Did you know Sesame Street was originally created for black and brown inner city kids?
A THREAD
Children usually spend a lot of time watching a lot tv and technically it was sort of a babysitter. It was even worse for inner city children whose parents spent endless hours at work, thus their kids were usually exposed to long hours of mindless programs.
Lloyd Morrisett, regarded as the father of Sesame Street and vice-president of the Carnegie Corporation with a Ph.D. in experimental psychology from Yale University developed
a special interest in children's education.
Through a research, they found that inner city children were behind by months to middle class children in kindergarten & the gap grew wider advanced through later grades.
Lloyd Morrisett partnered with Joan Ganz Cooney, an activist and producer at the time. They thought it was possible to teach young children through television. Joan did a feasibility study titled ‘The Potential Uses of Television in Preschool Education’
This study was used to convince
the Department of Education, The Carnegie Corporation, The Ford Foundation and private
donors to give $8 million to establish the Children's Television Workshop (now the Sesame Workshop)
Joan reached out to to a writer & TV producer named Jon Stone, a Yale University graduate experienced in children's television. He shared her passion for social activism and agreed to do the show because of its specific focus on educating black and brown children.
Jon came up with the idea to create a set that mimicked an inner city, New York neighborhood. He even named the show "Sesame Street."
Sesame was really black, from the jive talk to the soul and funk music to the set and cast.
The integrated and diverse nature of the show didn't get past Southern stations. They even removed Sesame Street from its airwaves for a time
because of complaints from parents.
A state commission in Mississippi refused to air the show because of the integrated cast. The main characters, Gordon and Susan, were black as well as their adopted son. After their refusal became national news Mississippi reversed their decision.
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On this day in 1862, congress allowed the enlistment of African Americans into the U.S. military. Those who served and loved the country that did not love them back.
Military History of African Americans.
A THREAD
Black Americans participated in every American war from the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican–American War, the Civil War, the Spanish–American War, World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the War in Afghanistan, and the Iraq War.
Thousands of black troops, made up of both free men and enslaved, fought in the continental war. They were promised freedom for fighting but those promises were often broken.
55 years ago today, The Newark Rebellion began, sparked by display of police brutality.
THREAD
What sparked the event ?
This unrest came to a head when two white Newark policemen, arrested a black cabdriver, John W Smith, for improperly passing them on 15th Avenue.
He was taken to the 4th Police Precinct,across the street from Hayes Homes, a large public housing project.
Residents of Hayes Homes saw an incapacitated Smith being dragged into the precinct & a rumor was started that he had been killed while in police custody. (Smith had been moved to a local hospital.) The crowds in outrage began to destroy property.
On July 9, 1868, the 14th Amendment to the Constitution was adopted, recognizing newly freed slaves as U.S. Citizens.
THREAD
The Amendment has 3 clauses:
-the Citizenship Clause
-the Due Process Clause
-the Equal Protection Clause
The Citizenship Clause overruled the previous Dred Scott v Sandford Supreme Court ruling which stated that African Americans could not be citizens of the United States.
On this day in 1944, Lieutenant Jackie Robinson boarded an Army bus and refused to sit at the back of the bus because of his race.
This led to a court martial & he was prohibited from being deployed overseas, thus he never saw combat action.
THREAD
While waiting for hospital test results on the ankle he had injured in junior college, Robinson boarded an Army bus.
Although the Army had commissioned its own unsegregated bus line, the bus driver ordered Robinson to move to the back of the bus. Robinson refused.
The driver backed down, but after reaching the end of the line, summoned the military police, who took Robinson into custody.
When Robinson later confronted the investigating duty officer about racist questioning by the officer, the officer recommended he be court-martialed.
Happy Birthday to the late Patrice Lumumba, first legally elected prime minister of D.R Congo.
He was assassinated in 1961 following a military coup supported by U.S.A & Belgian imperialism which was admitted by US State Dept in 2013 authorized by president Eisenhower.
THREAD
For 126 years, the US and Belgium have played key roles in shaping Congo's destiny. In April 1884, seven months before the Berlin Congress, the US became the first country in the world to recognise the claims of King Leopold II of the Belgians to the territories of the Congo.
In the few months prior to his assassination, Lumumba had been the first elected prime minister of the Republic of the Congo, newly founded on June 30, 1960.
A revolutionary nationalist, he was a major leader in the country’s fight for independence from Belgian colonialism.