GCS Celebrates Black History Month across the District
GCS staff and students are celebrating Black History Month. GCS is proud to feature special events in our schools during this month and other months dedicated to honoring the rich diversity of people who make our country unique. The contributions to our country made by different races, nationalities and cultures are vast. Yet, we began celebrating Black History Month in this country in 1976 – a relatively short time ago. That is one of the many reasons at GCS, we choose to embrace our collective history through the study of all people who paved the way.
What we now call Black History Month was originated in 1926 by Carter Godwin Woodson as Negro History Week. The month of February was selected in deference to Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln who were both born in that month.
The son of a slave, Carter G. Woodson was born in New Canton, Virginia on December 19, 1875. He began high school at the age of 20 and then proceeded to study at Berea College, the University of Chicago, the Sorbonne, and Harvard University, where he earned a Ph.D. in 1912.
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Carter Godwin Woodson
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Carter G. Woodson founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History in 1915 to train black historians and to collect, preserve, and publish documents on black life and black people. He also founded the Journal of Negro History (1916), Associated Publishers (1922), and the Negro Bulletin (1937). Woodson spent his life working to educate all people about the vast contributions made by black men and women throughout history. Mr. Woodson died on April 3, 1950 and Black History Month is his legacy.
Carter G. Woodson, however, would be sad to know that out of all the hundreds of black men and women who produced so many substantial inventions (from the development of crop rotation, the traffic light, the mail box, gas mask, fountain pen, typewriter, telegraph, golf tee, automatic gear shift, commode toilet--- to the method of dry cleaning clothes, the electric lamp, and the automatic car coupler and air brake for the railroad) benefiting this country, only four black inventors have been inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Akron, Ohio.
During the last four years, the Patent and Trademark Office has been working closely with the National Inventors Hall of Fame Foundation to rectify this situation and honor the true story of Black History.
The four black inventors inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame are:
Here are some links that can help you and your students learn more about Black History:
The History Channel: http://www.history.com/minisites/blackhistory/
Biography: http://www.biography.com/blackhistory/
Infoplease: http://www.infoplease.com/spot/bhm1.html
This article is attibuted to About.com.
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