A NORTH CAROLINIAN (FORMER HIGH POINT ER). REV. RONALD LEE CARTER IS PRESENTLY SERVING AS ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF THE KING CENTER AT BOSTON UNIVERSI TY. BOSTON MASSACHU SETTS. REV. CARTER IS THE SON OF MRS. TALMADGE CARTER. OF 603 ELL- WOOD DRIVE. HIGH POINT. THE FOLLOWING IS A PROFILE OF CARTER WHICH WAS PUi>LISHED /AWATU WAZURl, AN INDEPENDENT NEWS PAPER PUBLISHED BY THE BLACK STUDENTS AT BOSTON UNIVERSI— AT BOSTON UNIVERSI TY. THE BETTER WE KNOW US .. The priorities of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Afro-American Center are currently beino structured around the principles of research, culture, inforrViation and education, according to Rev. Ronald Lee Carter, Assist ant Director of the King Center. r.arter. who was anpointed tc this position in September, 1975, said, "The basic purpose of any Afro-American center on a white university campus is to conserve the values of blacks, make information available to the university, and help every one learn about minority affairs and culture." Carter has held several positions at the King tenter since his arrival at Boston University five years ago. He first served as a night monitor, answering the Center's phone and students' questions. He later became the assistant and advisor to Director Floyd Flake. While he has worked at the King Center, Carter has developed some definite ideas on how it should function. He emphasizes research and education as means for black Tolks to better themselves. Concerning these qualities. Carter said, "We have to utart with things that are going to make us strong men and women." Carter believes that the King Center should serve primarily as a research facility. He pointed out that this facility, equipped with pertinent tapes and books and good researchers, could make information available to the entire University. The 27-year-old Carter, who spent a year studying sociology in Istanbul, also stresses the need for the King Center to be a place where everyone can learn about the cultural affairs of blacks. The lean, articulate adminis trator said, "We must have interaction so that we can learn about each other." He added that separating cultures, "forms gaps, thus causing people to prejudge because they don't know about each other." Carter is against alienating and separating cultures, but he believes that the Center should aid in the conservation of blacks' values. In moving towards this ■ goal he feels students must take the Ini tiative, by re-evaluating black leaders and by reading the humanities as well as American and World history. In re-ordering the Center's priorities. Carter will be trying "to de-emphasize the social aspects," he said But some students have already voiced their opposition to his plans. He noted that when he emphasized education, most students were concerned with the reasons behind the phasirig out of such entertainment facilities as the pool table and television. But Carter, a graduate of Atlanta's Morehouse College, is little concerned with entertain ment. Soeaking to the student Continued oo Page 4 I THE TRIBUNAL AIR A VIABLE, VALID REQUIREMENT RESPONDING TO BLACK NORTH CAROLINA VOLUME III, NO. 50 WEDNESDAY, MAY 19,1976 YEAP 2&; CENTS MEMBER: North Carolina Black Publishers Association” North Carolina Press Associationi Inc. jH/sforico/ Landmark^! I Of Black America I L ■ J No more anbataatial testtmoiiy to the role of the Black in the growth and development of America can be found than the numerons historical landmarks in varlons regions of the coontry which are associated with Black Americana. Many of these—like the Alamo and Bunker Hill-are not conventloaally known as sites Involving chapters of Negro history. The 1976 Editions of THE TRIBUNAL AID will be dedicated to Aiperica’s bicentennial Celebration, with emphasis on contributions our Race has made in the making of America, from birth to the present. In 1976 there should not be a need to lift these contributions from isolated sources. Our past should be interwoven into the fabric of our civilization, because we are, except for the Indian, America’s oldest ethnic minority. We have helped make America what it was, and what it is, since the founding of Virginia. We have been a factor in many major issues in our history. There have been many misdeeds Fay Ashe, Black against us, yet we Have been able to live through them and fight back. This is living proof of our history. Oiu role in the making of America is neither well known or correctly known. Many positive contributions have escaped historians and have not found their way into the pages of History Editor many history books. We will strive to give readers, Black and white, many little-known facts about oar past and it is hoped that a proper perspective of owl' history will be of value to persons wlio may' believe that as Black People we have an' unworthy past; and hence, no strong claims ta all rights of other Americans. PROFILES OF BLACK WOMEN IN BLACK HISTORY DELAWARE Wilmington: Asbury Methodist Episcopal Church--This church, lo cated at Third and Walnut Streets, was dedicated in 1789 by the distinguished orator Bishop Francis As bury. Tradition has it that, on one occasion, a number of town’s leading citi zens, many of whom wer anxious to hear Asbury preach but considered Methodism beneath them socially, refused to enter the church, but stayed out side within hearing dis tance of the sermon. The listeners were impressed by the eloquence of the man they heard--not, as it turned out, the bishop, but his Negro servant Harry whose compelling testi mony reached their ears and inspired their admira tion. By 1805, however, Negroes hd left this church driven out by the decision of white worshippers to confine black members to the gallery. The Negroes who left formed their own church DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Association for the Study of Negro Life and History--- The Association, located at 1528 Ninth St. N.W., was long the solo prolessional agency concerned with pre serving the historical re cord of the Negro in Ameri can life. The organizing pioneer behind the Associ ation was Carter Woodson, a scholar and lecturer who began publication of the Journal of Negro History in 1916. Ten years later, Woodson inaugurated ob servance of "Negro History Week," during which lea ders of the black freedom struggle were appropriately honored, primarily in schools. Negro History W'eek is always celebrated in February, as close as possible to the birthdays of both Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln. Woodson and his later col league, Dr. Charles Wesley of Central State, collaborat ed on many historical studies. BIBLIOGRAPHY * * Drotning, Phillip T. A Guide to Negro History in America New York: Dou- Eniannpation Statue: Former Negro slaves were responsible foj financing and erecting the oldest memorial to Abraham Lincoln in the Washington, D.C.area. After Lincoln’s assassi nation in 1865, the first five dollars for the statue was; .jdonateji, by -a Mrs. Charlotte Scott ^ Mari etta, ^hio. Contributions were soon pouring in, where Congress finally set aside appropriate grounds for Thomas Bell’s statue of Lincoln breaking slavery’s chains. The memorial was dedicated on April 14, 1876 the Ilth anniversary of the assassination of Great Emancipator. THE LATE SOCIOLO GIST. E. FRANKLIN— FRAZIER. PAID THIS TRIBUTE TO THE I9th CENTURY WOMAN: "AFTER EMANCIPA TION WHEN THE WHOLE SOCIAL FABRIC OF LIFE The Underground Rail road was the name given to an organized method of helping Blacks escape from bondage along secret routes on land and sea to the free state ol North and the freedom and safe ty of Canada. Black and White, men and women, were conductors, but the greatest conductor ol this network of tracks was a tall- ebony colored, uneducated illiterate exslave, named HARRIET ROSS TUBMAN HARRIET TUBMAN was born slavery in Bucktown, Dorchester County, Mary- CRUMBLE AND THE VERY ECONOMIC BASIS OF NEGRO EXISTENCE WAS DESTROYED. IT WAS THE NEGRO WO MAN WHO MADE THE SURVIAL OF THE NEGRO POSSIBLE ". THE DARKEST DAYS OF SLAVERY DU) NOT BREAK THE SPIRIT OF THE BLACK WOMAN. INSTEAD THESE DAYS PRODUCED. AN AMA TEUR LA WYER. ABOLI TIONIST LECTURERS. THE GREAT "CONDUG— RANKS. TOR" OF THE UNDER GROUND RAILROAD. IN THE CIVIL WAR WHICH FOLLOWED BLACK WOMEN SERVED AS NURSES. SPIES. AND SOLDIERS IN THE AS THE. CENTURY PRO GRESSED. THE BLACK WOMAN EMERGED "AS THE GREAT MAINSTAY OF THE NEGRO RACE". DURING THE NEXT FEW WEEKS WE WILL INTRODUCE TO YOU SOME OF THESE BLACK WOMEN THAT WERE THE MAIN ST A Y OF THE PAST. The Woman Called 'Moses’ ■f pg^qmQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO BICENTENNIAL BIACK HISTORY “Lost-Strayed-Or Stolen ” JUUULUistb BfaMk history in the Western Hemisphere most probably begins with the discovery of the New Worid by duMopher Columbus fai 1942. Blacks are known to iwve participated meaningfoily in a nnmber of later explonUkms made by Ewropeans In varioos parts of the United States and Spanish America. Facts such as these at once bshion a new dimension for Black history wtthin the mainstream of American history. Inasmuch ■8 one of the primary porposes of this feature is t€ record some hktorical achievements of flie Black, it bpc—les most important to offer the reader ^NBoloplcal accmmts through which he can conveniently familiarize himself with the broad sweep if American Black history. Hie years covered here are 1499-1954. land, to Ben and Harriet Green Ross. No record was made of the dale of her birth because neither of her parents could read or write. Her chiildhood was not very different from that of other slaves during the I820’s. Harriet never had experiences of childhood. At the age of six she was sent from home to learn weaving, when she return ed home she was given the job of swamp trapping muskrats. Sometimes she was beaten mercilessly and learned the horrors of sla very through her own sad experiences. As a lield hand she was injured by a two-pound weight flung by an overseer at an escaping slave. Harriet suffered a fractured skull which caused dizzy spells. She suffered from this for the rest of her life. After this ac accident the uppermost thought in her mind was to escape to the North and freedom. The hard labor she wwas forced to do pre pared her for the task which lay ahead of her. In 1844 Harriet married John Tubman, a freeman. That year the value of cot ton had depreciated be- cause of hard times, and whenever this happened slaves were usually sold. Harriet wanted her hus band to run away with her, but he refused and threa tened to report her if she left. Four years later Harriet tuhnian followed the North Star to freedom. She travel ed many miles alone after being deserted by her two brothers who became fear ful and turned back. In her description ol what it means to be free at last, Harriet said "When I found I had crossed that line, I looked at my hands to see if I was the same per son, there was so much glory over everything. The Sun came like gold through the trees and I lelt like I was in heaven." Harriet could have re mained in the security of her new found freedom, but instead chose to spend her life working to free others, because she knew' lirst hand the horrors of slavery and was determined to do all she could to end inhu man bondage. Harriet de dicated herself to rescuing everyone within her power to save. was always a gun or re- Harriet armed wi volver. One purpose of the w'eapon was to be sure no one in her party turned back as her brothers had done. "YOU’LL BE FREE OR DIE". She told her par ties at the point of a gun. Shrw and courageous, she became the most venture some worker in the employ of the Underground Rail road and during the next decade, made 19 secret trips below the Mason Di xon line, rescuing over 300 slaves. Harriet was called ’MOSfjS" because, like the biblical figure, she de livered her people from sla very into the promised land of freedom. Southern slave ow'ners considered 'moses' such a threat at one time they offered $40,000 re ward for HIS capture. (Many slave owners were convinced that "MOSES" had to be a man.) The price on her head did not keep Harriet from her work. De cember, 1851, she led 11 fugitives to Canada, be cause by then the Fugitive Slave Law made it dange rous to stop short ol the border. She took personal charge of the _group Harriet 1821- throughout the hard win ters and in the spring she would return to the South to free others. Harriet’s reputation as NEW YORK CITY Freedom’s Journal, the first Negro newspaper, be gin publication on March 16, 1827. "n the spirt of candor and humility we intend...to lay our case be fore the public with a view to arrest the progress of prejudice, and to shield ourselves against its con sequent evils." NEW YORK !*@& Salvery is abolished in New York State on July 4th. BOSTON 1829 Publication by David Walker, a free Negro, of a militant anti-slavery pamphlet (An Appel to the Colored People of the World) which is distributed throughout the country and arouses a furor among slaveholders. NORTH CAROLl^A !*#| Masters fearing violation of state law manumit more than 400 slaves to Quaker residents of North Carolina, who retain theoretical ow nership but allow slaves virtual freedom until they can afford to transport them to free states. W ASHINGTON, D.C.1830 The U.S. Census Bureau reports that 3,777 Negro America New York: Pitt man Publishing Corpora tion 1967 Ploski, Harry A. Phe heads of families own bteday and Company. 1968 Kaiser, Ernest Hie Negio slaves, mostly in Louisiana K.„. u,™ *1^ S',; Eyewitness: The Negro in juether Company ijpg M Tubman -1913 an indomitable expert in guiding slaves to Freedom preceded by wherever she went and won her respect of people in every walk of life. In I860, Harriet be gan making speeches at Women’s Rights gather ings, Black Conventions and meetings of Anti-Sla very Societyies. Harriet . served as a Spy and a Nurse in the Union Army. Many tributes were given to Harriet for her ser vices, but her later years were spent in poverty. Like many others, regardless of their race creed or color, Harriet was forgooten by her government. She did not receive a pensio until more than thirty years after the war. Harriet finally re ceived $20.00 a month for the remainder of her life. She used this money to ward the establishment of a home for the age^ and indi gent which later became known as the Harriet Tubman Home. Harriet Tubman died of pneumonia at Auburn in March of 1913. On June 12, 1914, Flags of the City hung at half-mast. Blacks and Whites gathered to pay tribute to her and her con tributions to her Country and her People. iDOD Do-H-magM!!i-pqg 1^76 Honoring America's Bicentennial 1976 KiXXaOOOOBBBOBOBBOPBaOl >oooa B B B B B a B B00000000000is>0 i»a