▼ Refine Your Categories ▼

Click a term to refine your current search.

Subject

: all » Arts & Humanities

Resource Type

Language

Social Tags

: all » African-American history

City

Country

Province Or State

More options
[×]

Subject

: Arts & Humanities
[×]

Social Tags

: African-American history

Category: Arts & Humanities, African-American history

2 results

Results

Amos Gerry Beman, a Black minister in New Haven, Connecticut, was a national leader during the mid-nineteenth century. He was a proponent of abolition, suffrage, temperance and educational and moral reform. Beman grew up in Colchester, Connecticut and later Middletown, Connecticut, where his father, Jehiel Beman, was appointed pastor to the first African American church in Connecticut. Beman’s father had worked tirelessly for emancipation and civil rights, and his grandfather, Caesar Beman, had been manumitted after serving in the Revolutionary War. The Collection

0
♥ 1
1,374 read

From June through October 1973 and briefly during the spring of 1974, John H. White, a 28-year-old photographer with the Chicago Daily News , worked for the federal government photographing Chicago, especially the city`s African American community. White took his photographs for the Environmental Protection Agency`s (EPA) DOCUMERICA project.

0
♥ 0
1,078 read