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  2. How a thriving Black Miami community was erased overnight - AOL

    www.aol.com/thriving-black-miami-community...

    Those schools have since been renamed Lenora Braynon Smith Elementary and Georgia Jones Ayers Middle, honoring two childhood friends who once lived in the Railroad Shop Colored Addition.

  3. Azusa Street Revival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azusa_Street_Revival

    The Azusa Street Revival was a historic series of revival meetings that took place in Los Angeles, California. [1] It was led by William J. Seymour , an African-American preacher . The revival began on April 9, 1906, and continued until roughly 1915.

  4. 19 Black figures who changed history - AOL

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    Obama became the first Black president in American history after winning the 2008 election race against John McCain. While in office, he earned a Nobel Peace Prize, worked to limit climate change ...

  5. Great Awakening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Awakening

    Edwards's congregation was involved in a revival later called the "Frontier Revivals" in the mid-1730s, though this was on the wane by 1737. [7] But as American religious historian Sydney E. Ahlstrom noted, the Great Awakening "was still to come, ushered in by the Grand Itinerant", [7] the British evangelist George Whitefield.

  6. Charles Grandison Finney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Grandison_Finney

    In 1830–1831, he led a revival in Rochester, New York, which has been noted as inspiring other revivals of the Second Great Awakening. [15] A leading pastor in New York who was converted in the Rochester meetings gave the following account of the effects of Finney's meetings in that city: "The whole community was stirred.

  7. Millions of Native people were enslaved in the Americas ... - AOL

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    In 1865, for instance, a state-ordered tally of enslaved Indigenous people in Southern Colorado counted 149 people, with 100 of them listed as age 12 or under "at time of purchase."

  8. Brownsville Revival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brownsville_Revival

    During the revival, nearly 200,000 accepted Christianity, and by the Fall of 2000 more than 1,000 people who experienced the revival were enrolled at the Brownsville Revival School of Ministry. [2] Thousands of pastors visited Brownsville and returned to their home congregations, leading to an outbreak of mini-revivals that helped the ...

  9. First Great Awakening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Great_Awakening

    The most influential evangelical revival was the Northampton revival of 1734–1735, under the leadership of Congregational minister Jonathan Edwards. [45] In the fall of 1734, Edwards preached a sermon series on justification by faith alone , and the community's response was extraordinary.