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MARIAN ANDERSON

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Title: MARIAN ANDERSON


1
MARIAN ANDERSON
  • BORN 1902
  • DIED 1993
  • SHE WAS AN OPERA SINGER WHO WAS DENIED THE RIGHT
    TO SING IN CONSTITUTION HALL. SHE WAS THE MOST
    POPULAR SINGER IN HER TIME.

2
LOUIS ARMSTRONG
  • BORN 1903
  • DIED 1971
  • ARMSTRONG WAS A FAMOUS TRUMPETER DURING THE JAZZ
    AGE. HE LOVED MUSIC ALL HIS LIFE.

3
MARY MCLEOD BETHUNE
  • BORN 1875
  • DIED 1955
  • SHE WAS A MEMBER OF THE BLACK CABINET. SHE
    FOUNDED BETHUNE-COOKMAN COLLEGE.

4
RALPH BUNCHE
  • BORN 1904
  • DIED 1971
  • BUNCHE WAS A MEMBER OF THE BLACK CABINET AND
    WORKED FOR THE STATE DEPARTMENT. HE WAS A
    GRADUATE FROM HARVARD.

5
GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER
  • BORN 1864
  • DIED 1943
  • HE WAS THE DIRECTOR OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AT
    TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE. HE HELPED THE ECONOMY OF THE
    SOUTH BY HIS DISCOVERIES OF PLANT PRODUCTS.

6
COUNTEE CULLEN
  • BORN 1906
  • DIED 1946
  • CULLEN WAS RAISED IN A METHODIST PARSONAGE. HE
    WAS A WONDERFUL POET. HE WON MANY AWARDS FOR HIS
    POEM BALLAD OF THE BROWN GIRL.

7
Benjamin O. Davis Sr.
  • Benjamin was born in Washington D.C., on July 1,
    1877. He entered the military service on July 13,
    1898, during the war with Spain as a temporary
    first lieutenant of the 8th United States
    Volunteer.

8
Benjamin Davis Jr.
  • Benjamin O.Davis, Jr. was born in Washington,
    D.C., on December 18, 1912. He died on July 4,
    2002.
  • He was first African-American in the United
    States Air Force.

9
W.E.B DuBois
  • He was born in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.
  • He formed the (NAACP).

10
Paul Lawrence Dunbar
  • Son of former slaves, and one of Americas first
    black poets, Dunbar was born in Dayton in 1872.
    He became Daytons most notable man of letters,
    internationally famous as a poet and author.

11
Duke Ellington
  • Duke Ellington was born on April 29, 1899. In
    late 1917, Duke formed his first group The
    Dukes Serenaders. In 1923, Duke left the
    security that Washington offered him and moved to
    New York In 1928, Ellington and Irving Mills
    signed an agreement in which Mills produced and
    published Ellingtons music. In 1928, Ellington
    and Irving Mills signed an agreement in which
    Mills produced and published Ellingtons music.
  • Some of Ellingtons greatest works include
    "Rockin in Rhythm," "Satin Doll," "New Orleans,"
    "A Drum is a Women," "Take the 'A' Train,"
    "Happy-Go-Lucky Local," "The Mooche," and
    "Crescendo in Blue."

12
Marcus Garvey
  • He was born to a poor family in Jamaica, the
    youngest of 11 children.
  • He founded the (UNIA) in 1914, to promote racial
    unity and pride.

13
LANGSTON HUGHES
  • Langston Hughes was an African American writer.
    In the 1920s, Hughes joined the number of
    African American writers and artists who gathered
    in Harlem, an African American section of New
    York City. Hughes described his arrival in
    Harlem I can never put one paper the thrill of
    the underground ride to Harlem. I went up the
    steps and out into the September sunlight.
    Harlem! I stood there, dropped my bags, took a
    deep breath and felt happy again

14
ZORA NEALE HURSTON
  • Zora Neal Hurston was an African author who wrote
    stories, novels, anthropological folklore and and
    an autobiography. She died in 1960 but her works
    have increased in popularity and are passing the
    test of time staying power.

15
JAMES WELDON JOHNSON
  • James Weldon Johnson was born in Jacksonville,
    Florida. He graduated from Atlanta University in
    the 1920s. He became a poet in part of the
    Harlem Renaissance. He died in the 1930s in a
    car accident in Main.

16
LEWIS HOWARD LATIMER
  • Born in 1848, Lewis Howard Latimer, an African
    American engineer, developed an improved filament
    for the lightbulb and joined Thomas Edisons
    company. He died in 1928, but we still use his
    invention today

17
MAGGIE LENA
  • Maggie Lena was the first woman to become
    president of a local bank. She was born as a
    slave in 1867 in Richmond, Virginia. After
    graduating, she taught at the Lancaster School.
    In 1912, she helped found the Richmond Council of
    Colored Women. Walker died in 1934.

18
JAN MATZELIGER
  • Jan E Matzeliger was an African American
    inventor. He developed a shoe making machine that
    performed many steps previously done by hand. His
    device, which revolutionized the shoe industry,
    was adapted in shoe factories in the United
    States and over seas

19
Elijah McCoy
  • Elijah McCoy was born in Colchester, Ontario,
    Canada on May 2, 1844. He died on October 10,
    1929.
  • His first invention was a lubricator for steam
    engines, U.S. 129,843, which issued on July 12,
    1872.

20
Claude McKay
  • Born in 1890 in Casamance, southern Senegal on
    September 15th.
  • His "If We Must Die" was published in the
    Liberator in 1919.

21
Doris Miller
  • Was born in Waco, Texas, on 12 October 1919, to
    Henrietta and Conery Miller.
  • First African-American to use a weapon in World
    War II.

22
Florence Mills
  • Florence Mills was the first woman in musical
    comedy during the Harlem Renaissance
  • Florence was born January 25,1896 and died on
    November 1,1927

23
Philip Randolph
  • Asa Philip Randolph was born in Cresent
    City,Florida on April 15,1889,and died in the
    year 1979
  • Philip Randolph founded the Brotherhood of
    Sleeping Car Porters,a union for black pullman
    railroad car attendants

24
PAUL ROBESON
  • An Actor and Singer in the years of the Harlem
    Renaissance.

25
BESSIE SMITH
  • Singer.
  • Known as the Empress of Blues

26
Mary Church Terrel
  • She was born in Memphis.
  • She joined the struggle to gain equal right for
    African Americans.

27
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
  • Rose up from slavery to be come a well known
    educator and leader of African Americans.

28
ROBERT WEAVER
  • Born Dec. 29, 1970.
  • A noted Economist.
  • Was the first black to serve in the U. S. Cabinet.

29
Ida B. Wells
  • Was the editor of an African American newspaper
    in Memphis,Tennessee.
  • She wrote book called A Red Record.

30
GRANVILLE WOODS
  • Born April 23, 1856 Died January 30, 1910
    Birthplace Columbus, Ohio
  • . And, in 1889, he filed his first patent for an
    improved steam-boiler furnace.

31
MAJOR CHARLES YOUNG
  • Higher ranking African American officer,
    commanded four units of African American troups
    in Cuba
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