Carter
G. Woodson (1875-1950) has been cited as the father of black history. This Virginia
born Harvard Ph.D. (1912) founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life
and History (1915) and its Journal of Negro History and established Negro
History Week (1926). In a debate that is
still heard today, some of Woodson’s contemporaries criticized his efforts to
teach or understand African-American history apart from general American
history. Current wisdom suggests that designating
a black history month is not wrong as long as black history is connected to the
timeline of history studied throughout the year. The following is to focus your attention on
some of the black history resources in our area and the people and institutions
that are collectors and repositories of this information.
Americans’
consideration of the African-American experience is only about fifty years old.
The experience of and the lessons
learned by many Americans during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and the
advent of expanded mass communication as in the presentation of the television
series “Roots” resulted in widespread interest in black history among all
races. Today we find increased interest
and research in the experience of this population at the local level.