Origin of Black History Month
Reading time: 6 – 10 minutes
The story of Black History Month begins in Chicago during the late summer of 1915. An alumnus of the University of Chicago with many friends in the city, Carter G. Woodson traveled from Washington, D.C. to participate in a national celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of emancipation sponsored by the state of Illinois. Thousands of African Americans traveled from across the country to see exhibits highlighting the progress their people had made since the
destruction of slavery. Awarded a doctorate in Harvard three years earlier, Woodson joined the other exhibitors with a black history display.
Despite being held at the Coliseum, the site of the 1912 Republican convention, an overflow crowd of six to twelve thousand waited outside for their turn to view the exhibits. Inspired by the three-week celebration, Woodson decided to form an organization to promote the scientific study of black life and history before leaving town. On September 9th, Woodson met at the Wabash YMCA with A. L. Jackson and three others and formed the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH).
He hoped that others would popularize the findings that he and other black intellectuals would publish in The Journal of Negro History, which he established in 1916. As early as 1920, Woodson urged black civic organizations to promote the achievements that researchers were uncovering. A graduate member of Omega Psi Phi, he urged his fraternity brothers to take up the work. In 1924, they responded with the creation of Negro History and Literature Week, which they renamed Negro Achievement Week. Their outreach was significant, but Woodson desired greater impact. As he told
an audience of Hampton Institute students, “We are going back to that beautiful history and it is going to inspire us to greater achievements.” In 1925, he decided that the Association had to shoulder the responsibility. Going forward it would both create and popularize knowledge about the black past. He sent out a press release announcing Negro History Week in February, 1926.
Woodson chose February for reasons of tradition and reform. It is commonly said that Woodson selected February to encompass the birthdays of two great Americans who played a prominent role in shaping black history, namely Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, whose birthdays are the 12th and the 14th, respectively. More importantly, he chose them for reasons of tradition. Since Lincoln’s assassination in 1865, the black community, along with other Republicans, had been celebrating the fallen President’s birthday. And since the late 1890s, black communities across the country had been celebrating Douglass’. Well aware of the pre-existing celebrations, Woodson built Negro History Week around traditional days of commemorating the black past. He was asking the public to extend their study of black history, not to create a new tradition. In doing so, he increased his chances for success.
Yet Woodson was up to something more than building on tradition. Without saying so, he aimed to reform it from the study of two great men to a great race. Though he admired both men, Woodson had never been fond of the celebrations held in their honor. He railed against the “ignorant spellbinders” who addressed large, convivial gatherings and displayed their lack of knowledge about the men and their contributions to history. More importantly, Woodson believed that history was made by the people, not simply or primarily by great men. He envisioned the study and celebration of the Negro as a race, not simply as the producers of a great man. And Lincoln, however great, had not
freed the slaves—the Union Army, including hundreds of thousands of black soldiers and sailors, had done that. Rather than focusing on two men, the black community, he believed, should focus on the countless black men and women who had contributed to the advance of human civilization.
From the beginning, Woodson was overwhelmed by the response to his call. Negro History Week appeared across the country in schools and before the public. The 1920s was the decade of the New Negro, a name given to the Post-War I generation because of its rising racial pride and consciousness. Urbanization and industrialization had brought over a million African Americans from the rural South into big cities of the nation. The expanding black middle class became participants in and consumers of black literature and culture. Black history clubs sprang up, teachers demanded materials to instruct their pupils, and progressive whites stepped and endorsed the efforts.
Woodson and the Association scrambled to meet the demand. They set a theme for the annual celebration, and provided study materials—pictures, lessons for teachers, plays for historical performances, and posters of important dates and people. Provisioned with a steady flow of knowledge, high schools in progressive communities formed Negro History Clubs. To serve the desire of history buffs to participate in the re-education of black folks and the nation, ASNLH formed branches that stretched from coast to coast. In 1937, at the urging of Mary McLeod Bethune, Woodson established the Negro History Bulletin, which focused on the annual theme. As black populations grew, mayors issued Negro History Week proclamations, and in cities like Syracuse progressive whites joined Negro History Week with National Brotherhood Week.
Like most ideas that resonate with the spirit of the times, Negro History Week proved to be more dynamic than Woodson or the Association could control. By the 1930s, Woodson complained about the intellectual charlatans, black and white, popping up everywhere seeking to take advantage of the public interest in black history. He warned teachers not to invite speakers who had less knowledge than the students themselves. Increasingly publishing houses that had previously ignored black topics and authors rushed to put books on the market and in the schools. Instant experts appeared everywhere, and non-scholarly works appeared from “mushroom presses.” In America, nothing popular escapes either commercialization or eventual trivialization, and so Woodson, the constant reformer, had his hands full in promoting celebrations worthy of the people who had made the history.
Well before his death in 1950, Woodson believed that the weekly celebrations—not the study or celebration of black history–would eventually come to an end. In fact, Woodson never viewed black history as a one-week affair. He pressed for schools to use Negro History Week to demonstrate what students learned all year. In the same vein, he established a black studies extension program to reach adults throughout the year. It was in this sense that blacks would learn of their past on a daily basis that he looked forward to the time when an annual celebration would no longer be necessary. Generations before Morgan Freeman and other advocates of all-year commemorations, Woodson
believed that black history was too important to America and the world to be crammed into a limited time frame. He spoke of a shift from Negro History Week to Negro History Year.
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In the 1940s, efforts began slowly within the black community to expand the study of black history in the schools and black history celebrations before the public. In the South, black teachers often taught Negro History as a supplement to United States history. One early beneficiary of the movement reported that his teacher would hide Woodson’s textbook beneath his desk to avoid drawing the wrath of the principal. During the Civil Rights Movement in the South, the Freedom Schools incorporated black history into the curriculum to advance social change. The Negro History
movement was an intellectual insurgency that was part of every larger effort to transform race relations.
The 1960s had a dramatic effect on the study and celebration of black history. Before the decade was over, Negro History Week would be well on its way to becoming Black History Month. The shift to a month-long celebration began even before Dr. Woodson death. As early as 1940s, blacks in West Virginia, a state where Woodson often spoke, began to celebrate February as Negro History Month. In Chicago, a now forgotten cultural activist, Fredrick H. Hammaurabi, started celebrating Negro History Month in the mid-1960s. Having taken an African name in the 1930s, Hammaurabi used his cultural center, the House of Knowledge, to fuse African consciousness with the study of the black past. By
the late 1960s, as young blacks on college campuses became increasingly conscious of links with Africa, Black History Month replaced Negro History Week at a quickening pace. Within the Association, younger intellectuals, part of the awakening, prodded Woodson’s organization to change with the times. They succeeded. In 1976, fifty years after the first celebration, the Association used its influence to institutionalize the shifts from a week to a month and from Negro history to black history. Since the mid-1970s, every American president, Democrat and Republican, has issued proclamations endorsing the Association’s annual theme.



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I have mixed feellings about black history monty. I have nothing negative to say about it but…
I guess they have to teach this stuff. I just wonder when this is going to stop so we can move on. to me it just reminds us that we were slaves and once we stop celebrating slavery we can move on.
Black history is an everyday thing for me because I live it every day I dont need a month and cant crame it all into a month every year. But I do understand the concept of black history month.
Well look at it this way. You might know enough history to not celebrate it but you know plenty of people who know nothing. If it wasn’t for the month long nationwide attention to it there might be brothers and sisters who know nothing at all.
Slavery is a compelling story overall. No one likes the idea of it but it makes them want to know why it happened. The Jews lead with the Holocaust even though they have history before Germany. We (Blacks) have to do a better job of giving our complete history instead of just the horrendous.
It’s part of civilizing people to a certain extent. You are forced to say the pledge of allegiance when you are in school to civilize you to the american way right? This is no different.
Yea, I’m with Annibus on this one. Something is better than nothing I suppose. For the youth its a huge benefit even if historically its limited to the 20th century.
I guess that’s why whenever I spit Game that preceded slavery I get that blank look from katz.
Young & old alike…*sigh*
It’s a starting point not a finishing point. Even though we are starting from the end there’s a opportunity to show the beginning.
Since the end is modern to jump back to the ancient days loses most people. Maybe we should start from our time in America and slowly detail what precedes it. That way the steps are visible.
Some people know to much and can’t get people to relate and some people know to little and can’t relate. The solution is to fill the middle not ask either one to extend too much.
@ Anubis…i understand what your saying about “celebrating slavery” but thats mostly the schools and media that does that.
Us conscious blacks know our history began centuries before that so this is an opportunity to educate the youngins about the Mooors, the Kushites and The Kingdom of Kush, etc.
If any of you are ever in Detroit make sure you come check out the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History. Also keeping with the theme of this month a good book to read and to definitely give to any young cousins, brothers, nephews is “From Niggas to Gods 2″ by Akil.
Are history definitely starts before slavery, but slavery is something that we as a people shouldnt forget about. Black history should be observed daily not just once a year. This month atleast does highlight it for people who would not other wise pay attention
Exactly! Slavery is part of African American history and as such it should be part of our story here. But, since we are part of all Afrikans people our triumphs include the Haitians, Brazilians, Carribean Folk, Spanish Folk and of course Afrika.
We need to bridge the gap to connect all of us together. We are all from the same place and have been spread out by a devilish system. Once we are able to pay attention that all Black folks are part of our history we’ll see the change in mentality everyone desires.
Black history month should be all about “Hidden Colors” Tariq Nasheed´s film where he does NOT even talk about slavery, but rather “hidden knowledge”.
Deep…….
Like I’ve said before I’ve seen Hidden Colors and it’s a good documentary. I’m sure he’ll do a equal or better job in HC2.
History is everything yesterday so we have a lot to cover. Earlier I mentioned Jews using the Holocaust as significant event in their history.
Our folks have to use slavery as a significant event and fill the rest with everything before and after that point. Most of our folks are just ashamed of have been slaves. When in reality our accomplishments since then and before then were incredible. We will always progress as we always have but we need not be ashamed of events that are part of what shaped us and who we are today.