Black History Month, also known as African-American History Month, is an annual observance in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom for remembrance of important people and events in the history of the African American diaspora. This is the month that all of the hard work of the people who put in for African Americans to be free is celebrated. It is celebrated annually in the United States and Canada in February and the United Kingdom in October. CANADA Why a Black History … [Read more...]
Black History Month celebrated February 2013
January 27, 2013 by Team Celebration
Filed Under: AMERICAN [U.S.A.], CANADIAN, FEATURED, FEATURED EVENTS, SPECIAL DAYS TO REMEMBER Tagged With: A Celebration of Women, Abraham Lincoln, African American women, African Americans, Alice Marie Coachman, Bessie, Bessie Colman, Black History Month, CANADA, Canadian Negro Women’s Association, Carter G. Woodson, Cathay Williams, celebrated February 2013, Chillicothe, CNC, College of New Caledonia, Condoleezza Rice, Daryl Michael Scott, Elizabeth "Bessie" Coleman, emancipation, Emancipation Proclamation’s 150th Anniversary, events, Frederick Douglass, Howard University, Inauguration, January 17th 2013, Lucy Diggs Slowe, malcolm X, Matilda Sissieretta Joyner Jones, Maya Angelou, men, Morgon Freeman, Nat King Cole, Natalie Maria Cole, Negro History Week, Ohio, Ontario Black History Society, President, President Gerald R. Ford, president Obama, Rosemary Sadlier, Sarah Jane Woodson, sesqui centennial, The Library of Congress, TOP 10 AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN, United States, Whitehouse, women., World's Fair in Chicago