Tag Archives: United States

The Connecticut General Assembly passes the “BlackLaw” ::: 1833 :::


 Prudence Crandall

Prudence Crandall was an American schoolteacher who stirred controversy when she insisted on educating African-American girls at her school in Canterbury, Connecticut.

Prudence Crandell stood trial in 1833 to defend her decision to educate African-American girls but eventually closed the school in 1834 because of the violence and public backlash against it.

NMAAHC – Nat King Cole, Flip Wilson & American Television History


NMAAHC -- National Museum of African American History and Culture

  
Lonnie Bunch, museum director, historian, lecturer, and author, is proud to present A Page from Our American Story, a regular on-line series for Museum supporters. It will showcase individuals and events in the African American experience, placing these stories in the context of a larger story — our American story. A Page From Our American Story

Nat King Cole publicity photo 1956
Publicity photo from the premiere of
The Nat King Cole Show, November 1956.
Flip Wilson publicity photo 1969
Flip Wilson publicity photo.
NBC Television, 1969.

Nat “King” Cole ranks among the icons of American entertainers. His rich, smooth baritone singing voice is immediately recognizable, and his music remains popular today.

Beginning in 1946 with “The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire)” and “Straighten Up and Fly Right,” and continuing with “Nature Boy,” “Mona Lisa,” and “Too Young,” hit song after hit song made Cole an international star by the mid-1950s.

1950s American audiences loved variety shows, and Cole appeared on all of the big ones, including Milton Berle, Ed Sullivan, Perry Como, Red Skelton, and Dinah Shore, to name a few. He was cool, handsome, and, of course, talented. It only made sense that NBC offer him his own show. And so on November 5, 1956, The Nat “King” Cole Show, initially a 15-minute, prime time variety show, became the first nationally broadcast television show hosted by an African American.

Portrait of Nat King Cole
Portrait of Nat “King” Cole, New York, NY.
William P. Gottlieb, circa June 1947.

NBC spared no expense, bringing in top-flight orchestra leaders Nelson Riddle and Gordon Jenkins to direct the music. Cole’s guests were the best in the business as well. Mel Torme, Pearl Bailey, Mahalia Jackson, Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee and Tony Bennett, among many others, performed on Cole’s show. Eventually, NBC expanded the show to 30 minutes.

What the show did not have was a major national sponsor. Big companies who backed white entertainers’ shows — “See the USA in a Chevrolet,” Dinah Shore would sing — feared their products would be boycotted, particularly in the South, if they backed The Nat “King” Cole Show.

Oddly, advertisers believed Cole’s urbane sophistication was problematic, as well. White American viewers were more accustomed to blacks being portrayed as racially stereotyped slapstick comics. Black television shows like Amos & Andy, and characters like Rochester, Jack Benny’s wisecracking valet were too often the rule, and, sadly, what made many white television viewers comfortable.

Cole wanted none of that. He knew how important it was for an African American to demonstrate to the nation how insulting and racist these stereotypes were. More than anything else, Cole wanted a show produced on par with the Comos, Berles and Shores. To his and NBC’s credit, the show — which ran for 64 episodes — received excellent reviews.

Still, national advertisers ignored Cole’s show. “Madison Avenue is afraid of the dark,” Cole is reported to have said. When Max Factor Cosmetics told NBC executives that a “negro couldn’t sell lipstick,” Cole responded angrily: “What do they think we use? Chalk? Congo paint?”

Various episodes were sponsored on NBC affiliates by local companies, and a handful of regional sponsors appeared late in the show’s run. But for the most part, The Nat “King” Cole Show was paid for by NBC and, to some degree, Cole himself, who “plowed back part” of his salary, he told Ebony Magazine. Absent a major sponsor, it was Cole, not NBC, who pulled the plug on the historic effort in December, 1957.

Of course, Cole could not have known what lay ahead for America in the next decade — the powerful civil rights movement, the tragic assassinations, the massive changes coming to our society. In 1970, a glimpse of that change was reflected in the success of black comedian Flip Wilson.

Flip Wilson as "Geraldine"
Publicity photo of Flip Wilson as Geraldine Jones from
the television program The Flip Wilson Show.
Geraldine is interviewing Dr. David Rueben.
NBC Television, November 1971.

Wilson started out in hotels and clubs in California as a young stand-up comic. By the end of the decade, he was one of only a handful of African American comedians to achieve national recognition, along with Redd Foxx, Nipsey Russell, Bill Cosby, Richard Pryor, and Dick Gregory. In 1965, after a recommendation from Foxx, Johnny Carson invited Wilson to perform on the Tonight Show. His career skyrocketed and soon Wilson became a regular guest host for Carson.

Wilson’s one-hour comedy special on NBC in 1969 received good ratings, and the network quickly offered him an hour-long, prime-time show of his own. Launched in 1970, The Flip Wilson Show was an immediate hit, soaring to number two in the ratings throughout its first two seasons, and winning an Emmy Award in 1971 for Best Comedy Writing.

The ratings afforded Wilson unprecedented creative development. His “Reverend Leroy,” the somewhat shady minister of the “Church of What’s Happenin’ Now,” drew fire from black groups who said it stereotyped African Americans. “Sonny, the White House janitor,” routinely made politicians look like fools — a potentially hazardous sketch with white audiences. Wilson’s most popular creation, the cross-dressing “Geraldine,” however, was almost universally beloved. Geraldine’s catch phrases, “What you see is what you get,” and “The Devil made me do it,” underscored the character’s confidence and wit.

Flip Wilson with Joe Namath
Flip Wilson as “Herbie” (his “bad” ice
cream man character) and guest star
Joe Namath from the television program
The Flip Wilson Show.
NBC Television, April 1972.

Wilson’s ratings also gave him the clout to feature the entertainment giants of the time, including John Wayne, Lucille Ball, Bing Crosby, and Carson. But Wilson also made his show a platform for black entertainers. The Jackson Five, James Brown, Isaac Hayes, Ray Charles and the Temptations, to name only a few, were Wilson regulars.

Thirteen years after The Nat “King” Cole Show struggled financially, The Flip Wilson Show was not only able to secure national advertisers, it was able to charge top dollar for its highly-coveted prime-time slot. Advertisers’ fears that their products would somehow be tainted by association with black artists apparently had diminished as a result of America’s changing views on race.

Nat “King” Cole and Flip Wilson were very different types of entertainers. Yet both faced the challenge of overcoming racial stereotypes and both hold significant spots in our American story: Cole as the first African American star to have his own television variety show in 1956; Wilson for the heights his variety show reached in the early 1970s. And each man demonstrated to America the depths, talent and sophistication that black entertainers brought to the stage.

Lonnie Bunch, Director All the best,
Lonnie Bunch
Director
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a new low ~~ back to the future


World 

by history.com

Isolationism refers to America’s longstanding reluctance to become involved in European alliances and wars.  Isolationists held the view that America’s perspective on the world was different from that of European societies and that America could advance the cause of freedom and democracy by means other than war.

American isolationism did not mean disengagement from the world stage.  Isolationists were not averse to the idea that the United States should be a world player and even further its territorial, ideological and economic interests, particularly in the Western Hemisphere.

The colonial period

Pilgrims landing at Plymouth

The isolationist perspective dates to colonial days.  The colonies were populated by many people who had fled from Europe, where there was religious persecution, economic privation and war.  Their new homeland was looked upon as a place to make things better than the old ways.  The sheer distance and rigors of the voyage from Europe tended to accentuate the remoteness of the New World from the Old.  The roots of isolationism were well established years before independence, notwithstanding the alliance with France during the War for Independence.

Thomas Paine crystallized isolationist notions in his work Common Sense, which presents numerous arguments for shunning alliances.  Paine’s tract exerted so much political influence that the Continental Congress strove against striking an alliance with France and acquiesced only when it appeared probable that the war for independence could not be won without one.

George Washington in his Farewell Address placed the accent on isolationism in a manner that would be long remembered:

“The great rule of conduct for us, in regard to foreign nations, is in extending our commercial relations, to have with them as little political connection as possible.  Europe has a set of primary interests, which to us have none, or a very remote relation.  Hence she must be engaged in frequent controversies the causes of which are essentially foreign to our concerns.  Hence, therefore, it must be unwise in us to implicate ourselves, by artificial ties, in the ordinary vicissitudes of her politics, or the ordinary combinations and collisions of her friendships or enmities.”

Washington was promulgating a perspective that was already venerable and accepted by many.  The United States terminated its alliance with France, after which America’s third president, Thomas Jefferson, admonished in his inaugural address, “peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none.”

The 19th century

The United States remained politically isolated all through the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th, an unusual feat in western history.  Historians have attributed the fact to a geographical position at once separate and far removed from Europe.

During the 1800s, the United States spanned North America and commenced to piece together an empire in the Caribbean and the Pacific — without departing from the traditional perspective.  It fought the War of 1812, the Mexican War, and the Spanish-American War without joining alliances or fighting in Europe.

The isolationist point of view was still viable in 1823 when President James Monroe gave voice to what would later be termed the Monroe Doctrine, “In the wars of the European powers, in matters relating to themselves, we have never taken part, nor does it comport with our policy, so to do.”

Nevertheless, pressures were mounting abroad that would undercut and demolish that policy near the mid-20th century.  The advent of German and Japanese expansionism would threaten and later nearly snuff out the contented aloofness enjoyed by the United States.  The United States’ occupation of the Philippines during the Spanish-American War thrust U.S. interests into the far western Pacific Ocean — Imperial Japan’s sphere of interest.  Such improved transportation and communication as steamships, undersea cable, and radio linked the two continents.  The growth of shipping and foreign trade slowly enhanced America’s world role.

There also were basic changes at home.  The historic ascendancy of urban-based business, industry, and finance, and the sidelining of rural and small-town America — the bastion of isolationism — contributed to its eventual demise.

World War I

Germany’s unfettered submarine warfare against American ships during World War I provoked the U.S. into abandoning the neutrality it had upheld for so many years.  The country’s resultant participation in World War I against the Central Powers marked its first major departure from isolationist policy.  When the war ended, however, the United States was quick to leave behind its European commitment.  Regardless of President Woodrow Wilson‘s efforts, the Senate repudiated the Treaty of Versailles that ended the war, and the United States failed to become a member of the League of Nations.

German sub sinks US ship   Indeed, isolationism would persist for a few more decades.  During the 1920s, American foreign affairs took a back seat.  In addition, America tended to insulate itself in terms of trade.  Tariffs were imposed on foreign goods to shield U.S. manufacturers.

America turned its back on Europe by restricting the number of immigrants permitted into the country.  Until World War I, millions of people, mostly from Europe, had come to America to seek their fortune and perhaps flee poverty and persecution.  Britons and Irishmen, Germans and Jews constituted the biggest groups.  In 1921 the relatively liberal policy ended and quotas were introduced.  By 1929 only 150,000 immigrants per year were allowed in.

During the 1920s and 1930s, the preponderance of Americans remained opposed to enmeshment in Europe’s alliances and wars.  Isolationism was solid in hinterland and small-town America in the Midwest and Great Plains states, and among Republicans.  It claimed numerous sympathizers among Irish- and German-Americans.  William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska, Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin, and George W. Norris of Nebraska were among western agrarian progressives who argued fervently against involvement.  Assuming an us-versus-them stance, they castigated various eastern, urban elites for their engagement in European affairs.

World War II

The year 1940 signaled a final turning point for isolationism.  German military successes in Europe and the Battle of Britain prompted nationwide American rethinking about its posture toward the war.  If Germany and Italy established hegemony in Europe and Africa, and Japan swept East Asia, many believed that the Western Hemisphere might be next.  Even if America managed to repel invasions, its way of life might wither if it were forced to become a garrison state.  By the autumn of 1940, many Americans believed it was necessary to help defeat the Axis — even if it meant open hostilities.

FDR signs declaration of war against Japan

Many others still backed the noninterventionist America First Committee in 1940 and 1941, but  isolationists failed to derail the Roosevelt administration‘s plans to aid targets of Axis aggression with means short of war.   Most Americans opposed any actual declaration of war on the Axis countries, but  everything abruptly changed when Japan naval forces sneak-attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.  Germany and Italy declared war on the United States four days later.  America galvanized itself for full-blown war against the Axis powers.

The demise of isolationism

The isolationist point of view did not completely disappear from American discourse, but never again did it figure prominently in American policies and affairs.  Countervailing tendencies that would outlast the war were at work.  During the war, the Roosevelt administration and other leaders inspired Americans to favor the establishment of the United Nations (1945), and following the war, the threat embodied by the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin dampened any comeback of isolationism.

The postwar world environment, in which the United States played a leading role, would change with the triumph of urban industry and finance, expanded education and information systems, advanced military technology, and leadership by internationalists.  A few leaders would rise to speak of a return to America’s traditional policies of nonintervention, but in reality, traditional American isolationism was obsolete.


 Don’t let Republicans make America great again or take Americans back to the ole’days by engaging in Isolationism… America has always been GREAT

Nativegrl77

by Nativegrl77beaseedforchangestickersGREEN

After having watched and listened to “the media” as well as “politicians who supported Weapons of Mass destruction Bush” and the folks i call “Doves” a seemingly huge group of voters who didn’t seem to understand chess diplomacy or the responsibilities of a great power, but hey that is just my opinion.  We must all thank goodness we have the right to have different views and can voice them, but sadly in this era of trump these rights we, quite frankly, take for granted are now being shredded away each and every day with a pen seemingly full of revenge takes action. I really do believe we have come full circle and so has isolationism … from print , online news, pundits, tv hosts to a whole lot of politicians that prefer to forget about the Universal Norm against the use Chemical Weapons that was created over 100yrs ago … lest we talk about provocative words, torture or nukes .  I cannot say it enough, contrary to what we are hearing on the airwaves by what some call trumpies, we should all believe in doing the right thing for our country  NOT doing, saying or being stupid knowing that our US military are serving all over the world and could be at risk . We should all expect a #WorldCoalition to engage in the effort to create peace so all can prosper, be healthy, experience equality, be educated and fight for the greater good. If you have kept up with the latest executive orders, actions or comments by #teamtrump it’s clear that we have a lot of work to do … make the media accountable,challenge those who represent trump on camera,mobilize for #election2018 because it matters because it will kill the trifecta and understand that there is no such thing as “alternate facts”

Stay tuned in because strike or NOT,  we are seeing an attempt at getting rid of or a reduction in WMD … just knowing hearing  Russia and Syria stated that they have them is amazing.  The journey toward a No Nuke/No Chemical Weapons World will be long, but one that the World must support and get involved in, if not now when … for the next generation

Be a Seed for Change

A More Perfect Union — Building Welcoming Communities Campaign to Strengthen Immigration Integration


A More Perfect Union — Building Welcoming Communities Campaign to Strengthen Immigration Integration

The White House Task Force on New Americans launches the “Stand Stronger” Citizenship Awareness Campaign to raise awareness on U.S. citizenship.

The White House Task Force on New Americans launched the “Stand Stronger” Citizenship Awareness Campaign. The goal of the Campaign is to raise awareness about the rights, responsibilities, and importance of U.S. citizenship and to provide more information on the naturalization process, along with new tools and resources to prepare for it.

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We Stand with Ahmed (and We Hope He’ll Join Us for Astronomy Night):

U.S. Chief Data Scientist D.J. Patil shares why he’s proud to see people across the country standing up for innovation and intellectual curiosity today, and the President weighs in.

POTUS invites Ahmed to the White House

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5 Indicators That Show We Turned a Depression-Like Shock into a Six-Year Expansion

Seven years after the financial crisis, check out these charts to see how President Obama’s policy decisions helped America narrowly avoid another Great Depression.

Single Family Housing Prices

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West Wing Week: 09/18/2015 or, “FAFSA! (fafsa, fafsa, fafsa, fafsa)”

This week, the President marked the 14th anniversary of 9/11, met with troops around the world at a multimedia town hall at Fort Meade, crashed a back-to-school bus tour in Iowa, sat down with esteemed author Marilynne Robinson, and hosted Connecticut Huskies, Spanish royalty, and genuine American heroes at the White House. That’s September 11th to September 17th, or “FAFSA! (fafsa, fafsa, fafsa, fafsa).”

Watch West Wing Week here

WATCH HERE

What the President did for Bristol Bay, AK – 2014 – a reminder


The President took action to pThis is Bristol Bay, Alaska, a national treasure that President Obama is protecting for all of us.rotect a place called Bristol Bay, Alaska. Here’s why that matters:

It places a national treasure — and one of the nation’s most productive fisheries — off limits for oil and gas leasing. Alaskans have been fighting to preserve Bristol Bay for decades. Today, we got it done.

Bristol Bay helps to produce 40 percent of America’s wild-caught seafood each year. It supports $2 billion every year in commercial fishing, and supports good jobs in sport-fishing and tourism.

These waters are beautiful and valuable, and today’s action will ensure that future generations will be able to enjoy their bounty.

It’s a big deal. Watch the President’s announcement, and take a look at these photos of the place this Administration just took definitive action to protect:

Please click on link above for more amazing pictures and information

 

This is Bristol Bay, Alaska, a national treasure that President Obama is protecting for all of us.

A humpback whale with shearwater birds in Bristol Bay.

A humpback whale with shear water birds in Bristol Bay.

The beautiful Bristol Bay helps to produce 40% of America's wild-caught seafood every year.

The beautiful Bristol Bay helps to produce 40% of America’s wild-caught seafood every year.

Thanks,

Sally

Secretary Sally Jewell
Department of the Interior
@SecretaryJewell