Home

January

FEBRUARY

BLACK_HISTORY

MAS Newsletter

Tournament Trail

WINSTON-SALEM "B"

WBU~CHERRY BLOSSOM

MAS @NY's A-A-A

Winners of Tournaments

Durham "B"

Queen City "A"

MAS Sectional

Tidewater "A"

Our History

MAS Past Vice Presidents

MAS Life Members

MAS Officers

The Veep Speaks

Director's News

MAS in the NEWS

COMM/NATL REPRESENTATIVES

INTERESTING EMAIL

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Bridge Tips

AROUND THE MAS

MAS Clubs & Units

CLUB ROSTERS

Maryland

North Carolina

South Carolina

Virginia

Wash, DC

CLUB NEWS

College View Bridge Club

Bridge Masters

Our Sick & Shut-Ins

Final Grand Slammers

Frances L Powell

Roseann Elliott

Our Photo Album

MASOctPix08

Herb's MAS S Album

Bridge Links

Contact Us

Visitors' Feedback

THE MID-ATLANTIC SECTION

AMERICAN BRIDGE ASSOCIATION, INC

THIS IS BLACK HISTORY MONTH


Black Women in American Culture and History

The 2012 Annual Black History Theme

From the American Revolution to the present, African American women have played a myriad of critical roles in the making of our nation. Their labor and leadership, their motherhood and patriotism, and their intellect and artistic expression have all enriched both the African American community and the nation at large. In slavery and freedom, their struggles have been at the heart of the human experience, and their triumphs over racism and sexism are a testimonial to

our common human spirit.

In American culture today, many know of the accomplishments of a few prominent figures. From Phillis Wheatley, the unlikely American patriot during the Revolutionary War, to Harriet Tubman, the leader of the Underground Railroad from slavery, to Ida B. Wells, the unyielding opponent of lynching, to Rosa Parks, the mother of the modern Civil Rights Movement, black women have been notable for standing against oppression. From Gwendolyn Brooks to Toni Morrison to Rita Dove, they have distinguished themselves in American letters, and in recent years they have been recognized as actors and recording artists with Academy Awards and Grammys.

The accomplishments of these exceptional women are the expressions of a vibrant culture in which African American women play a singular role. The labors, struggles, organization, and sacrifices of common women have made possible the prominence of heralded individuals. In churches, community groups, literary societies, sororities, and advocacy organizations, African American women have been the core of organized black life, but here their strivings have often escaped the gaze of the public and hence their history is too little known.

Their story is unique in the annals of American history. Black women were held as slaves and middle-class black women labored while their counterparts were housewives. Subjected to a long history of stereotypes about their sexuality, morality, spirituality, and intellect, African American women have never succumbed to victimhood and have pressed forward to uplift themselves, their families, and their community.

To gain an understanding of the history of African American women is to broaden our understanding of a people and the American nation. The Association for the Study of African American Life and History dedicates the 2012

Annual Black History Theme to exploring African American women’s roles in and contributions to the making of America.

Carter G. Woodson's Home is a National
Historic Site!

 

ASALH will partner with the National Park Service and Omega Psi Phi Fraternity to host the
136th commemoration of the Dr. Woodson's birthday. The event will be held on December 19,
2011 at Shiloh Baptist Church, 1510 9th Street, Northwest, Washington, DC from 6:00pm-
8:00pm.


The Mid Atlantic Section is the birthplace of the ABA.