Text “ERICA” to 52140 to join the Get Up! Mornings w/ Erica Campbell mobile club for exclusive news. (Terms and conditions).
Source: fstop123 / Getty
A principal of an elementary school in Virginia is now apologizing after students were told during a gym exercise to act like runaway slaves for Black History Month.
Thank you for subscribing! Please be sure to open and click your first newsletter so we can confirm your subscription.
Principal David Stewart, of Madison’s Trust Elementary School sent a letter to parents saying, “The lesson was culturally insensitive to our students and families. I extend my sincerest apology to our students and school community.”
According to NBC News, students in third through fifth-grade was told this was a “game” to see which groups would make it through an obstacle course that represented the Underground Railroad. During a board meeting, Michelle Thomas, president of the Loudoun County chapter of the NAACP mentioned that students got to pick whether they wanted to be a slave, sharecropper or landowner.
Thomas said, “Slavery was not a joke. You didn’t get to choose.”
Upset by what happened, retired educator, Linda Deans said, “Having a black male student crawling around on the floor in the dark as he re-enacted a lesson about a runaway slave is an offensive educational strategy.”
The principal wants to make sure that incidents like this never happen again and will be appointing “equity/culturally responsive team.”
Check out vintage photos of Black history being made in America below!
9. African American Students Enter High School with Military Escort
Source:Getty
9 of 40
10. Lunchcounter Protest in Virginia
Source:Getty
10 of 40
11. Harry Belafonte Leads Civil Rights Rally
Source:Getty
11 of 40
12. Malcolm X's Funeral
Source:Getty
12 of 40
13. Martin Luther King's Funeral
Source:Getty
13 of 40
14. Lynching Victim Hanging Above Crowd
Source:Getty
14 of 40
15. W.E.B. DuBois
Source:Getty
15 of 40
16. Booker T. Washington
Source:Getty
16 of 40
17. The 369th, 15th New York who won the Croix de Guerre for Gallantry
Source:Getty
17 of 40
18. Mutilated Corpse of Claude Neal
Source:Getty
18 of 40
19. Segregated Fountain
Source:Getty
19 of 40
20. Womens Defense Corp of America
Source:Getty
20 of 40
21. Crowd Waiting to Enter Supreme Court
Source:Getty
21 of 40
22. Black Students Integrate Little Rock's Central High School
Source:Getty
22 of 40
23. Troops Watch as Black Students Go to School
Source:Getty
23 of 40
24. Segregated Restrooms
Source:Getty
24 of 40
25. Portrait Of Medgar Evers
Source:Getty
25 of 40
26. Separate Waiting Room
Source:Getty
26 of 40
27. Race riots in Birmingham, Alabama.
Source:Getty
27 of 40
28. A White Man Bars African-Americans From Restaurant
Source:Getty
28 of 40
29. Myrlie Evers Speaking at Microphone
Source:Getty
29 of 40
30. A Young Marcher
Source:Getty
30 of 40
31. Civil Rights Fighters
Source:Getty
31 of 40
32. Elijah Muhammad
Source:Getty
32 of 40
33. Anti Segregation In The Southern Stores March At Broadway In New York
Source:Getty
33 of 40
34. Selma to Montgomery March
Source:Getty
34 of 40
35. Selma to Montgomery March
Source:Getty
35 of 40
36. Soldiers at Civil Rights Protest
Source:Getty
36 of 40
37. Luther King's Funeral
Source:Getty
37 of 40
38. Coretta Scott King
Source:Getty
38 of 40
39. 'Kidnapped' Poster At Black Panther Rally
Source:Getty
39 of 40
40. 'Right On!' Black Power Button
Source:Getty
40 of 40
Continue reading Vintage Photos Of Black History Being Made In America
Vintage Photos Of Black History Being Made In America
From the moment enslaved Africans were kidnapped and brought to the land that went on to be called the United States, there has been Black history in America. Black folks have overcome obstacle after obstacle to continue making that same history in the face of adversity.
So with Black History Month upon us, there may be no better time to reflect on the timeless and seemingly endless contributions that Black people have bestowed upon these United States.
From fighting for desegregation to fighting in the American military to fighting for an education, and much, much more, the struggle was very real. And while Black folks have continued the fight on a number of different levels, the struggle has persisted.
Civil rights have played a major role for the Black man in America, something that is more than apparent in the below vintage photos of Black people making history in America despite a greater power at work against it. It shows the good, the bad and, because it was in the U.S. during a time of heightened, overt racism, the ugly.
Scroll down to see more classic images from centuries ago up until just a few short decades ago.