Page 4 ~~~~ B la c k H M onth m m m m . “ >for Empress of the Blues ■ f In 1903, on the streets ot _ i, Chattanooga, Tennessee, you could , „ c l - / l i hear Bessie Smith sing for nickels and dimes. Twenty years later, you could hear her everywhere. On February 15, 1923 - after failing several auditions, including one for the b lack -o w n ed B lack Sw an Records - the self described “tall and fat and scared to death” singer made her first recordings. With “Down Hearted Blues” by Alberta Hunter on the A side and “G ulf Coast Blues” on the B, she was a hit, and Columbia Records was soon known as the house that Bessie built! I f e v e r an A frican A m erican a rtis t w as c a lle d “untrained,” it was Bessie Smith. She honed her craft before listeners with little cash and less patience for anything but the real thing - their blues, their truths. By the time her record hit, not only was she “ready,” she had built a small following o f fans who knew her name. Bessie Sm ith’s records soon sold 100,000 copies per week, making her the highest paid black perform erofher day. No wonder she was called the “Empress of the Blues.” F for Father of Baseball By C i . a h ) A nderson . E d .D, ®lje F ortiani» ©bsseruer Focus February 9, 2000 b a s e b a ll,” and his N ational A sso c ia tio n o f P ro fessio n al Baseball Clans became known as the Negro National League. As the first president of the league, Foster provided Black players a place to play and investors with financial opportunities. The Negro National League initially included such teams as the Kansas City Monarchs, the Indianapolis ABC’s, the Chicago American Giants, The Detroit Stars, i ,1,. w «.».»m the St. Louis Stars, and the Westem An Cuban All-Stars, five-year jail terms to anyone caught reading it - and in Dahomey, the sentence was life! Still Garvey flourished, with an estimated six million active followers. for Hollywood fiy J am s A bams caustically, “I ’d rather get paid $ 1,500 a week to play a maid, than $15 a week to be one.” Such were the options o f the day. 1 for Islam Bv S chomblrc C enter Science Tem ple o f A merica in Baltimore, arguing that African Americans were in fact Moors from Morocco who had been stripped o f their identity (and religion) by whites. Following A li’s death, his teachings were expanded by one of his fo llo w e rs, W a lla c e Fard M uham m ad m y ste rio u sly disappeared, the movement was headed by Elijah Muhammad, who eventually moved its headquarters to Chicago. As the Nation o f Islam was growing, other African Americans were drawn to Islam through the M uslim M ission o f A m erica, established in 1920 by Sheikh D a a ’w ud F aisal, a B erm udan immigrant to New York. Still others jo in e d g roups o f A hm adiyya Muslims, inspired by immigrants from East Asia entering North America via West Africa. Islam was first introduced On December 15, 1939, to North A m erica by enslaved as a full regiment o f media troops Africans from Muslim regions of storm ed A tlanta for the film West Africa, though there is no premiere o f Margaret Mitchell’s indication that their beliefs were book, dear ole Dixie might have perpetuated into the succeeding been Gone With the Wind, but its generation o f African Americans. forGarveyism dear ole Mammy was here to stay. T he re lig io n did not have a Her myth, for years so carefully significant impact on the African fantasized, was now more real than By J a m s A dams American community until the early In the 1920s, with a proud plan for ever. There, in Technicolor, was 20,h century. African uplift, a fanciful plumed hertoo-beautiful portrayal by Hattie In 1913, Noble Drew Ali commodore hat, uniformed parades McDaniel. Significantly, McDaniel ( 1886-1929) founded the Moorish ofthe men and women ofhis African was ra c ia lly barred from the nation-in-the-making, and himself premiere but broke the blackout on as its provisional president, Marcus Academy Awards night in 1940, winning an Oscar Garvey had seized the imagination for the role, the first ever o f the Pan-African world. Raised aw ard ed an A fric a n and educated in Jamaica, he had American. gone o f to see the world. He returned O ther attempts home from his youthful travels in Europe and the Americas matured to enshrine Mammy had - d isg u ste d w ith racism and been made over the years. determined to end it. In 1914, with In 1912, a sta tu e to on the superior skills as an orator and an M am m y organizer, he founded the Universal Washington, D.C., Mall Negro Improvement Association. was proposed. And as C a th e rin e Within five years, his empowerment h isto ria n philosophy spread throughout the Clinton has written, “Most United States. In 1920, in New treacherous o f all, for over 100 years she has haunted Y ork’s Madison Square Garden, his first convention attracted over kitchen shelves; even with Come and experience Portland's premiere Hot Tubbing By-The-Hour 25,000 people. Challenging the the handkerchief removed We feature private Hot Tubs complete with shower, towels, and music from her head after a crowd to rid itself o f the shackles o f 80lh « Stark • 256-4TAN 1980s update, we still colonialism and segregation, he issued the call: “Up you mighty recognize this pernicious Tanning incarnation grinning down race, you may be what you will.” Tubbing G arv ey w as in d u strio u s. So at us - Aunt Jemima.” Hair Care A ssessing her su c c e ssfu l w as his w eek ly Massage film h isto ry , newspaper. The Negro World, that ow n said colonial governments meted out M cD aniel In 1920, Andrew “Rube” Foster brought the various Black baseball teams together into an association similar to the white leagues. Rube Foster had been involved in every a sp e c t o f th e g am e, beginning when he was a small boy. He had little formal education. When he was old enough, he quit e le m e n ta ry sch o o l and b e c a m e a p ro fe ssio n a l baseball player. Fostersoon learned that he was a better organizer and businessman than he was a professional baseball player. His greatest Marcus Garvey was the drivingforce behind the back-to-A frica movement achievement came when he and proposed to resettle A frican Americans in Liberia: To this end, his organized Black baseball organization purchased three ships and created the Black Star Line. leagues for all the aspiring When funds from subscribers vanished and the Black Star Line collapsed, young baseball players and the blame fell on Garvey. Though many people believed he was framed. fans. Garvey was convicted o f mail fraud in 1925 and served two years in He became known as “the father o f Black ORTLAN' TUB & IAN SAVE 25% Off