of each of the 2022 Themed Posters.
No substitutions are available.
No substitutions are available.
1
2022 Theme Posters!
2
3
TO ORDER , CALL 202 -23/ -5910 OR VISIT ASALH .OR
Save the Date THE 2022
BLACK HISTORY MONTH Virtual F E S T I V A L A L L
M O N T H
L O N G
D U R I N G
F E B R U A R Y
Celebrating the 96th Annual Black History Theme: B L A C K
T H E
H E A L T H
F O U N D E R S
O F
A N D
B L A C K
W E L L N E S S
H I S T O R Y
M O N T H
A s s o c i a t i o n f o r t h e S t u d y o f EST 1915 African American Life and History WWW.ASALH.ORG | 202.238.5910 | #ASALH
Dr. Carter G. Woodson
THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY
Save the Date
108TH ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE
SEPTEMBER 17-25, 2023
Jacksonville, Florida
HYATT REGENCY JACKSONVILLE RIVERFRONT 2023 BLACK HISTORY THEME:
ANTI-BLACK VIOLENCE AND RESISTANCE IN THE DIASPORA ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE AND HISTORY® WWW.ASALH.ORG OR CALL 202.238.5910
Family outside former slave quarters at Hermitage Plantation, Savannah, GA, 1907 © Detroit Publishing Co., Library of Congress
Listen to
the Whispers of the Past
How do we tell future generations the full history of those who came before us? How can we preserve the places where their stories unfolded? How can we honor the lives of African American families — and their individual identities?
We can stand at historic sites and hear the whispers of long ago around us. Stories from past generations, told through the places our ancestors inhabited, allow us to experience authentic learning in place. As a nation, we must give voice to all individuals. We must tell authentic accounts of our history and the fragile threads that held peoples’ lives together. Cultural landscapes and historic sites memorialize the places where history was made. Help protect and preserve these places.
Read more about the work of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation at www.achp.gov The Advisory Council on Historic Preservation promotes the preservation, enhancement, and sustainable use of our nation’s diverse historic resources, and advises the President and the Congress on national historic preservation policy.