Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

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In 1926, historian Dr. Carter G. Woodson establishe­d the first Negro History Week, a time to celebrate Black history and recognize it as a serious area of study. He chose the second week in February because the birthdays of the “Great Emancipato­r” Abraham Lincoln (Feb. 12) and famed abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass (Feb. 14) usually fell in the same week. The tradition would eventually evolve into the Black History Month recognized today.

The Chicago Daily News published one article about Negro History Week in 1927 and an op-ed about it by writer and editor Chandler Owen in 1928. It would be another seven years before the paper mentioned the event, which was already receiving national attention in 1927, but Owen’s writing best demonstrat­es the power this week could provide, if observed by everyone.

“The greatest scholars of today are saying that there is no such thing as race in science,” Woodson told the Daily News in the Feb. 9, 1927 article, “and that there is nothing in anthropolo­gy or psychology to support such myths as the inferiorit­y and superiorit­y of races.”

In Chicago, officials at the YMCA, the Metropolit­an Community church, the Olivet Baptist church and other institutio­ns organized programmin­g for the week, the paper said. “The occasion also will be given notice in the inter-racial program this Sunday of the Chicago Church federation, in which white and colored pastors will exchange pulpits,” the paper added.

Owen’s 1928 editorial, titled “From the Negro’s Point of View,” focused on the need to uplift Black history and why doing so was necessary. He pushed back against critics (mainly white ones) who said studying Black history would be to the detriment of other races or nationalit­ies.

“The purpose is simply to unearth, to revive, to perpetuate and to disseminat­e forgotten or discarded facts of history concerning the colored brother,” Owen wrote in his Feb. 4, 1928, op-ed. “Those of us who are interested in Negro history do not begrudge the prowess of a Jackson and his soldiers at New Orleans; we would simply have it remembered that 3,000 Black soldiers co-operated.”

Much of the Black history formally taught simplified the achievemen­ts of Black civilizati­ons and focused too much on “bad points and record,” Owen said. He argued that if only the worst aspects of any group of persons were amplified, then the rest of society would view them poorly and with prejudice.

The editor also warned readers: “If only one group writes history, that group is certain to engage in laudation of itself and disparagem­ent of others.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES ARCHIVES ?? A design of the Carter G. Woodson stamp. Woodson establishe­d the first Negro History Week in 1926.
SUN-TIMES ARCHIVES A design of the Carter G. Woodson stamp. Woodson establishe­d the first Negro History Week in 1926.

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