Read The Black History of the White House Online
Authors: Clarence Lusane
Mitchell, James. “James Mitchell to A. Lincoln, May 18, 1862.”
Lincoln Collection,
Vol. 76.
Mills, David. “Sister Souljah's Call to Arms.”
Washington Post.
13 May 1992.
Montgomery, David. “For D.C. Family, a Distinguished, If Little-Known Ancestor.”
Washington Post.
25 August 2009.
Moore, Acel. “As Liberty Bell Flap Continues, a Slave Memorial Is Suggested.”
Philadelphia Inquirer.
2 June 2002.
Morley, Jefferson. “The Snow Riot,”
Washington Post.
6 February 2005.
Morris, Kenneth B. Jr. “New Shoes.” Frederick Douglass Memorial and Historical Association Public Meeting (Washington, D.C.). 15 September 2007.
Morrison, Toni.”Letter to Obama Campaign.” Undated.
Murray, Shailagh. “A Family Tree Rooted in American Soil: Michelle Obama Learns About Her Slave Ancestors, Herself and Her Country.”
Washington Post.
2 October 2008.
“NEA Jazz Masters Honored at White House Event: A Salute to NEA Jazz Masters Celebrates Black Music Month.” Press Release. National Endowment for the Arts, Washington, D.C., 22 June 2004.
“Negroes Applaud Parker.”
Atlanta Constitution.
13 September 1901.
Newman, Richard. “The Pennsylvania Abolition Society: Restoring a Group to Glory.”
Pennsylvania LEGACIES.
November 2005.
Newton, Leon. “The Role of Black Neo-Conservatives During President Ronald Reagan's Administration.” In
White House Studies Compendium,
Vol. 6. Anthony J. Eksterowicz and Glenn P. Hastedt, eds. New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc., 2008.
Nitkin, David and Harry Merritt. “A New Twist to an Intriguing Family History: Census
Records, Genealogical Research Show Forebears of Obama's Mother Had Slaves.”
Baltimore Sun.
2 March 2007.
Nye, Joseph S. “Public Diplomacy and Soft Power.”
The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science,
Vol. 616, No. 1. 2008.
“Obama Wins Senate Race to Become 5th Black U.S. Senator in History.”
USA Today.
2 November 2004.
O'Brien, Conor Cruise. “Thomas Jefferson: Radical and Racist.”
Atlantic Monthly.
October 1996.
Oldham, James. “New Light on Mansfield and Slavery.”
Journal of British Studies,
Vol. 27, No. 1. January 1988.
Page, Thomas Walker. “The Real Judge Lynch.”
Atlantic Monthly.
December 1901.
Paynter, John. “The Fugitives of the
Pearl.
”
Journal of Negro History
(Washington, D.C.). July 1916.
Pierce, Paulette. “The Roots of the Rainbow Coalition.”
The Black Scholar.
March/April 1988.
Pinckney, Warren Jr. “Jazz in India: Perspectives on Historical Development and Musical Acculturation.”
Asian Music.
Autumn 1989âWinter 1990.
Reich, Howard. “Jazz at the White House Newport Stars, The Clintons And WTTW Celebrate America's Music.”
Chicago Tribune.
12 September 1993.
“Reverend Jesse Jackson and Rainbow Coalition Ask Clinton to Spare Rector.” Press Release, National Rainbow Coalition (Chicago). 24 January 1993.
Riley, John. “White House Tea and No Sympathy: The DePriest Incident.” In
National History Day 2006 Curriculum Book.
Washington, D.C.: White House Historical Association, 2006.
Robinson, Eugene. “An Inarticulate Kickoff.”
Washington Post.
2 February 2007.
Salisbury, Stephan. “Committee Is Put in Place to Guide Slavery Memorial.”
Philadelphia Inquirer.
23 September 2005.
âââ. “Despite Criticism, President's House Project Advances.”
Philadelphia Inquirer.
10 October 2009.
âââ. “Panel Calls for Slave Commemoration.”
Philadelphia Inquirer.
10 July 2002.
Sarmah, Satta. “Is Obama Black Enough?”
Columbia Journalism Review.
15 February 2007.
“Savannah Remembers Him.”
News and Courier
(Charleston, SC). 10 September 1901.
Scheips, P. J. “Lincoln and the Chiriqui Colonization Project.”
Journal of Negro History,
Vol. 37, No. 4. 1952.
Schudel, Matt. “Top Jazz Students Play Big Number: 1600 Penn.”
Washington Post.
16 June 2009.
Shear, Michael D. “ âConservative Values' Guide Court Appointee.”
Washington Post.
5 May 2003.
Shipman, Tim. “Sarah Palin Blamed by the US Secret Service Over Death Threats Against Barack Obama.”
The Telegraph
(UK). 8 November 2008.
Slobodzian, Joseph A. “Independence Mall Slavery Memorial Gets Federal Funding.”
Philadelphia Inquirer.
6 September 2005.
Smolenyak Smolenyak, Megan. “Philip Reed, the Slave Who Rescued Freedom.”
Ancestry.
MayâJune 2009.
“SNCC Position Paper: Vietnam.” In
The Sixties Papers: Documents of a Rebellious Decade.
Judith Clavir Albert and Steward Edward Albert, eds. New York: Praeger, 1984.
Southall, Geneva Handy. “Blind Tom: A Misrepresented and Neglected Composer-Pianist.”
The Black Perspective in Music.
May 1975.
Spellman, Jim and Meserve, Jeanne. “Secret Service Probes Alleged Noose Incident.”
CNN.
2 May 2008.
Spottwood, Stephen G. “The Nixon Administration's Anti-Negro Policy.” In
The Voice of Black America: Major Speeches by Negroes in the United States, 1797â1973.
Philip S. Foner, ed. New York: Capricorn Books, 1975.
Steinhem, Gloria. “Women Are Never Front-Runners.”
New York Times.
8 January 2008.
Swarns, Rachel L. “Madison and the White House, Through the Memoir of a Slave.”
New York Times.
16 August 2009.
Swarns, Rachel L. and Jodi Kantor. “In First Lady's Roots, a Complex Path From Slavery,”
New York Times.
7 October 2009.
“Taft Condemns Lynching: President Says Man That Pulls the Rope Should Hang by the Rope.”
New York Times.
10 April 1912.
“Taft Deplores Lynching: The Remedy, He Tells The Times, Is Better Enforcement of the Law.”
New York Times.
27 June 1912.
“Tells His Story in a Modest Way.”
Afro-American-Ledger.
28 September 1901.
Thamel, Pete. “Coach With a Link to Obama Has Hope for Brown's Future.”
New York Times.
16 February 2007.
“This Week in Black History.”
Jet.
4 July 1983.
Thomas, Edward. “Edwin [sic] M. Thomas to A. Lincoln, August 16, 1862.”
Lincoln Collection,
Vol. 84. ff. 17718â17719.
Thomas, Robert. “Lillian Parks, 100, Dies; Had âBackstairs' White House View.”
New York Times.
12 November 1997.
Thomas, Robert McG. Jr. “Willis Conover Is Dead at 75; Aimed Jazz at the Soviet Bloc.”
New York Times.
19 May 1996.
Vittes, Laurence. “The Power and the Passion.”
Strings Magazine,
January 2009.
Vorenberg, Michael. “Abraham Lincoln and the Politics of Black Colonization.”
Journal of Abraham Lincoln Association,
Vol. 14, Issue 2, Summer 1993.
Wallsten, Peter. “Frank Talk of Obama and Race in Virginia.”
Los Angeles Times.
5 October 2008.
Wallsten, Peter and David G. Savage. “Conservatives Invoke Obama in Voting Rights Act Challenge.”
Los Angeles Times.
18 March 2009.
Warren, Jack D. Jr. “Uncle George's Cabin.”
Free Lance-Star
(Fredericksburg, VA). 22 February 2003.
Washington, Linn Jr. “Park Service Compromises Black Rights.”
Philadelphia Inquirer.
7 May 2002.
Watrous, Peter. “Jazz at the White House: A Metaphor for Democracy (and a Help to the Boss).”
New York Times.
21 September 1998.
Weissman, Stephen R. “Opening the Secret Files on Lumumba's Murder.”
Washington Post.
21 July 2002.
Wells, Ida B. “Lynch Law.” In Ida B. Wells, Frederick Douglass, Irvine Garland Penn, and Ferdinand L. Barnett.
The Reason Why the Colored American Is Not in the World's Columbian Exposition.
Robert W. Rydell, ed. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1999.
Wesley, Charles H. “Lincoln's Plan for Colonizing the Emancipated Negroes.”
Journal of Negro History.
January 1919.
Williams, Juan. “One-Man Show.”
Washington Post.
9 June 1991.
âââ. “What Obama's Victory Means for Racial Politics.”
Wall Street Journal.
10 November 2008.
Wilkins, Sharron E. “The President's Kitchen.”
American Visions.
FebruaryâMarch 1995.
Younge, Gary. “Is Obama Black Enough?”
Guardian.
1 March 2007.
Zoninsein, Manuela. “The Black President.”
Slate.
30 September 2008.
Studies and Reports
Chapman, Michael. “TR: No Friend of the Constitution.”
Cato Policy Report.
November-December 2002.
Public Law 108-72. SEC. 6. Sense of Congress Regarding Jazz Appreciation Month.
Robinson, Michelle LaVaughn.
Princeton Educated Blacks and the Black Community,
B.A. Thesis. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University, 1985.
United States Senate. “Commemoration of A Musical Master.”
Congressional Record,
S. 10152. 22 July 1992.
The White House & President's Park: Administrative History, 1781â1983.
Washington, D.C.: United States Department of the Interior, 2001.
Websites
About Famous People.
www.aboutfamouspeople.com
.
Ad-Hoc Historians.
www.ushistory.org/presidentshouse/adhoc/position.htm
.
Afri-Classical.com Web.
http://chevalierdesaintgeorges.homestead.com/JohnsonF.html
.
African American Registry.
www.aaregistry.com/detail.php?id=1232
.
Afrolumens Project.
www.afrolumens.org/slavery/gradual.html
.
American Almanac.
http://american_almanac.tripod.com/amistad.htm
.
American Entertainment International Speakers Bureau. 2009.
www.aeispeakers.com/print.php?SpeakerID=461
.
The American Presidency Project.
www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=22360
.
Ancestry Magazine.
www.ancestrymagazine.com
.
Architect of the Capitol.
www.aoc.gov/cc/art/freedom.cfm
.
Autism Research Institute.
www.autism.com/families/problems/savant.htm
.
Avenging the Ancestors Coalition.
http://avengingtheancestors.com/index.htm
.
The Black Past.
www.blackpast.org
.
Bloomberg.
www.bloomberg.com
.
British Broadcasting Company.
http://news.bbc.co.uk
.
CNN.
http://us.cnn.com
.
Common Dreams.
www.commondreams.org
.
Counterpunch.
www.counterpunch.org
.
Exploring Pennsylvanian History.
http://explorepahistory.com/hmarker.php?markerId=280
.
Harry S. Truman Library and Museum.
www.trumanlibrary.org
.
History Central.
www.historycentral.com/amistad/amistad.html
.
Huffington Post.
www.huffingtonpost.com
.
Institute for Historical Review.
www.ihr.com
.
James Madison's Montpelier.
http://Montpelier.org/blog/?cat=8
.
Kennedy Center.
www.kennedy-center.org
.
The Myrtle Hart Society.
http://myrtlehart.org/content/view/275/5
.
Narcosphere.
http://narcosphere.narconews.com
. The Nation.
www.thenation.com/blogs
.
The New Yorker.
www.newyorker.com
.
Pew Research Center.
http://pewresearch.org
.
Project Vote. Web.
www.projectvote.org
.
Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
www.pbs.org
.
The Public Eye.
http://publiceye.org
.
Slate.
www.slate.com/id/87868
.
Slavery in the North.
www.slavenorth.com
. Talking Points Memo.
http://tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com
.
Think Progress.
http://thinkprogress.org/2006/03/10/claude-allen
.
U.S. History.
www.history.org
.
Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League.
www.uniaacl.org/archive/declare.htm
.
White House Historical Association.
www.whitehousehistory.org
.
abducted people, Franklin & Armfield (impact),
105
Abell, Bess,
339
abolition (occurrence), Lincoln (impact),
214â215
abolitionist center (Philadelphia),
84â85
abolitionist movement
President's house, relationship,
77
roots,
91â92
abolitionists
Jackson battle,
149â150
mail (usage), Kendall ban,
150
abolition movement
aggressiveness,
145
assistance, pre-Civil War presidents (reluctance),
26â27
British soldier defense,
50
slavery, repugnance,
51
White House resident,
129
Adams, John Quincy
Amistad
argument,
153â154
antislavery advocate,
140
slave ownership, avoidance,
145
slavery question, avoidance,
151
Adams, Sherman,
273
Morrow memos,
274â275
Ad-Hoc Historians,
100â101
formation,
99
affirmative action
cessation, conservative attempts,
451
Nixon initiation,
312â313
Powell support,
327
Reagan reversal,
317
Rice, softness,
328
African Americans
carpenters, racism (experience),
418â419
death, Jackson (impact),
150
elections, seating preventions,
243
equality, denial,
234
land, U.S. government broken promises,
470
legal slavery,
132
Lincoln
interaction,
183
meeting,
185â186
policies/viewpoints,
181
political relations,
214â215
White House, relationship,
198â215
lynching,
244â258
music discrimination,
260â263
New Deal benefits, blockage,
255â256
organizing/breakthroughs,
299â300
positioning, importance,
478â479
re-enslavement,
237
school children, photograph,
239
sentiments, Douglass speech,
201â202
slavery escape,
185
Social Security exclusion,
255â256
urbanization, increase,
301
African Blood Brotherhood,
352
African Methodist Episcopal Church
founding,
95
Turner participation,
189
Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program, Clinton reform,
324â325
Alabama, slave state admission,
146
Alexander Jr., Clifford,
310
,
315
Ali, Muhammad,
304
Allen, Carlos,
297
Allen, Claude,
330â331
Allen, Eugene (White House pantryman/butler/maître d'hôtel),
270
Allen, Richard,
95
Jones, differences,
96
Allicocke, Joseph,
48â49
Sons of Liberty “general,”
49
All Other Persons,
66â75
blacks reference,
70
All the President's Men
(Bernstein/Woodward),
313
Almeida, Juan (Cuba coup leader),
291
al Qaeda/Iraq, Bush administration linkage,
431
Amato, John,
448
American Colonization Society (ACS),
94
colonization plans, rejection,
190
conference (1855),
184
formation,
148
Monroe support,
148
American Federation of Labor (AFL), Supreme Court nomination opposition,
253
American Negro Slave Revolts
(Aptheker),
62
American politics, manipulative nature,
408
American Revolution
alternative voices,
26
Boston Massacre, impact,
49
racism/white racial hegemony, impact,
24â25
regime rebuff,
47â48
slavery cessation, failure,
50â56
American Society for Colonizing Free People of Color in the United States,
148
American Society of Muslims,
419â420
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), violation,
102
Amistad
Adams argument,
153â154
black rebellion/seizure,
153â154
slaves, Van Buren detention plans,
154
Anderson, Marian
Daughters of the American Revolution rejection,
264
photograph,
264
racist attacks, continuation,
264â265
Roosevelt support,
263â264
Angelou, Maya,
321
Ann and Mary
(Somerset passage),
53
Anthony, Susan B. (Wells battle),
245
anti-lynching bill inaction, U.S. Senate apology (2005),
257â258
Anti-Lynching Bureau of the National African Council,
247
anti-lynching campaigns,
244â258
continuation,
257â258
anti-Muslim opposition,
459â460
anti-slavery petitions, mailings (gag rule prevention),
151â152
Arizona anti-immigration law (SB 1070), passage/judicial suspension,
460â461
armed revolutionary movement, Southern leaders (connection),
25
Armstrong, Louis,
334
capital construction research,
118â119
White House worker assertion,
116
Arsenio Hall Show,
Clinton jazz performance,
343
Arthur, Chester A.
abolition support,
238
anti-racist agenda, avoidance,
240â241
Douglass opinion,
240
Articles of Confederation,
64â66
Article IV, slavery concern,
65â66
debate,
65
drafting,
64â65
tone/content/purpose, struggle,
55â56
writing/signing, black presence,
48
Asians, organizing/breakthroughs,
299â300
Assassinations Records Review Board,
281
Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching (ASWPL),
248
Assumption Act,
88
Atlanta Constitution,
222
Atlanta Cotton States and International Exposition, Washington speech,
223â224
,
241
Attucks, Christopher “Crispus,”
49â50
Atwater, Lee,
311â312
Avenging the Ancestors Coalition (ATAC),
100â102
Coard response,
101â102
Ayers, Bill,
447
Ayler, Albert,
338
Â
Bacchus (slave), escape,
54
Bachman, Michelle,
453
tea party defense,
466â467
Backstrom, Fred,
284
Bai, Matt,
450â451
Baker, Bernard (Watergate burglar),
313
Baker, David,
344
Baker, Frazier B. (murder),
246
Bakke
decision.
See Regents of the University of California v. Bakke
Ballad of Blind Tom, The
(O'Connell),
159â160
Banna Ka (slave),
120
Banneker, Benjamin,
112
,
119â123
Almanac, illustration,
124
death,
124
Ellicott, relationship,
120â121
,
124
fame, growth,
124
letter/criticism,
123
Banneker, Mary/Robert,
120
Barbour, Haley,
459
Barnett, Ferdinand L.,
246
Barnett, Ross (Kennedy deal),
283
Barrett, Harrison,
359
Bassett Jr., Burnwell,
45
Battle of Manassas, The
(Wiggins),
165
Battle of Wilson's Creek,
176
Baumfree, Isabella,
209
Beall, William,
117
Beck, Glenn,
380
fear/paranoia, spread,
454
power/influence,
474â475
Beeman, Richard,
69â70
Begin, Menachem,
265
Behind the Scenes or Thirty Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House
(Keckly),
171
,
178â179
condemnation/criticism,
179
Belafonte, Harry (youth march organization),
276â277
Belcher, Cornell,
441â442
Bell, Daniel,
136
Bell, John,
166â167
Ben (White House black carpenter),
104
,
108
Benezet, Anthony
black children instruction,
92
slavery institution criticism,
92â93
Bennett Jr., Lerone,
27
,
96
,
181
,
197
Lincoln examination,
212
speculations,
208â209
Benson, Romona Riscoe,
100
Bernstein, Carl,
313
Berry, Mary Francis,
359
Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church (1794), establishment,
96
Bethune, James,
159â160
Corner Store,
161â162
Bethune, Mary McCleod,
268
Biden, Joe,
463
bin Laden, Osama (capture/assassination failure),
430
Birch, James,
105
Birchtown, free black community,
80
birther movement (birthers),
380
Obama references,
453
Birth of Nation
movie still,
251
Wilson viewing,
250â251
“Black, Brown, and Beige” (Ellington),
334
Black Agents of the Secret Service (BASS)
class action lawsuit,
292â293
ruling, dismissal,
295
Writ of Mandamus (2004),
292â294
black Americans, anger,
479â480
“Black Consciousness” (SNCC paper),
306
black Democratic/Republican candidates,
365
Black Farmers and Agriculturalists Association (BFAA),
471
Black History, Ethnic Studies (relationship),
20â21
Black House, establishment,
356â357
black liberation
theology, vernacular (usage),
444â445
women liberation, Truth linkage,
209â210
Blackmon, Douglas A.,
236â237
Black Panthers (Black Panther Party for Self- Defense),
279
,
304
,
310
,
388
Chicago branch, COINTELPRO target,
420
march,
388
police raid,
420
revolutionary doctrine, advocacy,
388
Black Patti Troubadours,
263
Black Pioneers (Liberty to Slaves motto),
80
black politics
initiative, seizing (1980),
318â319
negation, Obama leadership (relationship),
480
black power, call/desire,
279
Black Power Movement,
381â382
black presidents, popular imagination,
404â412
Black Reconstruction in America: 1660-1880
(Du Bois),
240
,
416â417
blacks
activism,
85â87
activists, government repression/attacks,
280
capitalism, Nixon (impact),
313
carpenters, White house ban,
109
cause, Lincoln White House (impact),
27
civil rights extension, white reaction (aggressiveness/violence),
287
codes, enforcement,
235
colonization, Lincoln advocacy,
203â204
communities, civil rights issues,
301
concerns, Obama administration response,
376
contrabands, photograph,
177
cooks, U.S. president (relationship),
83â85
demeaning, Roosevelt (writing/speeches),
226
discredit/destruction, COINTELPRO goal,
290
emigration,
188
movements,
189
equality, movement (intensification),
304
exclusion, codification,
221
expatriation
advocacy,
184
Monroe support,
148
farmers (assistance denial), racism (impact),
469â470
farm organizations, number (increase),
470â471
freedom movement,
298â317
general strike (Du Bois),
26â27
history, future,
32â34
leaders, government repression/attacks,
280
mobilization (1960s),
279
mob violence deaths,
247
nationalist organizations, demands,
280
newspapers, development,
95
opera performers, Roosevelt support,
263
organizations, FBI destruction/neutralization attempts,
309