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Tag Archives: liberty and justice for all
America’s Forgotten Freedom Fighters
The new PBS series, The Abolitionists, features five forgotten American freedom fighters — William Lloyd Garrison, Angelina Grimke, Frederick Douglas, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and John Brown (more about Brown in the 3rd paragraph from the end of this article). How … Continue reading
Posted in abolitionists, Angelina Grimke, biography, black history, Frederick Douglas, Harriet Beecher Stowe, history, lifestyles, Quotations, Quotes, self-help, social justice, Uncategorized, William Lloyd Garrison
Tagged abolitionist, against slavery, Alton, American freedom, American Indians, American presidents, anti-slavery movement, attack, black Americans, brave, bravely, burned, burned at the stake, by a mob, chose to use violence, Civil Rights Movement, courageous decision, editorials, Elijah Lovejoy, families, fellow, foreign soil, Francis J. McIntosh, freedom fighters, freedom riders, hanged, Harpers Ferry, hero, history, history writers, honor, I won't forget the men who died, I'm proud to be an American, Ilinois, Jim Crow, John Brown, Jr., Lee Greenwood, liberation, liberty and justice for all, Lydia Marie Child, lynched, Martin Luther King, Medgar Evans, minister, modern wars, monument, Nat Turner, nobel deed, Observer, PBS Series, peaceful methods, prayer, Presbyterian, press, published, quotation, racial lines, religious newspaper, right here in the, runaways, sacrifices, saint, slaveholders, slavery is a sin, slaves, song, Southhampton County, St. Louis, the abolitionists, the South, to fight for freedom, to give that right to me, tool, tribes, turning point, underground railroad, USA, Virginia, where at least I know I'm free, white
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Why Was The Army In Little Rock, AR In 1957?
In 1957 I was a six-year-old in Little Rock, Arkansas. I had a lot of company there as members of the Army’s 101st Airborne Division joined us in the city. At the time I didn’t really understand what was going on; … Continue reading
Posted in black history, history, lifestyles, popular culture, self-help
Tagged 101st Airborne Division, 1957, Afghanistan, all men are created equal, American troops, Antioch University, Arkansas, Army's, bathrooms, black people, Central High School, colored, country, cruelty, dark, department store, downtown, escalator, faculty member, freedom, Garland Elementary School, government, hatred, integrated, integrated society, Iraq, Jim Crow laws, KVLC Radio, land, liberty and justice for all, light complexions, Little Rock, Little Rock Nine, Los Angeles, Meadowcliff, oppression, psychology program, school district, separate, Terrence Roberts, the South, water fountains, white
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A White Man Who Trained Rosa Parks & Martin Luther King, Jr.
Here is a little known fact of American history. Monteagle, Tennessee could be called the cradle of the Civil Rights Movement. Before the Civil Rights Movement began, Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Abernathy, Rosa Parks and many other future leaders … Continue reading
Posted in black history, history, lifestyles, self-help
Tagged a white Tennessean, American hero, American history, back seat, black leadrship, Chattanooga, Civil Rights Movement, column, country road, cradle of the, first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, forced to move, forgotten, freer America, future leaders, greatest Americans of all time, greatness, hated, Highlander Folk School, humility, influential, land, liberty and justice for all, little know fact, Martin Luther King Jr., Monteagle, Monteagle Assembly, Monteagle Tennessee, Myles Horton, named for, non-violance, old, on this spot, one lane, persecution, Pete Seeger, private residence, Ralph Abernathy, rang in my heart, Rosa Parks, sang, school home, seized by, street, suffered, the state of, The Tennessean, the vision, trained, training and support Nashville, unknown nowadays, workshops
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My Second Greatest American — Martin Luther King, Jr.
On this blog I have been counting down my top 10 greatest Americans of all time based on their personal commitment to (and servce for) the principles of ”all men are created equal” and “liberty and justice for all”. My second … Continue reading
Posted in biography, black history, history, lifestyles, religion, self-help
Tagged 10 greatest Americans, 1968, Alabama, all men are created equak. Martin Luther King, America, arrested, Atlanta, bachelor's degree, black minister, Boston University, brave, brutality, bus, bus boycott, chester, civil rights, commitment, conscience of the nation, Coretta Scott Kings, Crozer Theological Seminary, desegregrate, Dexter Avenue Baptist church, employment, equal rights, first black student body president, Georgia, graduated first in his class. earned a Ph.D., Improvement Association, Jr., justice, law, legal, liberty and justice for all, Man of the Year, marches, Memphis, minorities, Montgomery, moral, Morehouse College, murdered, Nobel Peace Prize, nonviolent resistance, PA, passion, principles, protestors, public places, racial discrimination, Rosa Parks, seat, sociology, South, speeches, stirred the souls, sympathy, systematic theology, Time magazine's, TN, ultimate price for freedom, unconstititional, violence, voting rights for blacks, white man, work
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My #9 Greatest American — William Monroe Trotter
“There can be no freedom without equality.” –William Monroe Trotter Standing almost alone during the Jim Crow days of forced segregation, open racism, and public lynchings of the early 20th Century, William Monroe Trotter boldly spoke out for equal rights. … Continue reading
Posted in black history, history, lifestyles, self-help
Tagged 20th Century, accommodiation, agitation, American, American history, Birth of a Nation, black history, blacks, Booker T. Washington, Boston, business, Christ, Civil Rights Movement, cost, Declaration of Principles, delegates, discrimination, equal rights, equality, financial difficulty, France, freedom, God, Harvard, inferiority, Jesus, Jim Crow, liberty and justice for all, life, lynchings, movie, NAACP, Negro, Niagra Movement, non-violent protest, Paris Peace Conference, passport, Phi Betta Kappa, postal service, power, President Woodrow Wilson, racism, right to vote, segregation, ship, The Boston Guardian, The Boston Riot, The New York Times, US State Department, W.E.B. DuBois, White House, whites, William Monroe Trotter, World War I
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