M arch 1, 1995 • T he P ortland O bserver P age B8 BLACK HISTORY — MW All Blood Runs Red African American Museum Needs Objects The Museum o f African Amer­ ican History in Detroit is expanding and in 1996 will be the largest black historical museum in the world. The museum is currently seek­ ing objects for the new m useum 's permanent exhibition which will trace all aspects o f the Diaspora: The African experience, enslave­ ment, freedom m igration, black pride, and the African American experience as it exists today. O bjects needed include: Human cargo lists, slave shackles and tags, African art, information on the un­ derground railroad, news articles on escaped slaves to memorabi I ta o f the civil rights movement The new museum will be four times the size o f the current facility and will be on the cutting edge o f modem technology. “Our goal is to not only be the largest black cultural and historical center, but to also be the best,” said Kimberly Camp, executive direc­ tor. “ People keep a lot o f history and culture in their attics, we would like to expose everyone to it.” For a complete listing o f need­ ed articles or for more information, contact Emanuel Cooper, curator o f exhibitions at 313-833-9800. Above: Between the wars Bullard had several jobs, including managing a nightclub called Le Grand-Due, where he made himself at home. Right: His great-grandson stands with a 1986 portrait commissioned for a dormitory named in Bullard's honor at Gunter Air Force Base in Alabama. Continued from B ▲ there through the clogged roads He reached the city on June 15, went immediately to the temporary barracks o f the 51 st, and asked for the commanding officer. To Bullard's astonishment this turned out to be Maj. Roger Bader, an old comrade from the 170th whom he had last seen at Verdun a quarter century earlier. Bader assigned Bullard to a machine-gun company that made a stand on the banks o f the Loire and checked the Germans until heavy artillery could be brought up. The Bullard’s unit retreated to the nearby town o f LeBlanc, which was already under German shell fire. While run­ ning across the street carry ing a light machine gun, Bullard was struck by shrapnel and thrown into a wall, dam­ aging his spine. Same shell killed eleven o f his comrades and wounded sixteen other. With the unit in danger o f being captured, Bader gave Bullard a safe- conduct pass and told him to get away: The Germans would surely execute a black foreigner who had fought against them in two wars. Bullard made for Biarritz, on the Spanish border. He arrived there in the middle o f the night o f June 22 and immediately joined the line that already formed at the consulate. Consul G eneral M cW illiam s told Bullard to shed his telltale uni­ form, and other Americans waiting to see Me W illaims gave him clothes. One smalI boy asked his father, “ Dad­ World War II welders construct the liberty ship SS George Washington Carver. (From Black Women in American: An Historical Encyclopedia) Sisters In Historic Schools Case To Speak Two sisters who were school children during the historic Brown vs. Board o f Education case will speak next week at Oregon State University as part o f Black History Month. Linda Brown Thompson and C heryl Brow n H enderson will chronicle the history o f their fami­ ly’s court battle, its impact on edu­ cation and the civil rights m ove­ ment. They also plan to talk about the principles o f diversity and open- mindedness in anon-confrontational forum. T he sessio n is free and w ill tak e p lace T u esd ay at 7 p.m . at the O SU M em orial U nion Lounge in C o r v a llis , 2 6 th S tre e t and Je ffe rso n W ay. Thompson and Henderson were thrust into the national spotlight in 1950 when their father - Topeka, Kan. minister Oliver Brown - thought it was unjust that his 7-year-old daughter Linda traveled across town to school rather than attend an ele­ mentary school four blocks away just because her skin was black. A May 17, 1954, decision by the Supreme Court o f the United States against the Board o f Educa­ tion o f Topeka, Kan. held that sep­ arate but equal is unjust and uncon­ stitutional. The sisters have established the Brown Foundation for Educational Equity, Excellence and Research, which supports education improve­ ment efforts throughout the United States. From President William J. Clinton Warm greetings to everyone celebrating African American History Month, 1995. Hillary' and I join you in mark­ ing the brave efforts o f the countless Americans throughout our nation's history who have demandedjustice, declared an end to segregation, and fought to ensure that every individ­ ual has the opportunity to build a brighter future fo r themselves and their families. Today, there is a renewed sense o f hope in America — a hope based on the idea that our great diversity can unite rather than divide our society. It is the same hope that has inspired African Americans since our country’s beginnings to dream o f a nation in which all people enjoy the freedom to make their own last­ ing contributions to our world. If we are truly to build on history' ’s rich lessons, we must always remember these p io n eers’ pivotal roles in American history. Ours can be u land o f unprece­ dented peace and prosperity in the twenty-first century if we have the fuith that Martin Luther King de- scribed, the faith to “transform the jangling discords o f our nation into a beautiful symphony o f brother­ hood. ” He must never cease striv­ ing to bring people together across racial and cultural barriers. This is our generation's most solemn call­ ing and most important challenge. I urge everyone, during A f­ rican am erican H istory Month and throu gh out the yea r, to take up this ch allen ge an d to learn m ore about the black A m ericans who h ave m ade th is co u n try great. dy, can 1 gave the nigger my beret?” Bullard made his way safely to Lisbon and sailed for New York, where he arrived at the end o f July 1940. He had not seen his native land in almost three decades. Immediately upon arriving he was rudely reminded that America had hardly changed The New York commandant o f the American Le­ gion post obtained hotel rooms for all American soldiers on the ship except Bullard: ' 3ullard, 1 haven’t got any reservation for you. I didn’t know you were with the group.” He got some cheap rooms in Harlem and found odd jobs there. Within a year his daughters were able to join him. His back injury made many jobs im­ possible, but he found work travel­ ing about New York state selling perfume. Between 19 4 7 and 1954 Bullard returned to France several times, seeking compensation for the loss o f his property . He finally received some in 1954-not very much but enough to help him settle into a small Harlem apartment. His last job was as an elevator operator in the RCA Build­ ing. In this capacity he met Dave Garroway and became a guest on “The Today Show.” America never honored its na­ tive son, but France never cased to. In 1954 the French government chose Bullard to be one o f the men to relight the eternal flame over the grave o f the unknown soldier at the Arc de Triomphe. In 1959 he was made a chevalier in the Legion of Honor, and when President Charles de Gaulle visited New York the next year, Bullard was invited to the re­ ception. He attended in his legion­ naire uniform. As the meeting was ending, de G aulle came over to Bullard and hugged him. And the year after that, as Bullard lay dying, French military officials frequently brought gifts and greetings to his bedside in the Metropolitan Hospi­ tal. Bullard died a few days after his sixty-seventh birthday. The French military conducted honorary servic­ es, and he was buried according to his instructions in a French legion­ naire uniform, in grave no. 7, section C, plot 53 o f the Federation o f French war Veterans Cemetery in Flushing, New York. When he was awarded the Le­ gion o f Honor, Bullard had tried to explain his feelings about his two countries: “The United States is my mother and I love my mother, but as far as France is concerned, she is my mistress and you love your mistress more than you love your mother-but in a different way.” T h ro u g h o u t his painful days in M etropolitan H ospital, Eugene B ullard had k ep t his spirits up like the fig h te r he w as. W hen he began g a sp in g in his final m o­ m ents, a co m p an io n sittin g w ith him rose to get a d o cto r. K now ­ ing it w as p o in tle s s , B u lla rd grab b ed her hand and stopped her. Then he spoke his last w ords: “ I t’s b eau tifu l o v e r th e re .” Frederick Douglass: W hen The Lion Wrote History WETA, Washington, D C. and ROJA Productions created the first com prehensive film biography o f Frederick Douglass, former slave, renowned orator, fiery abolitionist, newspaper journalist and publisher, diplomat and outspoken advocate o f voting rights for women. Frederick Douglass: When The Lion Wrote History - produced and director by veteran filmmaker O r­ lando Bagwell (Malcom X: Make It Plain. Eyes On the Prize) - is a 90 minute documentary which aired last fall on public broadcasting stations. V ideotape copies can be obtained by calling 1-800-328-4127. The film combines archival pho­ tos and images, interviews with schol­ ars and other expects and live-action cinematography o f locations from Douglass' life Sitescovered include Baltimore, Md; New Bedford. Mass Rochester, N.Y., Nantucket Island, Mass., the antebellum Wye House Plantation on M aryland's eastern shore, and Douglass’ last home, Cedar Hill in W ashington. D C. Douglass was one o f the few men present at the first w om en's rights convention in America and had a special relationship with many o f the women in the suffrage move­ ment. In 1881, P re sid e n t Jam es G arfield appointed Douglass the Recorder o f Deeds for the District o f Columbia. He was appointed Minis­ ter Resident and Consul General to Haiti by President Benjamin Harrison on July 1, 1889 He died o f a heart attack on Feb. 20, 1895, after attending a session o f the National Council o f Women. A period o f national mourning was de­ clared and he was buried at Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester Frederick Douglass, a former slave who became an outspoken, eloquent advocate for the equality for African Americans, with friends in Haiti during Douglass' tenure as U S. ambassador. Frederick Douglass A n n iv e r s a ry i n mu tiili i of (The ^ .I n r t l a n b ( O b s e r v e r ~~ '