• Home
    • Sketchbook
  • Blog
  • About Me
  • Contact
Menu

friendscallmep

  • Home
  • Personal Works
    • Sketchbook
  • Blog
  • About Me
  • Contact

P’S BLOG


Subscribe

Sign up with your email address to receive news and updates.

We respect your privacy.

Thank you!

Black History 365 | # 103 Hattie McDaniel

June 16, 2024

This is Hattie McDaniel, she is the first black actress to win an Oscar. It was for her role as Mammy in Gone With The Wind. She was not allowed to attend the ceremony. Yikes. When she died she requested to be buried in Hollywood Cemetery she was denied due to the graveyard restrictions of being whites-only at the time. Yikes-Yikes.

Tags Black History 365
Comment

Black History 365 | # 102 George Washington's Teeth (Fact or Fiction)

June 16, 2024

Did you know George Washington’s teeth started to rot and fall out before he was 30 years old? We were taught that he had wooden teeth. That is incorrect and we were misinformed. George Washington had the teeth of slaves in his mouth. Sources now conclude that George Washington’s wooden teeth was a myth, and that he PROBABLY had animal teeth and maybe some human teeth in there. What do you think is true?

Tags Black History 365
Comment

Black History 365 | #74 Raymond Lee Washington

June 8, 2024

This is Raymond Lee Washington, best known as the founder of The Crips. Washington was born August 14, 1953 in Los Angeles to Violet Samuel and Reginald Washington. He had three older brothers from his mother’s first marriage and one younger half-brother from his mother’s second marriage. Growing up in Los Angeles in the 1950s Washington came to be known for getting into fights. His penchant for fighting led to his being routinely expelled from school for fighting and later being sent to Juvenile Detention Camps. In the late 1960s, Washington, now a teenager, admired the Black Panthers and their attempt to bring social change through their militant positions. Washington sought to emulate these tactics, eventually joining the Avenues street gang led by Craig Munson. However, Washington got in a fight with Munson’s brother, and afterwards decided to leave the gang to start his own group known as the Baby Avenues. The youthful aspect of the gang’s membership then led to their adopting the name the Avenue Cribs, which finally became the Crips. On August 9, 1979 Washington was shot by an unknown assailant in a drive-by shooting in LA. Though he was taken to a nearby hospital, the gunshot proved fatal. He died five days before his 26th birthday.  Washington’ death marked the end of the unification of the Crips as the various branches began fighting one another and also the end of hand to hand combat, disputes began to be held with guns.

Tags Black History 365
Comment

Black History 365 | # 76 Stanley "Tookie" Williams

June 7, 2024

This is Stanley Tookie Williams III, best known as the founder of The Crips. Williams and his mother moved to Los Angeles, California in 1959.  Williams spent his early-middle adolescence wandering the streets fighting, and ended up making a name for himself doing just that. He did not attend school and instead engaged in petty theft and occasional robbery.  Eventually meeting Raymond Washington who had a similar lifestyle, the teenagers started the crips. It eventually evolved into one of the largest street gangs in California.

Tags Black History 365
Comment

Black History 365 | # 92 Carter G. Woodson

June 6, 2024

We’ve reached the end of Black History Month! Did you know this is the person responsible for Black History Month? In February 1926, Carter G Woodson sent out a press release announcing the first Negro History Week. As early as the 1940s, efforts began to expand the week of public celebration of African American heritage and achievements into a longer event. With the rise of the civil rights and Black Power movements in the 1960s, black students on college campuses were becoming increasingly conscious of the historic dimension of their experience. Since then, every U.S. president has issued a proclamation honoring the spirit of Black History Month. From Gerald Ford to Obama. Reagan even said “Understanding the history of Black Americans is a key to understanding the strength of our nation.” Your existence is revolutionary. And everyday is a chance to make our ancestors proud. Keep making history.

Tags Black History 365
Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Latest Posts

Featured
May 17, 2025
Black History 365 | # 226 The Dark History of Gynecology
May 17, 2025
May 17, 2025
May 14, 2025
Black History 365 | # 225 Rodney Hinton Jr.
May 14, 2025
May 14, 2025
May 13, 2025
Black History 365 | # 224 Constance "Connie" Enola Morgan
May 13, 2025
May 13, 2025
May 13, 2025
Black History 365 | # 223 Mamie "Peanut" Johnson
May 13, 2025
May 13, 2025
May 11, 2025
Black History 365 | # 222 Toni Stone
May 11, 2025
May 11, 2025
May 10, 2025
Black History 365 | # 221 Dr. Chester M. Pierce
May 10, 2025
May 10, 2025
May 9, 2025
Black History 365 | # 220 Kara Walker
May 9, 2025
May 9, 2025
May 8, 2025
Black History 365 | # 219 Victor Murphy
May 8, 2025
May 8, 2025
May 7, 2025
Black History 365 | # 218 How Blade Saved Marvel
May 7, 2025
May 7, 2025
May 6, 2025
Black History 365 | 217 Amiri Baraka
May 6, 2025
May 6, 2025