Black History Month videos, stories

Black History Month videos, stories

Over the years, 91制片厂 speakers and 91制片厂 stories have helped tell about the history of Black Americans 鈥 because Black history is our history.

Enjoy these links to some of those inspiring speeches, panels and stories.


TALKS BY CIVIL RIGHTS LEADERS

Myrlie Evers-Williams 鈥 2013 commencement address

Myrlie Evers-Williams is a civil rights activist and former chairwoman of the NAACP. Her husband, Medgar Evers, was the NAACP鈥檚 state field secretary for Mississippi. Together, the Everses organized voter registration drives and civil rights demonstrations. They became high-profile targets for pro-segregationist violence and terrorism. In 1962, their home in Jackson, Mississippi was firebombed in reaction to the boycott of downtown Jackson鈥檚 White merchants that Medgar Evers had organized. The violence reached its worst point the following year when Medgar was gunned down by a sniper in front of his home.


Bob Moses 鈥 2014 Black History Month Scholar Symposium

Bob Moses was a prominent figure in the civil rights movement as a field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. In 1961, Moses initiated SNCC鈥檚 Mississippi Voter Registration Project and was appointed its director in 1962. He helped to lead the Council of Federated Organizations into the Mississippi Summer Project 鈥 1964 Freedom Summer 鈥 which parachuted the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party to the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City. Bob Moses died in 2021 at the age of 86. For more about Bob Moses, visit our online Newsroom.


Julian Bond 鈥 2014 commencement address

In 1960, while a student at Atlanta鈥檚 Morehouse College, Julian Bond joined the civil rights movement, serving as communications director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and traveling throughout the South to organize voter registration drives. After the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 opened up opportunities in Georgia鈥檚 electoral process, Julian Bond served four terms in the Georgia House of Representatives and six terms in the Georgia Senate. In 1971, Bond helped found the Southern Poverty Law Center, serving as board president from 1971 to 1979. In his 1987 bid for a seat in the U.S. Congress, he lost to civil rights leader John Lewis. He narrated the highly acclaimed PBS series, 鈥淓yes on the Prize,鈥 which recounted the history of the civil rights movement. From 1998 to 2009, Julian Bond served as chairman of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the nation鈥檚 oldest civil rights organization. He died in 2015 at the age of 75. For the text of Julian Bond's 2014 commencement address, visit our online Newsroom.


STORIES FROM WAGNER MAGAZINE

Lonnie Brandon

Lonnie Brandon & the North Hall 27 鈥斅In 1970, a group of Black students risked their college careers to help Wagner become a more equitable place for all of us. Here鈥檚 what happened. Read Lonnie's story on the Wagner Magazine website. (Fall 2021)


Rita Reynolds

Rita Reynolds: True Heritage 鈥斅History professor Rita Reynolds鈥 life鈥檚 work documents the lives of wealthy, free Black families in the pre-Civil War South. One of them was her own. Read Rita's story on the Wagner Magazine website. (Fall 2021)


Milfred Fierce

History Makers: Milfred Fierce 鈥60 M鈥67 鈥斅Milfred Fierce, a basketball star for 91制片厂, was a pioneer in developing the field of Black & African Studies in American higher education. Read Milfred's story on the Wagner Magazine website. (Fall 2021)


Adrienne Kennedy

Playwright Adrienne Kennedy profiled 鈥 In 1963, Adrienne Kennedy鈥檚 groundbreaking surrealist play, 鈥淔unnyhouse of a Negro,鈥 won 91制片厂's Stanley Drama Award; the play was published in its entirety the following year in the Wagner Literary Magazine. More than half a century later, alumna and playwright Pia Wilson 鈥93 wrote about Kennedy鈥檚 career and how it had shaped her own. Read Miss Adrienne's story on the Wagner Magazine website. (Summer 2019)


Paul West

Paul West 鈥58 was part of jazz history in NYC 鈥 Bassist Paul West has played with 鈥渏azz royalty,鈥 including Dizzy Gillespie. He backed up singers like Billie Holiday, Carmen McRae, Dinah Washington, Betty Carter and Abbey Lincoln. There were the pianists: Randy Weston, Tommy Flanagan, Kenny Barron and Erroll Garner. And the band leaders: Lester Young, Milt Jackson and Max Roach. Paul West was a music educator, too, serving as executive director of New York City鈥檚 Jazzmobile program from 1969 to 1973 and director of the Henry Street Settlement Music School in Manhattan鈥檚 Lower East Side until 2000. Read Paul's story on the Wagner Magazine website. (Fall 2017)


Original drama examines impact of Eric Garner鈥檚 death 鈥 The play was titled 鈥淓very Time You See Me,鈥 which prefaced the final words uttered by Eric Garner as he was confronted by police in 2014 for selling loose, untaxed cigarettes on a Staten Island street. The play was created by the Sound of Port Richmond, a community theater program started in 2013 by 91制片厂. 鈥淎lmost as soon as the performance began, I found myself choking back tears,鈥 wrote Wagner Magazine editor Laura Barlament, 鈥渁n unexpected surge of emotion provoked by the powerful images, sounds, faces, and words I was experiencing in a stuffy room at the Staten Island Ferry Terminal.鈥 Read the story about 鈥淓very Time You See Me鈥 on the Wagner Magazine website. (Summer 2015)


Kerri Alexander, Jarrid Williams

#Awareness: Student leaders mentor the next generation 鈥 Like many predominantly White colleges, 91制片厂 has had its share of challenges over White privilege and diversity. Fortunately, Wagner has also had some extraordinary student leaders who have led us in an ongoing conversation about social justice and civic engagement. Wagner Magazine talked with two of them. Read the story about these student leaders on the Wagner Magazine website. (Fall 2014)


Ernie Jackson

Multitalented guitarist Ernie Jackson 鈥87 featured by the Met Museum 鈥 In 2013, Wagner music alumnus Ernie Jackson 鈥87 was asked by the Metropolitan Museum of Art if he would play something for a video series on an 1860s-era guitar from the Met鈥檚 archival collection. Ernie agreed, choosing a piece written in 1883 (the year of Wagner鈥檚 founding) in Rochester, New York (Wagner鈥檚 hometown). The piece, 鈥淩ochester Schottische,鈥 originally written for the piano, had been arranged for the guitar by virtuoso Justin Holland. Read Ernie's story on the Wagner Magazine website. (December 2013)


Henrietta Lacks

Kaufman-Repage Lecture: Author Rebecca Skloot on Henrietta Lacks 鈥 In 2008, the prestigious Kaufman-Repage Lecture at 91制片厂 was delivered by Rebecca Skloot, author of 鈥淭he Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.鈥 Lacks was a young Black woman who died of cervical cancer in 1951 in Johns Hopkins Hospital. Doctors took a sample of her cancer cells for research purposes, and these 鈥淗eLa鈥 cells became the first to be successfully kept alive in the lab. Still used in scientific research to this day, HeLa cells have contributed to scientific advancements as varied as the polio vaccine, treatments for cancers and viruses, and in-vitro fertilization. Ethical questions surrounding the harvesting of Lacks鈥檚 cells, their use without the family鈥檚 knowledge, and their employment in medical experimentation have also given rise to patient safeguards such as consent procedures and institutional review boards. Read the story about Rebecca Skloot and Henrietta Lacks on the Wagner Magazine website. (Fall 2011)


Sharon Richie

Compassionate command: A profile of Sharon Ivey Richie 鈥71 鈥 Sharon Ivey Richie 鈥71, Wagner鈥檚 first Black homecoming queen, had a stellar career in the Army Nurse Corps. She spent a year as a White House Fellow, served as chief nurse for the Army Recruiting Command, and was promoted to full colonel at age 36, the youngest officer of that rank in the entire Army at the time. After retiring from the Army, she became the director of the School of Nursing at Norwich University, a private military college in Vermont. She died in 2018 at the age of 68. Read Sharon's story on the Wagner Magazine website. (Fall 2009)


SHORTS FROM WAGNER MAGAZINE

James E. Powers Jr.

Obituary: James E. Powers Jr. 鈥63 鈥 James E. Powers Jr. 鈥63 and wife Beverly Ann Phipps 鈥63 ran the Spiral Gallery in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, during the late 1980s and early 1990s, known for nurturing Black artists and serving art-lovers. Read the story about James Powers on the Wagner Magazine website. (Winter 2020-21)


Steven Thomas

English prof examines depiction of slavery on the screen 鈥 In 2018, Routledge published a book co-edited by Wagner English professor Steven Thomas, 鈥淭he Cinematic Eighteenth Century.鈥 The book featured Thomas鈥檚 own chapter, 鈥淐inematic Slavery and the Romance of 鈥楤elle鈥,鈥 examining the way our culture represents the troubling history of slavery on the screen. Read the story about Steve's work on the Wagner Magazine website. (Summer 2018)


Erica Johnson

Lending a literary voice to the haunts of history 鈥 91制片厂 English professor Erica L. Johnson鈥檚 latest book, 鈥淐aribbean Ghostwriting,鈥 examined the work of Wagner alumna Michelle Cliff 鈥69 and others who 鈥渨rite novels about Afro-Caribbean and African American women whose lives find fleeting and inconsistent mention in the archives.鈥 Read the story about Erica's work on the Wagner Magazine website. (Summer 2010)


BLACK HISTORY MONTH SCHOLARS鈥 LECTURES

Steve Perry, Nadia Lopez 鈥 2018 Black Scholars Panel

91制片厂 Provost Lily McNair moderated the 2018 Black Scholars Panel discussion with Steve Perry and 91制片厂 alumna and honoree Nadia Lopez 鈥98 H鈥16. Perry and Lopez are educators who have dedicated their professional lives to serving the most underserved of communities, and they both have very powerful ideas about how to better teach and prepare black and brown children for leadership in our country.


Erica Armstrong Dunbar 鈥 2019 Black History Month Scholar鈥檚 Panel

Rita Reynolds, who chairs 91制片厂鈥檚 History Department, introduced Erica Armstrong Dunbar, the Charles & Mary Beard Professor of History at Rutgers University, who delivered the college鈥檚 2019 Black History Month Scholar鈥檚 Lecture. Dunbar spoke about her book, 鈥淣ever Caught: The Washingtons鈥 Relentless Pursuit of their Runaway Slave, Ona Judge.鈥 The book was a 2017 National Book Award Finalist for Nonfiction, and it won the 2018 Frederick Douglass Book Award.


Gina Poe 鈥 2021 Black History Month Scholar鈥檚 Lecture

Gina Poe, a UCLA neuroscientist specializing in the study of sleep and its effect on memory and learning, gave 91制片厂鈥檚 2021 Black History Month Scholar鈥檚 Lecture. The title of her lecture was, 鈥淭he Essential Work of Sleep: What, Why and How Critical Life Functions are Only Served by Sleep.鈥