The Broncos’ Voice February 1994 IN PERSPECTIVE by Dr. Phillip McGuire Historically, African-Ameri can history has been largely what white historians have said it was. It has been their inter pretations that are most famil iar to both black and white America. More often than not, the interpretations that emerged had the effect of forc ing most African-Americans to suffer feelings of debasement and the psychic trauma of nondescriptness. These inglori ous historians took it upon themselves to distort a people’s heritage and, in many respects, to neglect completely the history of African-Americans by refus ing to admit that black America had a past worth recording. It was not until the late 1950’s and early 1960’s that many Americans began to read of the significant contributions of the African-American. Having been long neglected, the Afri can-American finally captured the intellect and ima^ations of objective white historians who began to rewrite what the ig noble ones had sought to per petuate. However, it is signifi cant for Americans, all Ameri cans, to know that since the mid- 1800’s African-American histori ans such as William Wells Brown, William Still, and George Washington Williams, to name a few, pioneered in establishing the black experience as a re spectable and vital entity that touches every aspect of Ameri can life. Unfortunately, the his torical community chose to deny or ignore much of what African- American scholars had to say. Most university and commercial presses simply refused to pub lish their works. This, of course, resulted in an unbal anced and subjective interpre tation of the African-American experience. Thus it was in 1916 that Dr. Carter Goodwin Woodson, known as the father of African- American history, established the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History for the purpose of fostering a bal anced and positive under standing of the African-Ameri can heritage through a sys tematic and scientific study of the black experience. He, Dr. William E. B. DuBois, and oth ers wrote of the African-Ameri can because they believed it would alleviate the position of African-Americans in Ameri can society by re educating both black and white America to a greater appreciation of the race. They also hoped that it would inspire future genera tions of Americans to live in brotherhood. They, too, were of the mindset that “the final measure of the greatness of all peoples is the amount and standard of the literature and art they have produced.” In 1926, Dr. Woodson began the first annual observance of “Negro History Week” to pro vide an effective educational tool for the American public. More importantly, the obser vance of this week was begun because Dr. Woodson believed that race prejudice was the re sult of historical writings and teaching that either ignored or denied the existence of black achievements and contribu tions. He also felt that if Americans were to build for themselves a truly democratic society, then not one of them should be denied the equality of opportunity. As we pay special tribute to the African-American expe rience in February during our observance of what has grown into “Black History Month,” we must reaffirm that in the development of America, North Carolina, and Fayetteville, the African- American experience is more than a few events and biogra phies that were usually sensa tionalized by earlier American historians, episodes such as the Boston Massacre featur ing Crispus Attucks, the Under ground Raih:oad starring the legendary Harriet Tubman, the Civil War and the ubiqui tous Frederick Douglas, and that trite old saga of Booker T. Washington. These epochs and figures are important, but all Ameri cans must be exposed, for ex ample, to the fact that African- Americans have been partici pants in every phase of America’s development; that black physicists worked to the finish on the Manhattan Project, which produced the atomic bomb that ended the Second World War; that in 1942 Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson admitted in his di ary that the Army Classifica tion Tests were deliberately manipulated in order to make aU African-Americans appear intellectually and mechani cally inferior and thus best suited for the labor and supply units of the military; that black men and women, too, led the vanguard to eradicate slavery despite the glorification of the white abolitionist; that a black doctor, Dr. Charles Drew, re searched and invented the pro cess for blood plasma that to day saves millions of lives. And, despite their near-total ab sence from general textbooks today, African-American art ists have been depicting Ameri can themes and landscapes in notable works since the mid eighteenth century. These examples are only a few among many that must be incorporated into the American tradition if future generations are going to inherit a balanced and objective legacy. Only then will all Americans and the world at large be able to dis card inteUectually the notion that “everyone and everything of importance in the history of mankind was white” or “every one from Jesus and the Ma donna to Beethoven was black.” During the decade of the 1990’s, even the need for a black history month, as a sym bol of past negation and distor tion, must disappear from the American consciousness as we move toward a timely and united front against the last vestiges of racism, fear, de spair, and separatism.