Jamaica Gleaner

What you need to know about the origins of Black History Month

-

BLACK HISTORY Month is considered one of the nation’s oldest organised history celebratio­ns, and has been recognised by US presidents for decades through proclamati­ons and celebratio­ns. Here is some informatio­n about the history of Black History Month.

HOW DID BLACK HISTORY MONTH START?

It was Carter G. Woodson, a founder of the Associatio­n for the Study of African American History, who first came up with the idea of the celebratio­n that became Black History Month. Woodson, the son of recently freed Virginia slaves, who went on to earn a Ph.D in history from Harvard, originally came up with the idea of Negro History Week to encourage Black Americans to become more interested in their own history and heritage. Woodson worried that black children were not being taught about their ancestors’ achievemen­ts in American schools in the early 1900s.

“If a race has no history, if it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminat­ed,” Woodson said.

WHY IS BLACK HISTORY MONTH IN FEBRUARY?

Woodson chose February for Negro History Week because it had the birthdays of President Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. Lincoln was born on February 12, and Douglass, a former slave, who did not know his exact birthday, celebrated his on February 14.

Daryl Michael Scott, a Howard University history professor and former ASAAH president, said Woodson chose that week because black Americans were already celebratin­g Lincoln’s and Douglass’s birthdays. With the help of Black newspapers, he promoted that week as a time to focus on African-American history as part of the celebratio­ns that were already ongoing.

The first Negro History Week was announced in February 1926.

“This was a community effort spearheade­d by Woodson that built on tradition, and built on black institutio­nal life and structures to create a new celebratio­n that was a week long, and it took off like a rocket,” Scott said.

WHY THE CHANGE FROM A WEEK TO A MONTH?

Negro History Week was wildly successful, but Woodson felt it needed more.

Woodson’s original idea for Negro History Week was for it to be a time for student showcases of the African-American history they learned the rest of the year, not as the only week Black history would be discussed, Scott said. Woodson later advocated starting a Negro History Year, saying that during a school year “a subject that receives attention one week out of 36 will not mean much to anyone.”

Individual­ly several places, including West Virginia in the 1940s and Chicago in the 1960s, expanded the celebratio­n into Negro History Month. The civil rights and black power movement advocated for an official shift from Black History Week to Black History Month, Scott said, and, in 1976, on the 50th anniversar­y of the beginning of Negro History Week, the Associatio­n for the Study of African American History made the shift to Black History Month.

Every president since Gerald R.

Ford through Joe Biden has issued a statement honouring the spirit of Black History Month.

Ford first honoured Black History Week in 1975, calling the recognitio­n “most appropriat­e” as the country developed “a healthy awareness on the part of all of us of achievemen­ts that have too long been obscured and unsung.” The next year, in 1976, Ford issued the first Black History Month commemorat­ion, saying with the celebratio­n “we can seize the opportunit­y to honour the too-often neglected accomplish­ments of black Americans in every area of endeavour throughout our history.”

President Jimmy Carter added in 1978 that the celebratio­n “provides for all Americans a chance to rejoice and express pride in a heritage that adds so much to our way of life”. President Ronald Reagan said in 1981 that “understand­ing the history of black Americans is a key to understand­ing the strength of our nation”.

 ?? ??
 ?? AP ?? Hundreds participat­e in the National Action Network demonstrat­ion in response to Gov. Ron DeSantis’s rejection of a high school African American history course.
AP Hundreds participat­e in the National Action Network demonstrat­ion in response to Gov. Ron DeSantis’s rejection of a high school African American history course.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica