The Tuskeegee Airmen, in more ways than one, were directly responsible for the fact that I had a seat in the theater. They fought for the rights that I take for granted: the right to be an American Airman; the right to be a full and free citizen of my own country; the right to simply sit wherever I want in a movie theater.
Category: American History
Wyatt Outlaw: An Enduring Model of The Black Freedom Tradition
All too often, the Black Freedom Tradition in our nation is ignored, distorted, and misappropriated for reasons that range from silly and shallow to dangerous and vile, despite the fact that our nation’s survival has often depended upon it. Still, the tradition endures, in reverent memory, in deep ancestral bonds, and in day-to-day practice.
Education for Freedom: Black-Organized Education in Reconstruction Era Franklinton, NC
In April of 1866, Walter A. Bookram, a civic leader in the Black community of the town of Franklinton, North Carolina, wrote to the editors of the A.M.E. Church’s newsletter, The Christian Recorder, to inform them that a school for the town’s free and newly-freed Black residents had been established. The school in question was a night school housed in…
Dr. Barbara Jeanne Fields on the Moral Foundations of Freedom
“Slavery and freedom are incommensurable qualities, the difference between them an existential matter touching the dignity and worth of human life. People suffer, certainly, in freedom as well as in slavery (and, for that matter, in every known condition of human existence). But that unquestionable truth does not license anyone to tote up the suffering of one–in dollars of gold,…
The Way I See America
This is how I see America: Maritime, African, Indigenous, and European, with the Greater Caribbean at its heart (h/t to Elizabeth Eaton’s map of the Atlantic arc of colonial British America for bringing this thought to the forefront). Edit: the Google Earth version of the same perspective.

