Black History Month 2012 - WTVM.com-Columbus, GA News Weather & Sports

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  • Bill Pickett was a legendary cowboy and rodeo performer. He is credited with the introduction of a new event to the rodeo: bulldogging.
  • Dr. Condoleezza Rice became Secretary of State on January 26, 2005. Prior to this, she was the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, commonly referred to as the National Security Advisor, since January 2001.
  • The Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Infantry was established in early 1863 under the direction of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw. The first all-black Union regiment of the Civil War.
  • Colin L. Powell was nominated by President Bush on December 16, 2000 as Secretary of State. After being unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate, he was sworn in as the 65th Secretary of State on January
  • Civil Rights leader Ralph David Abernathy was born on March 11, 1926 in Linden, AL. He served as Martin Luther King's chief aide during the Civil Rights struggle of the 1950's and 1960's.
  • The Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) was organized December 5, 1955, following the conviction of Rosa L. Parks for refusing to yield her seat on a segregated Montgomery, Alabama, city bus.
  • The USS Mason was a WWII warship manned mostly by African-Americans. In some circles it was referredt to as "Eleanor's Folly" because Eleanor Roosevelt was an advocate of desegregating thearmed forces. There
  • In 1865 two former slaves - William Savery and Thomas Tarrant of Talladega attended a meeting in Mobile of new freedmen. At the meeting it was decided that education of the children and an emphasis on
  • Known as the "Moses" of her people, Harriet Tubman led over 300 slaves to freedom via the Underground Railroad.
  • Paul Robeson was a lawyer, writer, orator, musician, and linguist. He was born in 1898 and would go on to appear in 13 feature films, perform songs in concert over four decades, and act on Broadway.
  • May McLeod Bethune was born July 10, 1875 in Maysville, S. Carolina the child of slaves. As a child she spent her time in the cotton fields yet yearned for education so deeply she walked nearly 10 miles
  • MARIAN ANDERSON 1897-1993 The first African-American singer to perform with the Metropolitan Opera. A glorious God-given voice, nurtured in the choir of the Union Baptist Church, brought recognition
  • Benjamin Banneker was a self-taught man of extraordinary ability. He was a gifted mathematician, astronomer, inventor, surveyor and almanac writer.
  • Educator, scientist, and innovator are only three of the titles by which George Washington Carver may be called. An ardent researcher, Carver loved trying to understand the the natural world and finding practical uses for nature's resources.
  • Frederick Douglass became the leading spokesman of his time for the abolition of slavery and for racial equality.
  • Fred Gray has been and is one of the most recognized lawyers in the state of Alabama. He has a long history of involvement in the civil rights struggle.
  • Rev. Vernon Johns was the pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, AL from 1948-1952.  In the 1940s he was considered among the top black preachers of the time.
  • Dr. Mae Jemison was the first African-American woman to enter space. Dr. Jemison has a chemical engineering degree from Stanford and a M.D. from Cornell. Jemison spent two years in Africa with the Peace
  • Congressman John Lewis is a distinguished civil rights leader and current U.S. congressman from Georgia. Lewis grew up near Troy, Alabama.
  • Considered by many to be the pre-eminent civil rights leader in American History, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was born on January 15, 1929 in Atlanta, GA.
  • Thurgood Marshall was the first African-American appointed to the United States Supreme Court and played a vital role in the civil rights history of the United States. Thurgood Marshall graduated from
  • E.D. Nixon was often thought of as "Mr. Civil Rights" in Montgomery during the struggle for civil rights.