Tag Archives: Thurgood Marshall

Harlem’s Rev. Dr. Calvin Butts Receives UNCF Shirley Chisholm Community Service Award

4404671420_889d0a5ef1_zOne of Harlem’s most influential pastors was recently celebrated by the United Negro College Fund for his commitment to education. Continue reading

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Sugar Hill, Harlem, NY

Sugar Hill is a neighborhood in the northern part of Hamilton Heights, which itself is a sub-neighborhood of Harlem, a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Manhattan. Continue reading

US Dept. of Ed. Awards $500k to ADC

Abyssinian Development Corporation (ADC), the nationally renowned and consistently innovative not-for-profit organization dedicated to renewing and reclaiming the spirit of community in one of New York City’s oldest and most storied neighborhoods, today was awarded $471,740 by the U.S. Department of Education for the planning of ADC’s Harlem Promise Neighborhood (HPN) project. Continue reading

There goes Harlem

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“So, Harlem?” a friend said to me recently, when we ran into one another near our sons’ Upper East Side high school. She was referring to my family’s recent move to St. Nicholas Avenue and 146th Street, officially Sugar Hill, a once wealthy African American enclave immortalized in Billy Strayhorn’s “Take the A Train” and home to such Harlem Renaissance luminaries as Ralph Ellison, Duke Ellington, Thurgood Marshall, and W. E. B. Du Bois. “Good for you.”

I tried to parse the meaning of the compliment, which I knew, because I love this friend, was paved with the best intentions. Good for me because she knew we’d been hit hard by the recession, and we needed to move to a cheaper neighborhood, so we moved? Or good for me because we’d been squeezing three children into a two bedroom apartment and now, for significantly less rent every month, we have three bedrooms, an office, and a deck? Or good for me because I’m now a white denizen of a predominantly black neighborhood, and that, along with a black man in the White House, is a sign of progress?

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HW’s Black History Month

king_johnson“In conjunction with the civil rights movement, Johnson overcame southern resistance and convinced Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed most forms of racial segregation. Johnson signed it into law on July 2, 1964.

Legend has it that, as he put down his pen, Johnson told an aide, “We have lost the South for a generation,” anticipating accoming backlash from Southern whites against Johnson’s Democratic Party. Continue reading