Black History Month - Tumblr Posts

7 years ago
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good
Damn, This Is So Good

Damn, this is so good


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9 months ago
Black History Month Art Challenge

Black History Month Art Challenge

DAY 5: Clawdeen Wolf - Monster High


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9 months ago
Black History Month Art Challenge

Black History Month Art Challenge

DAY 6: Antonio Madrigal - Encanto


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9 months ago
Black History Month Art Challenge

Black History Month Art Challenge

DAY 8: Fabian Seacaster from Fantasy High


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9 months ago
Black History Month Art Challenge
Black History Month Art Challenge

Black History Month Art Challenge

DAY 4: Husk - Hazbin Hotel (+ my human version)


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9 months ago
Black History Month Art Challenge
Black History Month Art Challenge

Black History Month Art Challenge

DAY 10: Cooper - Trolls (+ human form)


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5 years ago

WAKANDA FOREVER

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

To the fandom for being alive!

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

To the ladies who write fics and headcanons with Black characters and/or Black readers.

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

To the people who hyped up “Wakanda Forever!” on the movie’s Official release, representing their roots.

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

To the people who chose to stay after the movie’s Official release, and revive the Fandom since the 90s BET Black Panther series was cut short.

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

To the many “camps” in Fandom… T'Challa’s Kingdom, M'Baku’s Mountains, Shuri’s Lab, N'Jadaka’s Kingdom, Nakia’s Secret Spy Agency, Jabari Tribe Warriors, Dora Milaje/War Dog Trainees (I see y'all)… Regardless of who your favourite characters are, you’re the reason this fandom continues to thrive!

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

A special mention for those who do fanart and graphics as well. Love and appreciate y'all!

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

We’ve made history! This is the first Superhero movie in the MCU to get multiple nominations for The Oscars!🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

In my full experience so far, the best version of the Black Panther fandom exists right here on Tumblr! We don’t bite! Congratulations to all who were nominated and/or won via @theblackpantherawards - and those who have provided healthy outlets, encouragement and prayers throughout last year. Let’s keep the positive energy alive, yes?👍🏾♥️🤗

Black Panther 1st Anniversary (aka Appreciation Post)

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5 years ago

Anything possible if you have perseverance and hope

Who are William and Ellen Craft?

Oh boy, here we go.  One of my all-time favorite stories.  William and Ellen Craft were both born into slavery in Georgia in the 1820s.  They looked like this.  You’ll note, just by looking at her, that Ellen was very light skinned.  That would be because her parents were an enslaved woman and her master…and Ellen’s mother was also the child of an enslaved woman and her master.  You can only imagine what had happened.  Slavery is disgusting.  Anyway.

Who Are William And Ellen Craft?

William and Ellen met, fell in love, and got married so far as they were allowed (enslaved people were forbidden by law to actually get married in any legally binding fashion; since being sold away from each other forever happened so often, slave marriage vows often included the phrase “til death or separation do you part”–again, slavery is disgusting).  As you can imagine, William and Ellen didn’t want to have any children born into the system of slavery.  In December of 1848, they decided to escape to the North.  And that’s when the Crafts got crafty and came up with a brilliant plan to escape in style.

As we established, Ellen was white passing, and they decided to use this fact to their advantage.  William was able to keep a small portion of his earnings from being contracted out as a carpenter, and he saved up that money to buy Ellen some really fancy clothes.  Once disguised, Ellen looked like this:

Who Are William And Ellen Craft?

Dashing, right?  So Ellen was disguised as a wealthy, white man, someone nobody would think to question, and William would be playing the part of her enslaved manservant.  Their story was that they were traveling north because Ellen was in poor health and wanted the expertise of northern doctors.  This poor health story was for a few different reasons:

Ellen had been practicing masculine mannerisms and behaviors, but by claiming to be sick, she wouldn’t have to talk much and reveal that she still had a feminine voice.

Ellen had her right arm in a sling, pretending it was badly injured, so she could mark travel documents with an “X” and hide that she didn’t know how to write.

On racially segregated trains, she could keep William in the “white” compartments with her because she would need him to tend to her at all times, what with her “delicate health” and all.  Staying together would prevent the two from getting separated accidentally.

It was still a nerve-wracking experience, to be sure, with the threat of discovery at every turn, but William and Ellen Craft managed to escape from slavery by riding first class trains and staying in the nicest hotels along the way.  There was even one point where Ellen got to have dinner with the captain of the steamboat they were riding.  They arrived in Philadelphia, safe and sound, on Christmas Day, 1848.  The Crafts then settled in Boston, fitting in nicely with the free black community in the Beacon Hill neighborhood and making friends with prominent abolitionists.  These abolitionist friends, which included the likes of Theodore Parker and Lewis Hayden among many others, encouraged William and Ellen to make their escape story public.  They did, and soon the two were celebrities.

Their celebrity status turned out to not be such a good thing less than two years later, when the Fugitive Slave Act was passed.  Their master back in Georgia had, of course, read all about how the Crafts outwitted all the white people and made a home for themselves in Boston, so he hired two slave catchers to go up to Boston and retrieve his “property.”  What the slave catchers didn’t bargain for was that Boston was ready for them.

Up in Boston, the Vigilance Committee consisting of both black and white abolitionists was hard at work coming up with a plan to prevent the Crafts from being captured.  William Craft and Theodore Parker even thought of legal loopholes to get William arrested in Massachusetts, if it came to that, because he couldn’t be taken out of Massachusetts jail to be taken South.  Loophole 1: since Ellen and William still hadn’t gotten married, a friend could report William for fornication and get him arrested for that.  Loophole 2: William could carry various weapons on him, fight back against the slave catchers if they caught him, and get arrested for assault with a deadly weapon.  They thought of everything.

When the slave catchers arrived, the Vigilance Committee sprang into action, getting the two slave catchers arrested like six separate times in quick succession, for petty crimes both real and imagined.  They had Vigilance Committee member Samuel Gridley Howe doing his Sam thing and making very scary threats.  All of this was done to make these slave catchers so sick of Boston that they’d give up and go home to Georgia.  All the while, William and Ellen were being shuffled, often separately, between safe houses.  Eventually it came to pass that Ellen was staying with Theodore Parker, while William stayed with Lewis Hayden.  And that’s when yet another dramatic episode happened.

Lewis Hayden had himself been born into slavery in Kentucky, and he had made his escape up to Boston just a couple years before William and Ellen Craft did.  Once William got to his house, Hayden put his own plan into action.  One day, the slave catchers, who had already been put through hell by like the entire city of Boston, arrived at Lewis Hayden’s doorstep and demanded that he turn over the fugitive William Craft.  Hayden calmly opened the door a little further, not to let them inside, but to reveal the two kegs of gunpowder he had waiting just inside.  He told them that he would prefer to blow them all sky high if they took one more step, rather than see himself or William Craft return to slavery.  The two slave catchers took the hint and left.

William and Ellen were reunited at Theodore Parker’s house shortly thereafter, and plans were made to smuggle the Crafts up to Canada and then across the Atlantic to England.  Before they left, however, there was something Parker wanted to do for them.  Since they were heading to safety at last and no longer needed to be able to go to jail for fornication, Parker offered to legally marry them.  William and Ellen agreed, and Parker, their minister, did the honors right in his own living room, with a Bible in one hand and–I’m not kidding–a sword in the other.  Parker escorted them as far as Maine himself, with a variety of swords and guns on his person so he was basically that trope where a character takes an absurd amount of weapons out of their clothes.  When they parted, he gave William and Ellen the Bible and sword he had been holding as he officiated their marriage.

William and Ellen made a home for themselves in England for the next nineteen years.  They got to go to school, and they fulfilled their goal of raising their children in freedom.  They had five children, as a matter of fact.  In 1859, they were paid a visit by their old friend, Theodore Parker, who got to meet their children and see that they still had the Bible he gave them.  Parker was on his way to Italy, where he hoped the warm climate would improve his tuberculosis, but he would die in Florence the following spring, at just 49 years of age.  After the Civil War, Ellen was miraculously able to figure out where her mother was in Georgia and have her brought over to England to stay with them.  They hadn’t seen each other in almost twenty years, so you can only imagine the reunion.  In 1868, once slavery was abolished, citizenship was granted to African Americans, and the right to vote was granted to African American men, the Crafts felt like they had work to do.  Twenty years after they escaped from it, William and Ellen moved back to Georgia, back to where they began.  William and Ellen tried to establish a school for freedmen as well as a farm, but white supremacist violence and laws led to the failure of both after Reconstruction ended.

William and Ellen Craft spent their twilight years living in Charleston, South Carolina with their daughter and son-in-law.  Ellen Craft died in 1891, at the age of 65.  William Craft died in 1900, at the age of 75.


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9 months ago

Thursday, February 1.

Black History Month 2024.

Get ready to immerse yourself in a month-long celebration of Black joy, Black excellence, and Black art. Following the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's announcement that the theme for Black History Month 2024 is "African Americans and the Arts," we're thrilled to shine a spotlight on Black creators of all stripes right here on Tumblr.

Thursday, February 1.

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3 years ago
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In

Join us in a celebration of Black History Month as we highlight the Black authors whose books are in our Young Adult Collection! First up: Elizabeth Acevedo, Tomi Adeyemi, Kwame Alexander, Lisa Allen-Agostini, L. J. Alonge, Carol Anderson, Lily Anderson, K. Ancrum, and Dead Atta


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3 years ago
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In
Join Us In A Celebration Of Black History Month As We Highlight The Black Authors Whose Books Are In

Join us in a celebration of Black History Month as we highlight the Black authors whose books are in our Young Adult Collection! Part 2: Rena Barron, Kalynn Bayron, Black Enough Anthology, Tonya Bolden, Tanya Boteju, Roseanne A. Brown, Kacen Callender, Dhonielle Clayton, Brandy Colbert, Charlotte Nicole Davis, Dana L. Davis, Tanita S. Davis, Tracy Deonn, Alechia Dow, Sharon M. Draper, & Kimberly Drew


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3 years ago
Lets Celebrate Black Beauty On YA Covers.

Let’s celebrate black beauty on YA covers.

It’s Black History Month here in the United States, and what better time to celebrate black beauty? Let’s take a peek at some of the YA covers that feature their amazing black leads.

There still is a lot of work to be done in terms of inclusive YA - there’s not nearly enough black leads, and queer black leads, and disabled black leads, or any combination of them, and not nearly enough represented on covers. But for today, we can admire the beauty we’ve been given so far - and remind publishing that hey, these books are great, and representation is important. More, please! View the full post - with YA covers in all their glory! - on YA Interrobang.


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3 years ago

Anyways happy Black History Month!

Remember to support Black people! Not just famous black people, but Black people in your everyday life. Elevate their voices. Listen to them. Black men, women and nonbinary people. Lightskin and darkskin Black people. Disabled Black people, Black people with all sorts of conditions. LGBTQ+ and cishet Black people. Black people all over the world.

Not just February, but every day of every month, every year.


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3 years ago
Heres Some Fun Black History For You Guys!
Heres Some Fun Black History For You Guys!
Heres Some Fun Black History For You Guys!
Heres Some Fun Black History For You Guys!
Heres Some Fun Black History For You Guys!
Heres Some Fun Black History For You Guys!
Heres Some Fun Black History For You Guys!

here’s some fun black history for you guys!


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3 years ago

Happy Black History Month!

Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!
Happy Black History Month!

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3 years ago
Celebrate Black History Month With Tumblr!

Celebrate Black History Month with Tumblr!

Here's some of the songs we're vibin' to at Tumblr. Serving you jams from some of your faves, some new hits and some songs you forgot you loved — giving you Black Excellence from start to finish.

🎨: @everlastingrandom


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3 years ago
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Meet Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the black woman who invented that rock and roll sound 

You know what’s sad, before I even read this article I was ready to refute this because I grew up believing Chuck Berry created Rock and roll. It’s said how so many knew of this great woman yet none spoke on her greatness.

I also discovered Big Mama Thornton, who’s another hugely influential early inventor of rock and roll — I’m pretty sure Hound Dog was originally popularized by her, before Elvis stole it.

Love Sister Rosetta Tharpe! #BlackGirlMagic

A few of her performances:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JeaBNAXfHfQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9bX5mzdihs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SR2gR6SZC2M

Also I heard she was bisexual…

Happy Black History Month! 


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