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Joshua Williams standing |
Welcome to Preserving Our History in Tangipahoa and St. Helena Parishes, Louisiana. "Our History, Our Story, Our Legacy!" Dr. Antoinette Harrell is a native of Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana. She is a genealogist and local historian with a broad emphasis of African Americans in the Louisiana Florida Parishes.
Showing posts with label African American Heritage Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African American Heritage Museum. Show all posts
Friday, September 11, 2015
Joshua Williams of Amite, Louisiana
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Press Conference Held to Commemorate the 50th Anniversary of the M.C. Moore Deseg Case
Press Conference at the African American Heritage Museum Photo Credit: Antoinette Harrell |
The press conference was held at the African American Heritage Museum in Hammond, La., Several of the late M.C. Moore and Willie Mae Moore daughters was in attendance; Joyce, Katherine, Betty and Jeanette. Two son-in-laws, Charles Terry and Henry Jackson talked about the legacy their father-in-law left.
Joyce couldn't hold back her emotions as she talked about how hard it was for her. "When people asked me if I was the same Joyce associated with the case, I told them no it wasn't me," said Joyce.
Henry Jackson recalled standing guard with other African American men all night with guns to protect the Moore family after the Moore home was shot at in 1965.
Osa Bett Williams candidate for State Representative District #72 of Hammond recalled marching when A.Z. Young came through Hammond, LA.
Pat Morris of the president of the Tangipahoa Parish spoke about the opposition she faced from both blacks and whites in Tangipahoa Parish. The case was reopened in 2007 at the urging of the Greater Tangipahoa Parish Branch NAACP because of numerous complaints of the school system's wronging of African-American children and African American employees.
Monday, December 29, 2014
Who is the Unnamed Slave Boy in Tangipahoa Parish, Louisiana?
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Photo Credit: Dr. Charles Smith |
Under a oak tree in Hammond, Louisiana., you can find the gravesites of Peter Hammond, his wife, three daughters, and the grave of a little boy who was his slave. No one has ever mentioned the little boy by name. He is referred to as the favorite "slave boy."
Hammond, Louisiana is located in Tangipahoa Parish. The city of Hammond is named for Peter Hammond-(Peter of Hammerdal)- a Swedish immigrant who first settled the area around 1818.
In the Hammond Graveyard; The Hammond Vindicator, Hammond, Louisiana, Nov 5, 1977. They counted eight graves, nine if they counted the one, unmarked, of a little negro, a pet of Peter Hammond, who he buried there in the early sixties.
The article also mentioned that the spot became a favorite one with Hammond and when a dedicated slave child died, his especial pet, he buried it there. The first grave in the Hammond Graveyard, a striking expression of a Southerner's love for his slaves.
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Photo Credit: Dr. Charles Smith |
Dr. Charles Smith was shocked and outraged by the anonymity of "favorite slave boy," Dr. Smith
contacted local officials and researched the library for clues to the identity of the unidentified child slave to no avail. He realized that Hammond, Louisiana., would be just the place to begin his second African-American Heritage Museum and Black Veterans Archives, where he educated today's generations of black youth who seem uninterested.
I know that I can say not only should we educate the youth, but adults in the area also need to be educated as well about their local history and the history of their ancestors as it relates to the area in which they live. As a genealogist and family historian, I'm committed to researching any information I can find on this little boy to give him his name if I can find it. My heart aches as I write and publish this article. He wasn't a pet, he was a human being.
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A very special and warmed hearted thank you, Dr. Charles Smith, for caring enough to do something in remembrance of the child who was a slave. There are many unmarked graves that hold our enslaved ancestors in the parishes of Tangipahoa and St. Helena, La., Today, a candle in remembrance of all of them. But especially for the little boy who is buried in Hammond, LA.
For those of you that will celebrate NewYears Eve 2014, can you at least stop to think about what January 1, 1863, meant to your enslaved ancestors? If it wasn't for them where would you be today? Because we chose to forget our history, past, and present this is why so many unjust situations are repeating itself again.
Light a candle in remembrance of those who died as slaves. Light a candle in remembrance of those who died fighting for freedom. Your freedom was given to you, there was much bloodshed for a little taste of freedom. To say the least I'll call him "Freedom Child."
For further reading please visit the following sites:
https://www.princeton.edu/~achaney/tmve/wiki100k/docs/Hammond,_Louisiana.html
http://www.detourart.com/dr-charles-smith2/
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