Black Lightning

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Willa Beatrice Brown, one of a small group of pre-World War II black women aviators, was born in Glasgow, Kentucky on January 22, 1906. The daughter of Reverend and Mrs. Erice B. Brown, she graduated from Wiley High School in Terra Haute, Indiana. In 1927, Brown earned a Bachelor’s degree from Indiana State Teachers College (now Indiana State University) and ten years later a Master’s degree in Business Administration from Northwestern University.
After briefly teaching at Roosevelt High School in Gary, Indiana, she moved to Chicago, Illinois to become a social worker. It was there, however, that she decided to learn how to fly. In 1934 Brown began her flight instruction under the direction of John Robinson and Cornelius Coffey. She also studied at the Curtiss Wright Aeronautical University and in 1935 earned a Masters Mechanic Certificate.

In 1937 Brown became the first African-American woman in the U.S. to earn a commercial pilot’s license. Two years later she married her former flight instructor, Cornelius Coffey, and they co-founded the Cornelius Coffey School of Aeronautics, the first black-owned and operated private flight training academy in the U.S.

In 1939, the Coffey school was awarded a contract by the Federal Government to train Americans to fly airplanes in case of a national emergency. Later that year, Brown became a co-founder of the National Airmen's Association of America. She also joined the Challenger Air Pilot’s Association, the Chicago Girls Flight Club, and purchased her own airplane all between 1939 and 1940.

By 1941, hundreds of men and women had trained under Brown, including many men who later became members of the famed Tuskegee Airmen. Brown was the director/coordinator of two Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) programs: one at the Harlem Airport and the other at Wendell Phillips High School in Chicago.

Brown achieved another distinction in 1941, when she became the first African-American officer in the U.S. Civil Air Patrol (CAP); she was commissioned a Lieutenant. The U.S. government also named her federal coordinator of the CAP Chicago unit. In 1943, Brown earned her mechanic’s license, becoming the first woman in the United States to have both a mechanic’s license and a commercial pilot’s license.

In 1946, Brown, a Republican, also became the first African American woman to run for Congress. Although she lost to the Democrat incumbent, William Levi Dawson, she remained politically active. She supported various causes throughout her political career, including the racial and gender integration of the U.S. Army Air Corps.

In 1955, Brown, now 49, married Rev. J.H. Chappell, the minister of the West Side Community Church in Chicago. In 1972, in recognition of her contributions to aviation in the United States as a pilot, an instructor, and an activist, Ms. Brown-Chappell was appointed to the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) Women’s Advisory Board. Willa B. Brown-Chappell died on July 18, 1992 at the age of 86 in Chicago.

 

Black Lightning

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A lifelong Morristown resident, Clara Watson Pinkman (at right) trained as a nurse during World War II and worked at Community Hospital in Newark before finding a position at Lyons Veterans Administration Hospital where she worked from 1946 to 1960.

Born to William and Addie Watson in 1906, Clara grew up in the family’s Center Street home amidst a bustling but tight-knit community. Her father owned William Watson & Sons Rubbish Removal and was a respected businessman dedicated to supporting Morristown’s African American community.

Clara adopted her family’s sense of civic pride and contributed her free time to supporting a number of local organizations, including the Morris County Urban League, Union Baptist Church, Neighborhood House, Collinsville Civic and Improvement League, the Morris County NAACP, and in 1975 became the first black woman to head the Morris County American Legion Auxiliary. Clara Watson Pinkman’s dedication to family and community reflects a legacy passed down by generations of Morris County residents.
 

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On September 14, 2016, Carla Hayden became not only the first African American but also the first woman to be appointed Librarian of Congress (the 14th overall), overseeing the largest library in the world, with more than 164 million items on approximately 838 miles of bookshelves; the collections include more than 38 million books and other printed materials, 3.6 million recordings, 14 million photographs, 5.5 million maps, 8.1 million pieces of sheet music, and 70 million manuscripts—all now under her purview.
 

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Frances E. Harper, African american abolitionist, suffragist, poet, author, teacher and activist. Frances was born free in Baltimore, Her first work was published when she was 20 ad she went on to write over 10 published works, in addition to being featured in countless periodicals, throughout her life. She was an avid activist fighting for causes from abolition to womens rights. In 1858 She refused to give up her seat or ride in the “colored” section of a segregated trolley car in Philadelphia (100 years before Rosa Parks)
 

Bawon Samedi

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Bawon Samedi

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@MoorMe @IllmaticDelta @Lewis Black @K.O.N.Y @ridedolo @Poitier @Elle Driver

I think its time we do similar to what Luken does with tagging all Jamaican posters but instead with AA posters so that we become more organized and more...
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@MoorMe tag as many AA posters in the OP. :demonic:


Lets get started...

@Ronnie Lott @BmoreGorilla @Black Lightning @videogamestashbox.com @BrothaZay @Black Barbie @The College Dropout @DarrynCobretti @Barnett @kayslay @Donovan Gumby
 

How Sway?

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On this day in Black history, we honor Dr. Ebony Jade Hilton. Dr. Hilton was born in the rural town of Little Africa, South Carolina and at the age of 8 years old, decided she wanted to be a doctor. From that day forward her mother called her, Dr. Hilton. She attributes her entire career and the success that followed to that small gesture. She graduated from Spartanburg High School in 2000 and in 2004, graduated Magna Cum Laude from The College of Charleston as a triple major with degrees in Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Inorganic Chemistry. She then began her medical studies at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) and following graduation in 2008, continued at MUSC to complete of her Anesthesiology residency and Critical Care fellowship. On July 1, 2013, Dr. Hilton became the first African-American female anesthesiologist to be hired at MUSC since its opening in 1824. Throughout her studies health disparities and bridging the gap between physicians and patients has been her primary focus. Dr. Hilton is also an activist for social change and a mentor in her community.


:salute:
#doctorbae :noah::whew::obama:
 
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