94th Annual Black History Luncheon

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94TH ANNUAL BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON & AUTHOR’S BOOK SIGNING FEBRUARY 22, 2020 | THE WASHINGTON RENAISSANCE HOTEL Luncheon: 12 noon | Author’s Book Signing: 10:00 a.m. to 12 noon WWW.ASALH.ORG

#ASALH

#BLACKHISTORYLUNCHEON

#CARTERGWOODSON


The Omega Life Membership Foundation, Inc. Board of Directors

Extend Congratulations & Best Wishes to

ASALH on the 94th Annual Black History Month Luncheon

OMEGA LIFE MEMBERSHIP FOUNDATION, INC. 36 YEARS of CHARITABLE GIVING •

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2020 OLMF Board of Directors & Consultants Kevin E. Walton, Sr. Region I

Gregory E. Ackles, Sr. Region II

Gary C. Clark Region III/Asst. Treas.

Stanford T. Williams, Jr. Region IV/Vice Chair

CleArthur Morris, Sr. Region V

Kipling S. Wilson Region VI/Asst. Sec .

David L. Beckley, PhD Region VII

Kenneth R. Patterson Region VIII/Chairman

Albert Benifield, Jr. Region IX

Gregory C. Pittman Region X

Anthony U. Bostwick Region XI

Myron E. Reed Region XII

Gerald Dugas, PhD Director At-Large

Reginald A. Henry Dir. At-Large/Treas.

David Holliday Director At-Large

Peter L. Mitchell Director At-Large

Sedric D. Myers Dir. At-Large/Secretary

Kenneth A. Brown Harry K. Ratliff Immediate Past Chairman Financial Consultant

Larry A. Brown, Executive Director

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OLMF PO Box 92882 WWW.OLMF.ORG

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R. Steve Bowden Legal Consultant

Washington, DC 20090-2882


LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT

February 22, 2020 Dear ASALH Members and Friends: Welcome to the 94th Annual Black History Luncheon of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History! ASALH invites you to reflect upon the annual theme “African Americans and the Vote.” The theme calls for the commemoration of two anniversaries—the sesquicentennial of the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment, by which black men gained the right to vote after the Civil War, and the centennial of the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, by which women won the vote. Yet, as we celebrate those constitutional milestones, history teaches us to be mindful of their limits—to recognize both the strides and the setbacks for African American men and women. In highlighting this precious right, so fundamental to democracy, we should boast of Senator Hiram Revels of Mississippi, Congressman Robert Brown Elliott of South Carolina, Governor P.B.S. Pinchback of Louisiana, and all the other black elected officials who courageously stood up for the rights of their people during the Reconstruction era of the 1870s and, afterward, in the bitter decades to follow. We should remember, as well, those in freedom’s first generation who lost their lives simply for attempting to register to vote or to exercise their right at the ballot box, as was the case in the Colfax Massacre in Louisiana in 1873. The triumph of women’s suffrage was also accompanied by the duality of gains and losses, since the achievement and denial of voting rights proved equally true for black women. Thus we should certainly champion the work of black suffragists, such as Mary Church Terrell, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, and Nannie Helen Burroughs, who not only spoke out but also organized the votes of black women under the banner of being “in politics to stay” during the 1920s. But we should always keep in mind that the great majority of black women, just as black men, in the South, would not wield the ballot until the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Even then, the vote came at a dangerous cost, including beatings, loss of economic livelihood, and even death to members of the civil rights generation of African Americans who dared to register to vote in the Deep South, in addition to blacks and whites, alike, who went South simply to encourage and facilitate voter registration. Through voting-rights campaigns and legal suits from the turn of the twentieth century to the mid-1960s to this very day, African Americans have made their voices heard as to the importance of the vote. In this election year of 2020, let us show the same unyielding commitment, as did our foreparents, to making our votes count. Sincerely,

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham ASALH National President

2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Evelyn Ross, Fort Myer Construction Corporation

Outreach: Reba N. Burruss-Barnes, Juanita Patience Moss

Doris Sartor, Blacks in Government

Raffle: Subrena Alford, Kym Taylor

Denise Rolark Barnes, Washington Informer

James Shulman, American Council of Learned Societies

Registration: Ferial Bishop, Gwendolyn Harllee

Kenneth Brown, Omega Life Membership Foundation

Marilyn Torres, New York Life

Seating: Sharita Thompson

Reginald Weaver, Former NEA President

Staging: Cheryl Lawrence

LUNCHEON HOST COMMITTEE John Ashley, ASALH* Jeffrey Banks, United Bank

Patricia Browne, President and CEO, National Children’s Center

LUNCHEON LEADERSHIP TEAM

Volunteers: Cheryl Gresham

Johnnetta Betsch Cole, Chair and 7th National President, National Council of Negro Women

Gladys Gary Vaughn, Luncheon Co-Chair

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Sharita Thompson, Luncheon Co-Chair

AfricanAncestry.com

Michelle Celestin, Treasury Department Federal Credit Union

Sylvia Y. Cyrus, Executive Director

AJQ Plus 1 Band

Crystal R. Boswell, Operations Manager

Black EOE Journal

Spencer Crew, Smithsonian NMAAHC

Cheryl Gresham, Volunteer Chair

Rory Gruler, Spot Design

John Fleming, Chair, American Association for State and Local History Council

Valerie Maholmes, Script Writer

Lee’s Flowers, Stacy Banks, Proprietor

Robert Harris, ASALH*

Louis Hicks, Marketing

Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. 2nd District

Gwainevere Catchings Hess, Black Women’s Agenda

LUNCHEON COMMITTEE CHAIRS

Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. 3rd District

Audio Visual: Henry Joseph

ReedSmith LLC

Command Central: Darlene Oliver, Angela Spencer

Ridley Funeral Estab., Inc

Shani Hosten, AARP Kimberly Jeffries, The Links, Incorporated Cory Jones, First Choice Masonry Gladys Mack, ASALH*

Author’s Book Signing: Barbara Morland, Rosalyn Jones Fountain Featured Authors Event: Ann Futrell

David Marion, Grand Basileus, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.

Green Room: Lynne Taylor

Richard Marks, The Starr Center at Washington College

Greeter/Host/Hostess: Lovie Tarver, Lori Knapper, Steven Johnson

Burnis Morris, Marshall University’s Dr. Carter G. Woodson Lyceum

Media/PR: Edgar Brookins, Mesha Williams

*Preservation Sponsors

Omega Psi Phi Volunteers: Steven Johnson, Calvin Beidleman

VENDORS & EXHIBITORS

Afro-American Newspaper Pencil Me In Publications Eastern National ASALH Store Association Book Exhibit

LUNCHEON RAFFLE

1 ticket for $5 / 3 tickets for $10 1st Prize: $500 Cash 2nd Prize: Washington Renaissance Hotel two night stay 3nd Prize: African Ancestry DNA Test Kit 4th Prize: Book Basket

Taylor and Hov Event Planners ASALH STAFF Rachelle Eloizin, Administrative Assistant Crystal R. Boswell, Operations Manager Gigi Davis, Intern Kay E. Phillips, Project Manager Jennifer Bledsoe, Development Nicole Richardson, Assistant

AARP Corporate Office Association of African American Museums Barns & Noble at Howard University Manumission Tour Company

Forever Treasures The Crown Academy Incorporated The Washington Informer Newspaper Heritage International Fashions

ASALH LUNCHEON PARKING $19 self-parking $45 valet parking $35 overnight parking

Drawing to be held at today’s luncheon, must be present to win

2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

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ABOUT ASALH 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.

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., temporarily at 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 LEADERSHIP OFFICERS Dr. Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham ASALH President, Harvard University Mrs. Barbara Spencer Dunn Vice President for Membership, Membership Committee Chair Prince Georges County Truth Branch

Dr. Lionel Kimble, Jr. Vice President for Programs, Chicago State University Dr. Karsonya “Kaye” Wise Whitehead Secretary, Loyola University

Mr. Gilbert Smith Treasurer, Washington, DC Ms. Sylvia Y. Cyrus Executive Director

EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEMBERS CLASS OF 2020

Prof. Gloria Browne-Marshall John Jay College of Criminal Justice CUNY The Manhattan Branch of ASALH

Dr. Bettye Gardner Coppin State University (Professor Emerita)

Dr. Jarvis Givens Harvard University

Mrs. Susan Simms Marsh, Esq. Pennsylvania American Water

Mr. Moses Massenburg Michigan State University

Dr. Sheila Flemming-Hunter Blackrose Foundation

Dr. Gladys Gary Vaughn Cabin John, MD

Mr. Jeff Banks Washington, DC

Mr. Maurice D. Gipson Arkansas State University

Dr. Annette Palmer Morgan State University (retired)

Dr. Sundiata Cha-Jua University of Illinois, Urbanna

Dr. Eric Jackson Northern Kentucky State University

Ms. Aaisha Haykal College of Charleston

Dr. Edna Greene Medford Howard University

Ms. Anita Shepherd Bank of America James Weldon Johnson Branch of ASALH

Ms. LaNesha DeBardelaben Northwest African American Museum Seattle, WA

CLASS OF 2021

CLASS OF 2022 Ms. Denise Rolark Barnes The Washington Informer

Dr. Anton House Delware State University

Dr. Zebulon Vance Miletsky Stony Brook University

Ms. Zende Clark Newark, NJ

Dr. Randal Maurice Jelks University of Kansas

Ms. Camesha Scruggs University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Dr. Natanya Duncan Lehigh University

Ms. Gladys Mack Washington, DC 2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

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CORPORATE SPONSORS

2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

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NEED FULL COLOR AD


CIVIL & STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING | PROGRAM & CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT

Delon Hampton & Associates is proud to sponsor the Featured Authors Event and support the mission of ASALH in the promotion of research and preservation of the African American life, history, and culture.

900 7th Street, NW | Suite 800 | Washington, DC 20001 Tele: 202-898-1999 | Fax: 202-371-2073

www.delonhampton.com

Financing Dreams Since 1935!

We Provide Opportunities To Improve The Quality of Life for Our Members If you live, work, worship, or attend school in the District of Columbia, you are eligible to Join TDFCU Proud Sponsor of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History

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PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS SPEAKER

EMCEE

LONNIE G. BUNCH III

MAUREEN BUNYAN Broadcast Journalist

Student, Duke Ellington School of the Arts

INVOCATION & GRACE

THE BENEDICTION

MODERATOR

REV. WILLIAM H. LAMAR IV

REV. ALFONSO CAMPBELL III Zion Baptist Church, Washington, DC

Editor, The Journal of African American History

PANELIST

PANELIST

PANELIST

Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution

Metropolitan AME Church, Washington, DC

KARINE JEAN-PIERRE

Author, and MSNBC Political Analyst

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MARTHA JONES

Historian and author of Vanguard: How Black Women Broke Barriers, Won the Vote and Insisted on Equality for All

94TH ANNUAL BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON WASHINGTON RENAISSANCE HOTEL | WASHINGTON, D.C. | FEBRUARY 22, 2020

LIFT EVERY VOICE & SING

NIA ELAINE MARIE ALSOP

PERO G. DAGBOVIE

KAYE WISE WHITEHEAD

Associate Professor of African American Studies, Loyola University Maryland, Radio Host, Today with Dr. Kaye


LUNCHEON PROGRAM Dr. Valerie Maholmes, Script Writer

VOICE OF GOD

ENTREE Seared chicken breast with lemon caper sauce, mascarpone mac and cheese, butternut squash and peppers, collard greens with smoked turkey

SEATING OF GUESTS

DESSERT Sweet potato panna cotta

INTRODUCTION OF THE MISTRESS OF CEREMONIES

INTRODUCTION OF AWARDEE / SPEAKER & PRESENTATION OF AWARD

Voice of God

Dr. Shelia Fleming-Hunter, Awards Committee Chair

MISTRESS OF CEREMONIES

ACCEPTANCE OF AWARD AND SPEAKER

Ms. Maureen Bunyan, Broadcast Journalist

Dr. Lonnie Bunch, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution

LIFT EVERY VOICE AND SING, NEGRO NATIONAL ANTHEM Miss Nia Alsop, Student, Duke Ellington School of the Arts

INTRODUCTION OF THE BLACK HERITAGE STAMP

Mr. Elliot Gruber, Director, National Postal Museum

MEMBERSHIP APPEAL

WELCOME

Mrs. Barbara Spencer Dunn, Vice President of Membership

Dr. Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, ASALH President DC Mayor’s Office Representative

RAFFLE DRAWING Raffle Committee

INVOCATION AND GRACE

SPECIAL PRESENTATION OMEGA PSI PHI FRATERNITY, INC.

The Reverend William Lamar IV Metropolitan AME Church, Washington, DC

Mr. Kenneth R. Barnes, Executive Director, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. Mr. Kenneth R. Patterson, Chariman, Omega Life Membership Foundation

THE OCCASION INTRODUCTION OF EXECUTIVE COUNCIL

Dr. Lionel Kimble, Vice President for Programs

CLOSING REMARKS & ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

INTRODUCTION OF SPECIAL GUESTS

Ms. Sylvia Y. Cyrus, ASALH Executive Director

Dr. Gladys Gary Vaughn & Dr. Sharita J. Thompson Luncheon Co-Chairs

BENEDICTION The Rev. Alfonso L. Campbell III, Zion Baptist Church, Washington, DC

GREETINGS

WWW.ASALH.ORG #ASALH #BLACKHISTORYLUNCHEON #CARTERGWOODSON

Ms. Shani Hosten, AARP, Vice President, Multicultural Leadership

LUNCH IS SERVED SALAD Local greens, marinated seedless cucumber, squash, cherry tomatoes, chickpeas, dried cherries, ciabatta crostini with choice of dressing (blood orange vinaigrette dressing and ranch dressing)

GWEN IFILL, 1955-2016 2020 BLACK HERITAGE STAMP On January 30th, the United States Postal Service issued the 43rd stamp in the coveted Black Heritage series. This year’s honoree is Gwen Ifill, one of America’s most esteemed journalists. Among the first African Americans to hold prominent positions in both broadcast and print journalism, she was a trailblazer in the profession.

ENTERTAINMENT PROVIDED BY AJQ+1

2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

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2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

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PROUDLY SUPPORTING

ASALH 94TH ANNUAL BLACK HISTORY LUNCHEON



AUTHOR’S BOOK SIGNING 10 A.M. – NOON | FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Kathy Anderson CHANA Seeking the Red Bird Woody, Snappy and Terpy: Swamp Party Honney Barner Behind the Door – The Secrets to the Beginning Behind the Door II – Revelation Revealed Bernice Alexander Bennett Tracing Their Steps – A Memoir Kelsi Bracmort Simone Visits the Museum Ronald Briscoe My Daddy is Everything! Charita Brown Defying the Verdict: My Bipolar Life Mary Brown Integration A Doorway to Success Harold Buchanan Seven Sisters and a Brother Arthur Burnett Pieces Never Missing Required in a Child’s Life Derrick Butts Prostate Cancer a Family Affair Walter Carr JUST US! Yasmin Carty Proverbs, Phrases with Meanings

Cicero Fain Black Huntington: An Appalachian Story

Dr. Juanita Patience-Moss Deeply Rooted in North Carolina

MJ Fievre Badass Black Girl: Questions, Quotes, and Affirmations for Teens

Glen Mourning Crunchy Life: Recess Detention

Dorothy Gilliam Trailblazer

Stephanie Myers Invisible Queen: Mixed Race Heritage Reveal

Michael Goldfield The Southern Key: Class, Race, & Radicalism in the 1930’s and 1940’s

Veda Pendleton Prepped: A memoir, Coming of Age in Black and White America

Keneshia Grant The Great Migration and the Democratic Party: Black Voters and the Realignment of American Politics in the 20th Century.

Barbara A. Robinson Bend in the Road

Carroll Green Almost Heaven It Wasn’t Even Close A Legacy of Love

Christal Scott Reflections Of The Journey Behind Me

CeLillianne Green Coming Home

Regina Small They Don’t Know (TDK)

Eloise Greenfield The Women Who Caught the Babies: A Story of African American Midwives

Latiera Streeter Dear Fear, Volume 3

Angle Harriot Journey to the Sea Islands: Gullah Geechee Good! Colleen Hawthorne Vibrant Life Success How Today’s Top Achievers Win BIG in Work, Life and Play

Veronica Chapman King Khalid is PROUD

Ky’a Jackson The Color of Care: A Beginner’s Guide for the African American Caregiver

Lee Chavous Meet Jim Crow!

Marvin Johnson Nuggets Of Wisdom For Life’s Journey

Wendi Cherry From Jersey To Me: The Awakening & Healing of a Goddess

Ashley Jones Magic City Gospel

Audrey Childs Trouble So Hard: Labor and Life in the African-American Community, Edenton Town, North Carolina, 1870-1900 Sharon Clarkson My Dream Continues, Romantic Poetry and Prose for the Soul

Myra Rose Seven Sisters and a Brother

Monique Jones The Book of Awesome Black Americans Terry Jones A Summer With No Ice Cream Jacqueline Kane A Real Whole Lot: A WWII Soldier’s Love Letters to His Wife

Mark Cooper The Power of the Passport

Sabrina McIntyre Adore Him, Taking Care of our Temple Simplified

Marlene Cooper Grace Notes

James Mendez A Great Sacrifice

David Terry The Struggle and the Urban South: Confronting Jim Crow in Baltimore Before the Movement Hassan Tetteh The Art of Human Care Eric Twiggs The Discipline of Now: 12 Practical Principles To Overcome Procrastination Hattie Washington DRIVEN TO SUCCEED: An Inspirational Memoir of Lessons Learned Through Faith, Family and Favor (Revised 2019 Edition) Brenda Welburn The Time Travels of Annie Sesstry Antoinette White Who’s Protecting Me? Karsonya Wise-Whitehead RaceBrave Brandon Winford John Hervey Wheeler, Black Banking, and the Economic Struggle for Civil Rights Cheryl Woodruff-Brooks Chicken Bone Beach: A Pictorial History of Atlantic City’s Missouri Avenue Beach

2020 BLACK HISTORY THEME: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE VOTE

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The National Children’s Center (NCC)

Extends Congratulations and Best Wishes to ASALH on their 94th Annual Black History Month Luncheon

Patricia A. Browne President & CEO

For the past 62 years, the National Children’s Center has been one of the largest non-governmental service providers in the Washington D.C. Metropolitan Area. We support infants, children and adults with and without intellectual and developmental disabilities. nccinc.org



THE MEN OF OMEGA PSI PHI FRATERNITY, INC.

Extends Greetings & Best Wishes to

ASALH on your

th

94 Annual Black History Month Luncheon “Friendship is Essential To The Soul”


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