HARLEM HAPPENINGS

White Houses Past – The Underside of the Welcome Mat

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment


White Houses Past

The Underside of the Welcome Mat

By GARDINER HARRIS

WASHINGTON — Within days of his inauguration, as Barack Obama and his family begin to feel at home in the White House, Malia and Sasha will perhaps be scampering about the mansion’s staircases, bedrooms and formal public rooms.

As appealing as the prospect of that scene is, it is also a poignant reminder of how long it took for African-Americans to feel they had an equal place in that home.

In a pre-election conference call, Mr. Obama referred to the powerful symbolism of his daughters playing on the South Lawn of the White House, a building built with slave labor. And John McCain, in his concession speech Tuesday night, alluded to a private dinner that Theodore Roosevelt had with Booker T. Washington in 1901 that set off a poisonous controversy.

Responding to that dinner at the time, The Memphis Scimitar called it “the most damnable outrage which has ever been perpetrated by any citizen of the United States.” A former Democratic president, Grover Cleveland, wrote a letter to the House of Representatives, read on the floor in the election year of 1904, declaring that he had never done such a thing as invite a black man to dinner in that house.

John Stauffer, author of “Giants: The Parallel Lives of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln,” observed, “The racial history of the White House is a wonderful symbol of the racial history of the nation as a whole.”

The house itself was built by crews of black laborers — both slave and free. In 1801, a year after it opened, Thomas Jefferson brought nearly a dozen slaves from Monticello, and slaves would constitute much of the house’s staff until the death in 1850 of Zachary Taylor, the last slaveholder to be president.

Many lived in the servants’ quarters on the first floor, but some slept on the first family’s second floor — an intimacy that was a frequent source of tensions with non-slave servants.

The most prominent black caller to the White House in its first century was Frederick Douglass. He came three times while Lincoln was president, and his last visit was perhaps his most important. The White House had been thrown open to the public to celebrate the president’s second inaugural, but the guards turned Douglass away — apparently on standing orders that blacks were not to be allowed in. Douglass sent in his card, and Lincoln ordered him admitted.

The president asked Douglass how he had liked the speech, adding, “There is no man in the country whose opinion I value more than yours.”

“Mr. Lincoln,” Mr. Douglass answered, “that was a sacred effort.”

In those years, a black dresssmaker and former slave, Elizabeth Keckly, was Mary Todd Lincoln’s confidante. And in the next three decades, black singers, including the Fisk Jubilee Singers, Marie Selika Williams and Sissieretta Jones, entertained at the White House. But none of the singers were invited to stay for meals, a taboo that would last well into the next century.

Lou Hoover, the wife of Herbert Hoover, found that to be a problem in 1929, after Oscar De Priest became the first African-American elected to Congress since Reconstruction. She was admonished not to invite Mr. DePriest’s wife to her traditional tea for Congressional wives, so instead she arranged a separate tea party for Mrs. DePriest. But the event still drew a resolution of criticism from the Texas Legislature.

Eleanor Roosevelt, who was Theodore’s niece as well as Franklin’s wife, famously included African-Americans among her many guests at the White House, and she, too, was criticized — including when she invited Marian Anderson to follow her concert at the Lincoln Memorial in 1939 by singing at the White House before the king and queen of England.

The postwar wave of independence that swept the world changed Washington’s diplomatic scene. Black diplomats became regular guests at state dinners, and African heads of state were invited to sleep overnight. Still, most presidents reserved the White House guest rooms almost exclusively for family and close friends.

But African-Americans were gaining in political power — in Congress, in the cabinet, as aides — and starting in the 1970s became familiar figures in and near the Oval Office.

The first African-American guests invited to sleep in the White House are believed to have been Sammy Davis Jr. and his wife, Altovise, in 1973, by Richard Nixon. Mr. Davis was struck by the history. He later joked that he turned down the chance to sleep in the Lincoln bedroom in favor of the Queen’s room. “I thought to myself, now I don’t want [Lincoln] coming in here talking about, ‘I freed them, but I sure didn’t want them to sleep in my bed.’ ” (The singer Pearl Bailey, a friend of Betty Ford, also stayed overnight, after Nixon’s resignation.)

In the 1990’s, the Clintons, unique among modern first families, widened the circle of guests and political contributors who were invited to stay over, including a range of celebrities and politicians like Quincy Jones, Will Smith and his wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Willie Brown.

Still, there remains the enduring poignance of the not-so-distant past that was alluded to on election night — best expressed, perhaps, by an incident during Lyndon Johnson’s administration.

Bess Abell, who was Johnson’s White House social secretary, vividly remembers a state dinner at which Sarah Vaughan sang but, after dinner, disappeared.

“I found her in this office, which had been turned over to her as a dressing room, and she was sobbing,” Mrs. Abell said in an interview. “And I said, ‘Mrs. Vaughan, what’s wrong? What can I do?’ And she said, ‘There’s nothing wrong. This is the most wonderful day of my life. When I first came to Washington, I couldn’t get a hotel room, and tonight, I danced with the president.’ ”

Barclay Walsh contributed reporting.

courtesy of the: NYTIMES

Categories: GENERAL

Arts and Entertainment Calendar

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Categories: GENERAL

For Descendants of Black Settlers on Staten Island, a Dream Realized

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Sandy Ground – For Descendants of Black Settlers on Staten Island, a Dream Realized – NYTimes.com

Sandy Ground

On Visionary Soil, the Dream Turns Real

Andrew Henderson for The New York Times

“I see in Senator Obama what my ancestors saw,” said Julie Moody Lewis a descendant of free blacks. Ms. Lewis voted on Tuesday.

By DONNA LEE
Published: November 7, 2008

HISTORY seemed to be made at many places on Tuesday, among them the civil rights battleground of Selma, Ala., and Harlem, the spiritual capital of black America, to name just two.

Enlarge This Image

Sandy Ground, on the South Shore of Staten Island, is one of the oldest surviving communities established by free slaves in North America.

But for a sense that the past weighed especially heavily on the present, few locations could rival Sandy Ground in southwestern Staten Island, one of the nation’s oldest surviving communities established by free blacks and a place still inhabited by descendants of the original settlers.

Two such descendants — Julie Moody Lewis, 50, and her 15-year-old son, Shamel — arrived at Public School 31 in New Brighton on the North Shore at 4:30 a.m. on Election Day to be the first in line to vote. Ms. Lewis, who wore Obama buttons beneath her coat and was carrying a folding chair, huddled in a voting booth with her son to cast a ballot for Senator Barack Obama, helping to elect the first black president of the United States.

Ms. Lewis and her son represent the sixth and seventh generations of the Harris family, among Sandy Ground’s first settlers. The first known free African-American in the Sandy Ground region, John Jackson, bought land there in 1828, shortly after slavery was officially abolished in New York in 1827. Moses Harris, a free man from Manhattan, bought his first property in Sandy Ground in 1850.

By 1880, about 150 blacks lived in Sandy Ground, and nearly 200 in 1910. The community emerged as a center of political activity and social life for free blacks all along the Eastern Seaboard.

Before casting her ballot, Ms. Lewis had said she did not think she would live to help elect a black American president, a feat she saw as fueled by generations of black pioneers, among them her own ancestors.

“I see in Senator Obama what my ancestors saw when they set up a community where black people could live and be free,” said Ms. Lewis, who was laid off in May from her job as a consultant for the city’s Department of Design and Construction. “They had a vision for the country in that little place.”

Ms. Lewis’s mother, Sylvia Moody D’Alessandro, a 69-year-old retired health care administrator, expressed a similar sentiment. “Once Obama decided to run,” she said, “I saw his running as personally related to me.”

Mrs. D’Alessandro stood on the Mall in Washington the day in 1963 when the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech, and saw echoes of that moment in Tuesday’s victory.

“Obama, in fact, is a realization of that dream, so he’s standing on a lot of people’s shoulders,” Mrs. D’Alessandro said. “For people who were born here in chains, a person that is like them is running for president. In 400 years — that’s a major accomplishment.”

Both women are board members of the Sandy Ground Historical Society, which runs a museum devoted to preserving both Sandy Ground history and black history on Staten Island. The museum’s collection includes a bill of sale for a 14-year-old girl sold on the island and pictures of middle- and upper-middle-class African-Americans, which, Ms. Lewis said, show that some blacks were people of means.

The Harris family had bought land on Sandy Ground for farming, but the soil was not suitable to most crops. They turned to strawberries, which thrived.

The community began to decline when oysters in New York waters became tainted and the government banned commercial oyster harvesting by 1921. Ten families who trace their roots to the original settlers still live in Sandy Ground. Ms. Lewis and her mother moved from Sandy Ground to the North Shore after a 1963 fire on the South Shore destroyed their home and 14 others in Sandy Ground.

“Can you imagine what Moses Harris went through?” Ms. Lewis said. “The people who settled Sandy Ground, they had challenges, but they were resilient. They had a vision for this community. They knew when they had to bounce back, that they had to hold onto that vision. I believe Barack Obama feels that.”
More Articles in New York Region » A version of this article appeared in print on November 9, 2008, on page CY6 of the New York edition.

COURTESY OF THE: NYTIMES

Categories: GENERAL

A Veteran Pol Ruminates on Obama as a French Crew Drinks Champagne -

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment


November 9, 2008

Dispatches

In a Week Like No Other, a Voice of Experience

By JAKE MOONEY

THE itinerary that former Mayor David Dinkins was holding on Wednesday afternoon stretched to two single-spaced pages. His expression suggested he would rather be at its end, but a quick glance showed that he still had the better part of a page to go, and, as he put it with a weary chuckle, “miles to go before I sleep.”

The former mayor, 81, was sitting in a tiny back dressing room in a television studio across from the rail yards at 33rd Street and 10th Avenue. He had stopped by to appear on a popular French talk show, “Le Grand Journal,” which was in New York covering the American election live. This was the final broadcast, and Mr. Dinkins, who in 1989 was elected the city’s first black mayor, was on hand to lend perspective, some 15 hours after the nation had elected its first black president.

He had been up late the night before at a celebration on 125th Street, and had awoken early to make the first in a string of television appearances. In this one, some of the show’s humor may have been lost in translation: Minutes earlier, a bearded man wearing a yellow bandana had been heard singing, “Ohhhhhhh Ba-ma-ma-ma-ma,” and another had belted out “New York, New York” — in French.

As the crew broke down the set, Mr. Dinkins was asked what President-elect Obama might do after his historic election.

“Now you’ve got to go to work,” Mr. Dinkins said. First comes assembling a staff, he said, adding: “It’s true of any executive. No executive, mayor, governor, president can do everything, be everywhere, know everything.”

He was talking about the importance of being surrounded by trustworthy and capable people when his cellphone rang and he paused to check his voice mail. A technician, a New Yorker who had been unplugging wires just outside the dressing room door, leaned in and recalled that a few decades ago, Bobby Kennedy said we would have a black president in 40 years. “He was kind of a visionary, I suppose, right?” the man said.

“I rarely vote because I don’t think it makes a difference,” the technician added. “They’re all crooks, as far as I’m concerned. But I voted for Obama this time because — I don’t know. It seemed like a necessary thing.”

Mr. Dinkins, who is now a professor of public affairs at Columbia, was quick to point out that the challenges of being mayor — even of New York — did not compare to the demands on a president. Mr. Dinkins, who served one term, said he never considered a run for the nation’s top office. But on certain topics, like governing in a bad economy or facing harsh, racially tinged criticism, his experience can be instructive.

He never feared for his safety, he said, even when, for example, Louis Farrakhan said he did not deserve to live. As for the shaky economy Mr. Obama will inherit, “we shouldn’t feel bad for him,” Mr. Dinkins said. “We should acknowledge the difficulty of his task. But, like I did, he sought the job.”

After the interview, he stepped outside and into a waiting car. On the sidewalk, members of the French television crew were celebrating their last New York show with Champagne in plastic cups. Regis Rodat, who books the show’s guests, was finishing his; two empty bottles sat on the ground.

The French crew was headed back to Paris in five days. It was Mr. Rodat’s first time in New York, and now that his work was done, he was looking forward to having a look around

He wore a black cardigan over an Obama T-shirt that read, “Mr. November,” which he had bought at a celebration in Harlem the night before. His eyes widened as he thought of the election. “Unbelievable,” he said. “For all the world, I think.”

Courtesy of the: NYTIMES

Categories: GENERAL · HARLEM POLI-TRICKS

Miriam Makeba, Singer, Dies at 76

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment


Miriam Makeba, Singer, Dies at 76

Cesare Abbate/European Pressphoto Agency

Miriam Makeba performed in a concert on Sunday night in southern Italy shortly before she died early Monday.

By ALAN COWELL
Published: November 10, 2008

LONDON — Miriam Makeba, a South African singer whose voice stirred hopes of freedom among millions in her own country though her music was formally banned by the apartheid authorities she struggled against, died early Monday after performing at a concert in Italy. She was 76. CLICK HERE FOR MORE [NYT]

Categories: GENERAL · HARLEM NEWS

INDIAN ROAD CAFE

November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

 

Test Logo
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* Correction on Events *

* @ Indian Road Café *

* November 2008 *

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Dear Friends and Neighbors,

Here is a list of corrected events:

  • Pub trivia with Dr. Jordan on Thursday November 13th at 8:00 pm. Lots of great prizes including a pair of Broadway tickets.
  • Live music on Wednesday, November 12th @ 8:45pm the rock/jazz band Kenji Shinagawa

As Always visit our Event Calendar for Updated Events on our website (http://indianroadcafe.com/Calendar.html)

See You There!

    Indian Road Café & Market

    Contact Information

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    phone: 212-942-7451
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    Categories: EVENTS · GENERAL · UPPER MANHATTAN

    HARLEM JAZZ CRUISE TO THE CARIBBEAN

    November 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

    LUTHER GALES  INVITES YOU TO

     

     

    TRAVEL AND ENTERTAINMENT PRODUCTIONS’

     

     

    HARLEM JAZZ CRUISE TO THE CARIBBEAN

     

     

    A FUN-FILLED VACATION WITH SOME OF HARLEM’S FANTASTIC MUSICIANS

     

    8 NIGHTS – SEPTEMBER 29TH TO OCTOBER 7TH, 2009

     

    CRUISING ON THE CARNIVAL MIRACLE FROM NYC TO GRAND TURK -

    HALF MOON CAY BAHAMASNASSAU BAHAMASNEW YORK NYC

     

     

    DANNY MIXON QUARTET

    SELENO’S CLARKE’S HARLEM GROOVE BAND

    JAZMYH  FEATURING  INEZ WILSON

    NATHAN LUCAS QUARTET

     

     

    EARLY BIRD SPECIAL ENDS Nov. 1 2008

     

    MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS TODAY AND BEFORE NOVEMBER 1, 2008

      SAVE $60.00 TO $100.00 PER CABIN, OFF OF THE BELOW RATES

     

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    6A                  OCEAN VIEW                               RIVIERA  DECK                        $750.00

    4D                  INSIDE                                            VERANDA  DECK                     $710.00

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    4B                  INSIDE                                            MAIN & UPPER DECKS          $680.00

    4A                  INSIDE                                            RIVIERA DECK                         $630.00

     

     

    RATES ARE PER PERSON, DOUBLE OCCUPANCY, PLUS TAXES AND FEES OF $299.00 P/P

    SUBJECT TO CHANGE – CANCELLATION POLICIES APPLY – INSURANCE AVAILABLE

     

    CALL LUTHER TODAY!  1-212-926-6211

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    Categories: EVENTS · GENERAL