Lesser-known moments in Black history

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2 min readFeb 2, 2024

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šŸæ Good morning on this glorious Groundhog Day! Punxsutawney Phil did not see his shadow this morning, so an early spring is on its way.

A few weeks ago, writer and editor Allison Wiltz got people talking on X when she asked: ā€œWhat piece of black history do you wish more people knew?ā€ Over 300 responses later, Wiltz recapped all of them on Medium. A reporter in Houston, TX, wants more of us to know about Black peopleā€™s role in the American Revolution, where over 20,000 Black soldiers fought for the British after being promised freedom in return. (After the war, the British made good on the deal ā€” Black Loyalists resettled in Nova Scotia before founding their own province in Sierra Leone.) And an educator and activist simply responded: ā€œThat itā€™s American history. Every month is Black History.ā€

That reminds me of an essay Iā€™ve read at least five times because itā€™s so good: ā€œOn Seeing My Grandpa Strike a Pose at the Beach.ā€ Itā€™s by essayist Stephanie Georgopulos, who explains why Black history month, at least as itā€™s often covered in school, can feelā€¦ limiting, to say the least. This is an essay about Stephā€™s very chic grandpa, but itā€™s also about how capital-H History leaves out so much specificity and nuance. The whole thing is worth reading but Iā€™ll just leave you with this quote:

I donā€™t recall a single February in which I was told what Black people were up to when they werenā€™t being enslaved, discriminated against, disenfranchised, experimented on. (Wait, I remember. It was jazz.) What I learned, instead, was The White Gaze Presents: Black History, a Tale of Linear Progress. To hear my teachers tell it, Black people in the U.S. were treated Very Bad for a precise period of time, starting with slavery and ā€œendingā€ with the passage of the Civil Rights Act. But all of that was long ago, they assured usā€¦

What do you wish more people knew about your history? If you decide to write about it on Medium, add the topic ā€œEdition Promptā€ so I (and everyone else) can find it.

From the archive

A decade ago, comedian Sarah Cooper delivered 10 tricks to appear smart in meetings (tip #6: ask ā€œWill it scale?ā€ no matter what it is). Over four million people recognized themselves in these tips, which went on to become a bestselling satirical calendar. Even in Zoom times it makes me laugh.

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