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The Men of the Tenth Inc.
May 2013
The Come Up Teaching the Truth to the Youth
If You Don’t Know, Now You Know: The Life of Joshua Johnson The first successful African-American artist and one of the finest of early American portrait painters, Joshua Johnson remains shrouded in mystery some 180 years after he lived. The year and place of his birth are unknown, although historians speculate that he was born in the French West Indies and came to America as an indentured servant, living in Maryland. Once he served his time, he would have been freed and soon after pursued a career as a painter in Baltimore, Maryland. It is possible that Johnson studied portrait painting with a member of the celebrated Peale family, which lived in Baltimore at the time and produced many artists. Whatever his training, Johnson distinguished himself as a leading portrait painter by the late 1790s. More than 80 paintings have been attributed to Johnson, although only one of them bears his signature. The striking Continued on Page 4
Does Rick Ross have freedom of speech? Read on Page 2
Henry Blair Inventor (born 1804, died 1860). Mr. Blair invented a cornplanting machine, and he was first African American man to receive an U.S. Patent, which was for that device and which occurred on October 14, 1834. He also received a patent for a cotton planter of August 31, 1836.