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Daryl Michael Scott, Chair

© 2008, ASALH

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The Association for the Study of African American Life and History
C.B. Powell Building, Suite C-142
525 Bryant Street, NW
Washington, DC 20059

Phone: 202-865-0053
Fax: 202-265-7920

Page revised 6/2
3/2009
The USPS, in conjunction
with ASALH, has unveiled
the 2009 Black Heritage
Stamp.
Click here for info.
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Founders of Black History Month
Click on the image
above to order the
DVD,
Reflections on
Carter G. Woodson

Dr. John Hope Franklin and
Dr. Adelaide Cromwell
discuss Woodson. The
event was taped during a
plenary session at the 2006
Annual Conference in
Atlanta, GA.
The election of Barack Obama as the first American
president of African descent will mark a watershed in
American history. Carter G. Woodson was fond of
quoting a nineteenth-century novelist who wrote that the
romance of America was the fate of the Negro. Neither
the founding fathers nor the African slaves could have
ever imagined a day when a black man would hold the
most exalted office in the nation.
A century ago, when a group of men and women—whites
and blacks, Jews and Gentiles—joined ranks and formed
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, they were visionaries. In the abolitionist tradition,
carrying on the work of Frederick Douglass and Harriet
Tubman, of William Lloyd Garrison and Wendell Phillips,
they saw through a stormy sky of racial oppression and
despair. With African Americans being disenfranchised
and segregated, lynched and raped, uneducated or
miseducated, and everywhere casually maligned, the
NAACP lit a torch for equality and social justice.
Committed to struggle and armed with hope, the NAACP
constituted the vanguard in the movement for full
citizenship, and they continue to press the cause of
equality and social justice. As the grand ole civil rights
organization marks its centennial, the progress of black
citizenship cannot be better symbolized than by the
election of Barack Obama. O, what a century!
Journal of African
American History
Visit the JAAH Website for
complete information on
subscriptions and
submissions.
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Partner with ASALH

Donate to ASALH
for a FREE download of the 2009 Black History Month Letterhead!
Don't Miss Out on
the Limited Lost
Manuscript Edition!
Lost for over eighty
years,
Carter G.
Woodson's Appeal is now
available as a limited
edition!  Only 2000 copies
are available, so
click here
to find out how to get
your leather-bound,
autographed, and  
individually-numbered
special edition!
Barack Obama and the 2009
Black History Theme:
Quest for Black Citizenship in the Americas
Click here to view
President Barack
Obama's
proclamation of
February 2009 as
National African
American History
Month!
Click here to post your
condolences to
Dr. John Hope
Franklin
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