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Related: About this forumHow Carter G. Woodson, the father of black history, is teaching us still
Google Doodle: How Carter G. Woodson, the father of black history, is teaching us still
By Michael Cavna February 1 at 8:30 AM Email the author
WITHOUT THE work of Carter G. Woodson, Google would probably not be kicking off Black History Month on Thursday, let alone with its home-page image of Woodson himself. Woodson is historic because he believed in the illuminating power of the historic. He knew that tradition must be rightly learned before it can be valued, and that even then, society might try to devalue you and push you to the back of historys warehouse.
As a real-world example of such undervaluation, consider the historic office-home of Woodson in Washington, at 1538 Ninth St. NW just blocks from the White House as well as The Washington Post. On The Posts site, you can even see rare footage of Woodson a.k.a. the father of black history sitting at his desk long ago in his Ninth Street home, looking much as he does in Thursdays Google Doodle.
Yet in a city chockablock with burnished monuments, Woodsons Washington home was allowed to fall into a dilapidated state. As the president of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History wrote in a letter to The Post in the summer, Woodsons D.C. home was among 30 memorials honoring the African American experience that were subject to the ravages of deferred maintenance. (That letter championed the bipartisan National Park Service Act to secure repair funding.)
https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=&w=480
The former office-home of author-historian Carter G. Woodson, a National Historic Landmark at 1538 Ninth Street NW in Washington. (Mark Gail/The Washington Post)
Consider that this home was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1976, and that it was placed on the National Trust for Historic Preservations list of endangered properties 17 years ago.
. . .
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/comic-riffs/wp/2018/02/01/google-doodle-how-carter-g-woodson-the-father-of-black-history-is-teaching-us-still/?utm_term=.73571e20a192
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How Carter G. Woodson, the father of black history, is teaching us still (Original Post)
niyad
Feb 2018
OP
sheshe2
(87,552 posts)2. I am so glad it is being restored.
Sad that it was left this long. America abandons our heritage if it is non white. It is a start, the Confederate memorials are coming down, perhaps we are starting to learn. I sure hope so.
As the president of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History wrote in a letter to The Post in the summer, Woodsons D.C. home was among 30 memorials honoring the African American experience that were subject to the ravages of deferred maintenance. (That letter championed the bipartisan National Park Service Act to secure repair funding.)
.....................................
It's like Rosa Parks house. It was going to be demolished. A young man bought and rebuilt it in Berlin Germany. The US did not want it. It was just another eyesore of our ugly history.
Utter disrespect towards the Black woman who in 1955 dared to refuse to give up her seat to a white man in Alabama.
https://www.democraticunderground.com/118760930
Thank you niyad for pointing out the good the people like Woodsons' did and our bad for trying to let it fade away. We are making it right now,m slowly but we are.
niyad
(119,998 posts)3. you are most welcome. and thank you for the information about the Rosa Parks House.
It is utterly depressing to think how hard people have to work to preserve the civil rights, and women's rights locations (but then, we know that women and people of colour are of no value, yes?)
sheshe2
(87,552 posts)4. (but then, we know that women and people of colour are of no value, yes?)
Only in their minds, niyad. Only in their minds.
Thank you~
niyad
(119,998 posts)5. do you ever wonder how they manage to store so much hate in such tiny spaces?