December 7th, 2006

Role Models

Prior to Roger Bannister, no man had run 1 mile in under 4 minutes. It was felt to be impossible, in fact there was scientific studies that supported the belief.The year after Mr. Bannister accomplished his record time, 19 more runners broke the 4 minute barrier. Think about it,prior to Roger’s sub 4 minutes mile, no one had run so fast, after, in fact the very next year, almost 20 more people.

There are other examples of how being around greatness, inspires others. Black history month is comming up, and I found this from last year, a month full of people who are black and achieved great accomplishments. Let all find a way to be great.

 

 

CNN Black History Month

  

A legacy of black talent

Each day during Black History Month, CNN Interactive will profile one man or woman who has made a lasting contribution, ranging from literature, music and the arts to science and technology.



  

February 27Marian Anderson 1902-1993

Known as the contralto of the century, Marian Anderson was born in Philadelphia on February 27, 1902. Young Marian displayed her gifted voice in her church choir. She sang all parts: soprano, alto, tenor and bass. When she made her debut in New York on December 31, 1935, a reviewer described her performance as “music-making that was too deep for words.”

In spite of her undeniable talent, certain groups were not willing to accept a black performer into their realm. In 1939, the Daughters of the American Revolution banned her from singing in Washington’s Constitution Hall, which they owned. First lady Eleanor Roosevelt resigned from the group in response and sponsored an Easter morning concert at the Lincoln Memorial. Marian Anderson gave one of her most memorable performances to a crowd of 75,000 people.

The Metropolitan Opera in New York never had a black singer perform in any of its productions until January 17, 1955. Anderson made history with her performance in Verdi’s “A Masked Ball.”



  

February 26Patricia Roberts Harris 1924-1985

Patricia R. Harris was the first black woman to serve in a president’s cabinet and the first to serve as secretary of two cabinet posts. In 1977, President Jimmy Carter appointed Harris as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. In 1979, she was appointed as Secretary of Health and Human Services.

Harris earned a law degree with honors from George Washington University in 1960, and was then admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1961, she became associate dean of students at Howard University School of Law. In 1963, she was given full professorship and in 1969 became the dean of the law school.



  

February 25Alexander Sergeyvich Pushkin1799-1837

Alexander Sergeyvich Pushkin, a great Russian poet, was the great-grandson of Abraham Hannibal, an African who was a special friend of Peter the Great.

As a child, Pushkin displayed a talent for writing poetry. In 1818, he was appointed to Russia’s ministry of foreign affairs. By day, he worked for the government; at night, he wrote poetry. Pushkin eventually became Russia’s poet laureate.

Political freedom was the subject of two of his most famous poems, “Noel” and “Ode to Freedom,” which criticized the government. As a result, Pushkin was banished into exile, during which he continued to write and became the first Russian to earn a living as a poet.

In 1824, he received a pardon from Alexander the First on the condition that his future writings would not provoke political unrest. Pushkin agreed. Thereafter, he wrote two novels, “The Captive of the Caucasus” and “The Captain’s Daughter.”

A continuous theme throughout his works was his obvious pride in his African heritage. He left unfinished a tribute novel, “The Moor of Peter the Great,” in honor of his grandfather. At the age of 38, Pushkin died in a duel over the woman he married.



  

February 24Benjamin O. Davis Jr.1912-1969

Born in Washington, Benjamin O. Davis Jr. was an army brat whose father set him a challenging example. The elder Davis became a brigadier general in 1940, the U.S. Army’s first black general.

The younger Davis paralleled his father’s illustrious career. He graduated from West Point in 1936 and began his military career at Fort Benning in Georgia. In 1942, he joined the Army Air Corps and took command of the 99th Fighter Squadron, the famous “Tuskegee airmen,” as a lieutenant colonel.

Davis, known for his dignified manner and eloquent speech, became the first black brigadier general in the history of the U.S. Air Force in 1954. In 1965, he rose to the rank of lieutenant general.



  

February 23Josephine Baker1906-1975

Entertainer Josephine Baker has been considered one of the most colorful performers of all time. Her temptress style, daring costumes and dramatic flair made her world famous.

Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Baker moved to Paris at age 18 to dance with La Revue Negre (The Black Review). Soon, she gained top billing and became one of France’s most beloved entertainers.

In 1936, Baker returned to the United States to appear in the Ziegfeld Follies. She was not well received, however, because she was black. The following year, she returned to Paris and became a French citizen.

When Hitler’s troops occupied France during World War II, Baker joined the French resistance. Her loyal, brave service earned her the French Legion Medal of Honor.

Baker had a great love for animals and orphaned children. She purchased a 300-acre castle in the French countryside, where she lived with her husband, a host of exotic animals and 14 adopted children of various ethnic backgrounds. She called her family “the rainbow project.”

In 1951, Madame Baker made another visit to the U.S., this time to perform to rave reviews. She took a personal stand against racism by refusing to perform wherever black patrons were barred. Nearly 60 years old, Baker joined Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1963 march on Washington. Nine years later, she died in Paris.



  

February 22Joseph Lee1849-1905(?)

Near the turn of the century, many modern bakeries turned out hundreds of bread loaves, but the handmade process was labor intensive. Enter Joseph Lee. Lee was a master cook and restaurateur who invented a bread-making machine that revolutionized the entire baking industry.

His machine did more than just mix the ingredients, it kneaded the dough, making it lighter and more hygienic than the bare hands of a baker. It decreased the cost of making bread while increasing bread production. Only two or three workers were needed to operate the machine, which could produce hundreds of loaves daily. By hand, it could take nearly a dozen bakers to make the same number of loaves each day. Lee patented his bread-making machine in 1902.

He also invented a machine to reuse and recycle old bread. His bread crumbling machine was patented in 1895. It soon became an essential item in every first class hotel kitchen and restaurant. The crumbs were used to make such delectables as croquettes, batter for cakes, puddings and dressing for poultry.



  

February 21Dr. Susan McKinney Steward 1848-1918

Dr. Susan McKinney Steward was the first black woman to formally enter the medical profession with recognizable success. Highly motivated and determined, she overcame two major obstacles, being black and female.

In 1870, she graduated from the New York Medical School for Women and Children as class valedictorian. The focus of her work was the practice of homeopathy, as defined by Webster’s New Dictionary as “a system of curing disease by drugs in very small doses, which produce in healthy person, symptoms like those of the disease.”



  

February 20James Augustine Healy 1830-1900

In 1865, James Augustine Healy became the first black Roman Catholic bishop in the United States. He was one of five children born to Michael and Mary Eliza Healy. Michael Healy was an Irish indentured servant; Mary Eliza was a black former slave. Their children were born in Georgia and by state law, could be sold into slavery.

Once, when times were hard on the Healy farm, a group of white farmers suggested Michael Healy sell the children as slaves. Healy ran the men off his property with dogs. He and his wife then dedicated themselves to providing the best educational opportunities for their children.

With their son’s appointment, it seems the efforts of Michael and Eliza Healy were well rewarded.



  

February 19Patrick Francis Healy 1834-1910

A younger brother of Bishop James Healy, Patrick was the nation’s first black to earn a Ph.D. He and the rest of his five siblings contributed greatly to the world through their service as religious and civic leaders.

Throughout his lifetime Healy received numerous medals and commendations. He was the 29th president of the prestigeous Georgetown University from 1873-1882.

As a tribute to his outstanding leadership during his tenure, Georgetown erected the Healy Building. It housed the administration center, a classrom and a dormitory.



  

February 18The Black Mongols of China1st century

Asia’s first major encounter with black Mongols occurred around the first century. They converged on India, conquering all of the northwest sector, which is now the nation of Pakistan.

In China they were called the “yeuh-chih.” India referred to them as the “kusanas.” Now known as the “black huns,” they traveled as much as ninety miles per day. When they invaded Eastern Europe, they were called the “black tartars.”

James Brunson, an authority on the black racial presence in China, said, “These blacks referred to themselves as ‘kara khitai’ and would later take possession of the Steppe region, north of the Black Sea.”



  

February 17Biddy Mason 1818-1891

In 1851, 32-year-old slave Biddy Mason moved to California with her master, his family and her three young daughters. Biddy’s master made the move to California to pursue a better life for his family. Little did he know, Biddy had dreams for her family, too.

They settled in the San Bernardino valley. One year before their arrival, California outlawed slavery. Biddy’s master could not afford to lose his slaves, so he tried to move again, this time to Texas, where slavery was still legal.

Biddy stood up for her right to liberty and sued him in a California court. The court ruled in her favor and she won freedom for herself and her family. Later, she got a job in Los Angeles as a practical nurse making $2.50 per day. She lived frugally and managed to accumulate a nest egg of $250,000. With that money, she began to purchase real estate — land that is today considered some of the most valuable in Los Angeles. In short order, she amassed a fortune.



  

February 16Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable1745-1818

Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable founded the city of Chicago.

DuSable was born around 1745 in Haiti to a white French sea captain and a black former slave. After his mother died, he went to France with his father to be educated. Later he worked as a seaman on his father’s boats. At 20, he sailed to America.

Soon, DuSable settled in Illinois and became a fur trader. He married an American Indian woman and developed a very successful business. When traveling from Canada, where he trapped furs, DuSable would stop at a place the Indians called Eschikcago or “place of smelly waters.” In 1779, DuSable decided this would be a great place to build a trading post. Many white men had tried it before, but they found a great deal of resistance from the Indians. DuSable, though, did not have that problem. In fact, he was adopted into his wife’s clan. Soon, his successful trading post developed into the settlement now known as Chicago.



  

February 15

Madame C.J. Walker

1867-1919Madame C.J. Walker (born Sarah Breedlove) was America’s first black millionaire businesswoman. She achieved her success by inventing a new hair care process and marketing a line of cosmetics for black women. In 1905, Walker invented and patented a straightening comb which, when heated and used with her patented pomade, transformed many women’s hair into a shining, smooth mane. In 1906, she married Charles J. Walker, and was known thereafter as Madame C.J. Walker. She dubbed her hair straightening process the “Walker method.” The popularity of her products grew so rapidly that she soon established a manufacturing company that occupied an entire Denver city block.

Madame Walker’s company employed more than 3,000 people. Before the advent of the “Avon Lady” and Mary Kay representatives, she trained young women to sell her products door to door. Her agents were required to sign contracts binding them to a strict hygienic regimen; later, these standards would be incorporated into Colorado’s state cosmetology laws.



  

February 14

Daniel Hale Williams

1856-1931It was a hot summer night in 1893. A deliveryman named John Cornish was rushed to the emergency room. Stabbed in the heart in a bar-room brawl, Cornish was brought to Chicago’s Provident Hospital and to Dr. Daniel Hale Williams. With Cornish’s life in jeopardy, Williams decided to open the chest and operate. He repaired the torn tissue in the heart and completed the operation.

Williams made history that night as the first doctor to successfully perform open-heart surgery. Cornish went on to live another 20 years.

Even before this landmark event, Williams was highly regarded as a brilliant surgeon. When he died in 1931, part of his obituary read: ‘ … Many found him willing and ready to serve, without pay, in the cause of humanity.’



  

February 13

Garrett A. Morgan

1875-1963Thousands of soldiers on World War I battlefields owed their lives to Morgan, who invented the gas mask. In 1916, just four years after he invented the mask as a safety device for firemen, Morgan himself used one to help rescue men trapped by a gas explosion in a tunnel being constructed under Lake Erie. The city of Cleveland, Ohio, presented him with a gold medal in honor of his heroic efforts.

Orderly downtown streets came courtesy of Morgan as well. The native of tiny Paris, Kentucky, invented the automatic traffic signal, which helped improve urban traffic safety.



  

February 12

Mary Church Terrell

1863-1954Mary Church Terrell was a lecturer, a women’s rights activist and the first president of the National Association of Colored Women (NACW). Born in Memphis, Tennessee, to former slaves who had become wealthy through investing in real estate, Terrell was among the first black women to have a college education. She graduated from Oberlin College in 1884 with a degree in classical languages.

A champion of women’s rights throughout her life, Terrell gave her support to Susan B. Anthony and became a powerful force in the women’s suffrage movement.

A master of languages, Terrell represented black women in the American delegation to the International Congress of Women in Berlin. Of all the U.S. delegates, she was the only one to deliver her address in fluent German and French.

In 1919, she received international recognition at the International Peace Congress in Zurich, where she spoke of the condition of black America.



  

February 11

Elijah McCoy

1843-1929Elijah McCoy invented a locomotive lubricator that allowed workers to keep machines in full operation while they were being oiled. Before McCoy’s invention, the entire mechanical system would have to be shut off and lubricated by hand. With his machine in such demand, inferior imitations started creeping into the market. However, manufacturers refused to accept any substitute. They wanted the “real McCoy” — a phrase that has come to describe quality of workmanship.

McCoy received over 50 patents in his lifetime. Some of his inventions have become staples of daily living. Among his more familiar ones are the ironing board and the lawn sprinkler.



  

February 10

Dr. Mae C. Jemison

1956-presentOn September 12, 1992, Dr. Mae C. Jemison became the first female African-American astronaut to blast off into space. As a crew member aboard the space shuttle Endeavour, she was the mission’s acting science specialist. Jemison had dreamed of becoming an astronaut ever since she was a child living in Chicago. Jemison also is a chemical engineer, physician, and a teacher.



  

February 9

Lewis Howard Latimer

1848-1928Lewis Latimer didn’t make the light bulb, he made it better. As a pioneer in the electric lighting industry, he was the only black member of Thomas Edison’s team of inventors. By creating a carbon filament for Edison’s newly invented electric light bulb, Latimer solved two major design flaws: the bulb didn’t last very long and it had a tendency to shatter when it got too hot. Edison may have invented the bulb in 1879, but it was Latimer’s carbon filament that made it practical for everyday use.



  

February 8

Edmonia Lewis

They called her “Wildfire.” Edmonia Lewis was a gifted young woman who gained critical acclaim as a sculptor. She was born to a Chippewa mother and an African father in 1845. She grew up in Albany, New York, with her mother’s family. Even as a child, Lewis displayed a talent for art. Soon after she started being tutored by a local sculptor, Lewis’ works began receiving praise. Her most noteworthy sculptures include busts of Abraham Lincoln, John Brown and Col. Robert Gould Shaw, the leader of the all-black Civil War regiment who is portrayed in the movie “Glory”.



  

February 7

Alexandre Dumas

1802-1870Born in 1802, Dumas had a Haitian father and a French mother. He was born with the surname de la Palleterie, but adopted his mother’s maiden name after being estranged from his father.

The French novelist and playwright had early success in his career with dramas, such as “Henri III et sa cour” (1839) and “Christine” (1830). He later turned to historical novels, including his famous “The Three Musketeers” (1844) and “The Count of Monte Cristo” (1844). Dumas was considered a romantic and it is said that his lifestyle was reflected in many of his writings. Long after his death, his works remain literary classics.



  

February 6

Maggie Lena Walker

1867-1934 In 1903, Maggie Lena Walker became chairwoman of the board for the newly founded St. Luke Bank and Trust. That made Walker the nation’s first female bank president. She was said to have a “golden touch,” and helped the black community in many ways. She organized and served as president of the St. Luke Educational Fund, which helped black children get an education; was national director of the NAACP; and was appointed by several Virginia governors to various posts.



  

February 5

William Grant Still

1895-1978In 1936, William Grant Still became the first black to conduct a professional symphony orchestra in the United States. He conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. As America’s first African-American classical composer, Still also was the first black to write a symphony or to conduct a radio orchestra. His varied compositions were marked by simple harmonies and orchestration and the use of jazz, blues and other folk idioms.



  

February 4

Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield

1809-1876Dubbed “the black swan,” Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield gained worldwide acclaim as a brilliant vocalist. Her 27-note range was hailed as astonishing. She gained her nickname for her moving and emotional performances during the era just before the Civil War.



  

February 3

Dr. Charles Richard Drew

1904-1950 Millions of people are indebted to the medical research of Dr. Charles Drew. As a world-renowned surgeon, medical scientist and educator, Drew was a medical pioneer by finding a way to preserve blood. He created the first blood bank and developed a way to efficiently store blood plasma.



  

February 2

Ida B. Wells

1862-1931An early black activist, Wells was perhaps the most famous black female journalist of her time. Born to slave parents in Holy Springs, Mississippi, in 1862, Wells was orphaned 14 years later by a yellow fever epidemic.

As part-owner and editor of Memphis Free Speech from 1891 to 1892, Wells launched an anti-lynching crusade before a mob of protesters forced her to flee Memphis.

Later, she was a correspondent for a several newspapers, including the Memphis Watchman, Detroit Plain Dealer and the Indianapolis World. She also co-founded the NAACP.



  

February 1

Dr. Carter G. Woodson

1875-1950In 1915, Dr. Carter G. Woodson founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. Woodson started the Journal of Negro History in 1916. Shortly afterward, the historian and educator began pushing for a “Negro History Week” to explore the contributions of African Americans. His dream was fulfilled in 1926. Woodson chose the second week of February because that’s when two people whom he felt had significantly affected the lives of African Americans were born: Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. The week evolved into Black History Month in 1976.



  

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December 6th, 2006

20 Ways to know you are black in corporate America

I spent a great deal of time in the corporate world. I was fortunate to work for some great companies and yet had many situations that made me feel uncomfortable. I always felt somewhat on edge  in large groups because you never knew what to expect. Please study this list and see if you reconize the comments or yourself. I would love to have some comments on this one!Link below.

littleafrica.jpg (10804 bytes)

  

20 WAYS TO KNOW YOU’RE BLACK
IN CORPORATE AMERICA

 

1. A coworker sees you and several black colleagues at a casual lunch. Back at the office he/she later asks, “What was that meeting all about?”

2. You arrive at work on time as usual. Your boss, making her rounds, peeks in and remarks with surprise, “Oh, you’re here!”

3. A colleague says with a broad smile, “You know, I really like you. When I see you, I don’t see color. I don’t think of you as black.”

4. After a staff meeting, your boss suggests, “you need to work at making others more comfortable with you…why don’t you smile more often?”

5. You tell your manager about a problem you are having and the response you get is “You’ve got to be exaggerating! I find that hard to believe.”

6. You are told you are “rough around the edges” despite your completion of many professional development programs and it is suggested you emulate the behavior of a non-person of color colleague.

7. You continually get more responsibility, but no authority.

8. You are being recognized at a company banquet. As you approach the stage to receive your company’s highest achievement award, your corporations’ top executive exclaims, “Yo homeboy, congratulations”.

9. You arrive at an offsite business retreat dressed in business casual attire. Your non-persons of color peers approach and ask why you are always so dressed up?

10. You are told you are decreasing your effectiveness with your aggressive style.

11. You are frequently asked why you change your hairstyle so often.

12. Your first name is arbitrarily shortened to one or two syllables without your permission.

13. You are asked every summer if black people tan.

14. After a coworker returns from a weekend in the sun, they run to you on Monday morning and extend their arms to touch yours and say, “Hey I’m darker than you”.

15. Walking through the hall with colleagues, you exchange greetings with two other blacks you pass along the way. Your colleague says in amazement, “My you know so many people.”

16. You are told your attitude is affecting others. You are asked to…”lighten up, not be so serious about the work. Smile and laugh more often, to make others more comfortable working with you”.

17. You realize that at times you must “dumb down” appearing to be dependent and unaware, so that your manager and peers feel they are helping you…

18. You have to perform at 250% just to stay even.

19. You have to document everything. You’ve learned the hard way.

20. You assumed that all that was required of you was to work hard and get the job done.

 

***************************************************************
Someone who happened to view the above list, wanted to add his own points. Read below…

Being Black In The Work Place Of America

  

1. They take my kindness for weakness.

2. They take my silence for speechless.

3. They consider my uniqueness strange.

4. They call my language slang.

5. They see my confidence as conceit.

6. They see my mistakes as defeat.

7. They consider my success accidental.

8. They minimize my intelligence to “potential”.

9. My questions mean I’m unaware.

10. My advancement is somehow unfair.

11. Any praise is preferential treatment.

12. To voice concern is discontentment.

13. If I stand up for myself, I’m too defensive.

14. If I don’t trust them, I’m too apprehensive.

15. I’m defiant if I separate.

16. I’m fake if I assimilate.

17. Yet, constantly I am faced with work place hate.

18. My character is constantly under attack.

19. Pride for my race makes me, “TOO BLACK”.

20. Yet, I can only be me.

21. And, who am I you might ask?

22. I am that Strong Black Person who stands on the backs of my ancestor’s achievements, with an erect spine pointing to the stars with pride, dignity, and respect which lets the work place in America know, that I not only possess the ability to play by the rules, but I can make them as well.

23. BLACK AND PROUD!!!

 

courtesy of FreemanInstitute.com

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December 5th, 2006

Network Your Way to the top, Networking for professional blacks

It is noted being blackinbusiness can be a lonley place. You can sit in meetings with many and sometimes be the only black in the room. You can wonder, when you see a group of whites joking and chuckling, are they making fun of you. You can have self doubt because of the  negative feedback you recieve from management, without much positive reinforcement. You are an island, you are alone. You can fit in by making yourself the butt of jokes and being a clown. Thankfully for many, being an Uncle Tom is not an option. I have been luckly to have a group of black professionals that make up part of my inner circle. Over the years we have been their for each other in ways that white friends could not relate to. Our networking has helpped us all become successful and benefitted our organizations with higher sales and profits. Networking for black professional is a win win, the black professional gains confidence and skills, the company gains a more productive employee.

I have long been a member of the national sales network. NSN is a group of black sales professionals with chapters through out the United States. They have a visionary leader, David Richardson, and an excellent board of directors. I highly recommend this group for all sales people of color and even professionals not in sales.

NSN has excellent developmental programs and growth leadership opportunties. Due to the dynamics of race in the United States, you have to wonder when a white manager provides feedback, are they saying this because of my race. NSN has a talented group of managers and other professional to offer career counsul.

Other  networking options include, National Black Master of Business Adminstration Association. MBMBAA is national in scope as well and like the NSN, their year is highlighted by a National Convention There are networking groups for almost every profession. I urge you to make these groups an important part of your personal growth strategy.

Recently I came accross a site discussing black women’s issues. There are a number of abstracts and papers discussing compelling topics, such as; balance career and family, surviving tenure track, women health and much more.

It is exciting to see so many ways to be part of professional networks. In the future, I will discuss a company networking group for black professionals.

http://www.salesnetwork.org/

 

http://ora.howard.edu/centers/aawi/abstracts/t.htm

December 4th, 2006

How Serious is Racism in regards to Blacks in Business

We see the effects of race and racism all around us. In the States most opinions can be different as day and night depending on if you are black or white.Remember the different reactions to the trail of the century when OJ,{A man so famous, no last name is needed} was accused of murder, White folk were shocked at the reaction of most blacks to the  jury’s decision. Not Gulity!!

We just had a young bride groom not to be, silienced to death by the New York city police shooting fifty gun shots into  the bride groom’s body. Most blacks I encountered, expressed outrage. Many whites wondered what the black, bride groom not to be, did to cause New York city’s finest to over react.

I went to a book signing the other night for a best selling black author.He said racism no longer matted. Now it was my turn to be shocked, the crowd mostly black, well dressed and professional, seemed to agree. Members of my family feel the same way. The future for business will find a shortage of talent. Employers will not be able to last if they are unable to embrace inclusion.There seems to be a shift in the black community to want to get pass racism.

 

 

Even thought the rantings of Kramer did not offend me,I was not there, If I was, I would have visited the stage and kicked his butt. I was sent an article, in which the author states, the word nigger is not as bad as thinking blacks have inferior brain power. Check out the link below. It offers facinating debate on this topic.

Personality I think racism is wrong and harmful to our progress into the middle class and higher, but it will not go away.  We must find a way to win in spite of racism My futher feeling is as blacks we can descrminate, but we can not harm a race of people or be racist because we lack power. Whites in power can harm the black race and be racist. Lets not use raceism as an excuse but rather a motivation to be great at what we do.

http://gladwell.typepad.com/gladwellcom/2006/12/defining_a_raci.html

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