Inspirational Black history laying the groundwork for tomorrow’s Black Heritage.
Showing posts with label Black History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black History. Show all posts
Friday, August 5, 2016
Black Fight to Liberate New Orleans: War of 1812
From: Black Saga: The African American Exprience
On January 8, two battalions of five hundred free Black fought with Andrew Jackson to liberate New Orleans from the British n the last battle of the War of 1812. Identified as the "Free Men of Color," this was the largest single force of Black men ever assembled to fight for the United States up to that time.
The use of Black troops was the idea of the Louisiana Governor William C. C. Clairborne.
Jackson accepted the battalion of Free Men of Color plus a battalion of soldiers from Santo Domingo because of the shortage of effective troops. They held their line on the Chalmette Plains and then counter attacked. It was the worse defeat suffered by the British Army in years. The British lost more than twenty-six hundred soldiers, whereas American forces only lost twenty-one men. Jackson wrote later the he believed that the British commander, Sir Edward Pakenham, was killed by a shot fired by a Black man. Black actually fought on bothe sides of the battle, the First and Second West Indian Infantry regiments fought with the British. Hopes of freedom were dashed when the Treaty of Ghent (which ended the war) was negotiated.
Ironically, Black soldiers who had fought with Jackson were not permitted to march in the annual parades that celebrated the victory.
Labels:
Andrew Jackson,
Battle of New Orleans,
Black History,
Black in US Army,
Black soldiers,
Blacks in War of 1812,
Free Men of Color,
War of 1812
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Post traumatic Slavery Disorder Dr Joy de Gruy Leary
Chains in Our DNA
Educator and author Joy DeGruy, Ph.D., is the woman who, 25 years ago, coined the PTSS term to help explain the consequences of multigenerational oppression from centuries of chattel slavery and institutionalized racism, and to identify the resulting adaptive survival behaviors. She turned her study into the groundbreaking book Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome: America’s Legacy of Enduring Injury and Healing, published in 2005. Researchers have long investigated how historical trauma is passed down through the generations, and findings suggest actual memories are transmitted through the DNA for Jews, Native Americans and other groups, DeGruy indicates. That same concept can be applied to the impact of slavery on African-Americans.
PTSS differs from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which results from a single trauma experienced directly or indirectly. “When we look at American chattel slavery, we are not talking about a single trauma; we’re talking about multiple traumas over lifetimes and over generations,” says DeGruy. “Living in Black skin is a whole other level of stress.”
Read more at EBONY http://www.ebony.com/wellness-empowerment/do-you-have-post-traumatic-slave-syndrome#ixzz486GwmuwB
Follow us: @EbonyMag on Twitter | EbonyMag on Facebook
Labels:
African History,
African-American,
Black DNA,
Black Health,
Black History,
Black Psychology,
Dr. Joy de Gruy Leary,
Dr. Leary,
Slavery
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
