The origins of Black History Month lay in early 20th-century
historian Carter G. Woodson's desire to spotlight the accomplishments of
African Americans. Mainstream historians left out African Americans from the
narrative of American history up until the 1960s, and Woodson worked his entire
career to correct this blinding oversight. His creation of Negro History Week
in 1926 paved the way for the establishment of Black History Month in 1976.
Negro History Week
In 1915, Woodson helped found the Association for the Study of Negro
Life and History (today known as the Association for the Study of African
American Life and History or ASALH). The idea for an organization devoted to
black history came to Woodson as he was discussing the release of the racist
film The Birth of a Nation. Discussing it with a group of African-American men
at a YMCA in Chicago, Woodson convinced the group that African Americans needed
an organization that would strive for a balanced history.
The organization began publishing its flagship journal--The Journal
of Negro History in 1916, and ten years later, Woodson came up with the plan
for a week of activities and commemorations devoted to African-American
history. Woodson chose the week of February 7, 1926, for the first Negro
History Week because it included the birthdays of both Abraham Lincoln (Feb.
12), celebrated for the Emancipation Proclamation that freed many American
slaves, and abolitionist and former slave Frederick Douglass (Feb. 14).
Woodson hoped that Negro History Week would encourage better
relations between blacks and whites in the United States as well as inspire
young African Americans to celebrate the accomplishments and contributions of
their ancestors. In The Mis-Education of the Negro (1933), Woodson lamented,
"Of the hundreds of Negro high schools recently examined by an expert in
the United States Bureau of Education only eighteen offer a course taking up
the history of the Negro, and in most of the Negro colleges and universities
where the Negro is thought of, the race is studied only as a problem or
dismissed as of little consequence." Thanks to Negro History Week, the
Association for the Study of Negro Life and History began to receive requests
for more accessible articles; in 1937 the organization began publishing the Negro
History Bulletin aimed at African-American teachers who wanted to incorporate
black history into their lessons.
Black History Month
African Americans quickly took up Negro History Week, and by the
1960s, at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, American educators, both
white and black, were observing Negro History Week. At the same time,
mainstream historians had begun to expand the American historical narrative to
include African Americans (as well as women and other previously ignored
groups). In 1976, as the US was celebrating its bicentennial, the ASALH
expanded the traditional week-long celebration of African-American history to a
month, and Black History Month was born.
That same year, President Gerald Ford urged Americans to observe
Black History Month, but it was President Carter who officially recognized
Black History Month in 1978. With the federal government's blessing, Black
History Month became a regular event in American schools. By the opening decade
of the 21st century, however, some were questioning whether Black History Month
should be continued, especially after the election of the nation's first
African-American president, Barack Obama, in 2008. For instance, in a 2009
article, commentator Byron Williams suggested that Black History Month had
become "trite, stale, and pedestrian rather than informative and thought
provoking" and served only to relegate " the achievements of African
Americans to an adjunct status in American history."
But others continue to argue that the need for Black History Month
has not disappeared. Historian Matthew C. Whitaker observed in 2009,
"Black History Month, therefore, will never be obsolete. It will always be
in our best interest to pause and explore the meaning of freedom through the
lived experiences of a people who forced America to be true to its creed and
reaffirmed the American dream. Those who would eliminate Black History Month
often miss the point."
Woodson would no doubt be pleased by the expansion of the original
Negro History Week. His goal in creating Negro History Week was to highlight
African-American accomplishments alongside white American accomplishments.
Woodson asserted in The Story of the Negro Retold (1935) that the book "is
not so much that of Negro history as it is universal history." For
Woodson, Negro History Week was about teaching the contributions of all
Americans and correcting a national historical narrative that he felt was
little more than racist propaganda.
Excellent and timely. It is always important that we ALL understand the background and importance of this event. True, Mr. President Obama has been re-elected. However, his second term is only four years. What then? Thank you for posting this!
ReplyDeleteWhat then indeed.
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