In Celebration Of Black History Month: Remember Way Back When ABlack History Remembered History is nothing more than the wa\ we have lised our lives: Where we made our livelihood, who we called our enemies, our friends and our lovers, where we did business. It's important to remember way back when: there is much tcvbe proud of. For instance, in the "40s there were 150 black-owned businesses in Win ston-Salem. Certainly one of the largest and most popular was Safe Bus Inc.. formed in 1926 when several businessmen who operated iitnies combined operations. Jitnies were steam-driven vehicles. The rest of Winston-Salem got around on street cars, but black community had been left off streetcar lines. The first officers* for Safe Bus were H.F. Morgan. J.H. H^irston and C.R. Peebles. They began operations with a fleet of 35 busses and a city wide five-cent fare/In 1941. they acquired Camel City Cab Compans, which had operated fr^m the corner of Third and Church streets. and 36 taxicabs. and employed 146 Tharles McLean, had two late-model delivery trucks do handle its delivery route. Charles T. Martin bought and operated a Pure gas station on the corner of Fifth St. and Claremont Ave. James A. Ellington operated a well-stocked grocery store, its walls lined with canned goods from ceiling to floor, com plete with candy and chewing gum from California. At least one East Winston business that thrived five decades ago is still going strong: the assets of Winston Mutual Life Insurance approached the quarter-million dollar mark in 1940. Winston Mutual continued to grow, and merged with Golden State in 1985. Today, the building, construed in 1969. stands as a five-story landmark in the black community. * This week we launch Black History Month remembering Carter G. Woodson, the father of black, history, and other black heroes of the 20th century They are black legends in their own time. The Father of Black History It not for Carter G. Woodson, much of black history would be lost. He was convinced that if a race has no recorded history, its achievements will be forgotteh and finally claimed by others. It was Woodson who cam paigned for and established Negro History Week in 1926. Woodson was born in 1875 to former slaves in New Canton, Va. As a child, he was needed on his" parents farm and was unable to attend school most of the year. When he finally was able to attend high school, he completed his stud ies in just two years. He was hired as as principal of the high schqol he had attended, and finished college while working there. After writing his doctoral dissertation on black history, Woodson received a doctorate from Harvard University in 1912. Just three years later, he founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. He established Negro History Week, the forerunner of Black History Month, in 1926. ^Woodson died in 1950. His legacy to African- Americans will continue forever. Booker T. Washington (1856 - 1915) Booker Taliaferro Washington was a former slave who became one of The ttlost influential African-Americans in U.S. History. He graduated from Hampton Institute (now Hampton University) and was the founder of the National Negro Business League and Tuskegee Institute (now Tuskegee University). He held influence over several African-Americans newspapers 1 1, ? ? and was supported by white philanthropists who supported the "separate hut equal" educational philo J LITERACY PASS IT ON. c. 1993 Coors Brewing Company. Golden Colorado 80401 ? Brewer of Fme Beers Since 1873