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First Friday is the top networking event for African American professionals and consistently attracts over 16,000 people each month across North America according to First Fridays United. The First Fridays monthly events originated in 1987 as an outlet for African American professionals to mix, mingle and network.
In his will, he left funds to local charities and to the Charity Hospital, Lafon Old Folks Home, Straight University, and the Sisters of the Holy Family, an order of African-American nuns founded in New Orleans. [2] [3] Lafon also supported the Tribune, the first black-owned newspaper in the South after the American Civil War. [citation needed]
The Plain Truth Of New Orleans: 1969 [75] 1970 [75] Bimonthly newspaper [75] LCCN sn89059088; OCLC 7366271; New Orleans: The Republican Courier: 1899 [76] 1900 [76] Weekly [76] LCCN sn83016564; OCLC 2806334, 9908251; New Orleans: The Louisiana Republican: 1881 [77] 1882 [77] Weekly [77] LCCN sn89059142; OCLC 19537223; In English and French. [77 ...
The Louisiana Weekly is a weekly newspaper published in New Orleans, Louisiana. It emphasizes topics of interest to the African-American community, especially in the New Orleans area and south Louisiana. It has an estimated weekly circulation of 6,500. [1] The Louisiana Weekly was established by the C.C. Dejoie family in 1925. [2]
African-American newspapers Name City State Founded Closed 92d Buffalo: Fort Huachuca: Arizona: 1943–1945 [1]: Defunct 93d Blue Helmet: Fort Huachuca: Arizona: 1942–1943 [2]: Defunct
L'Union was the first African-American newspaper in the Southern United States. [a] The newspaper was based in New Orleans, Louisiana, and was published from 1862 to 1864.. Articles in L'Union were written in the French language, with the newspaper's primary readership being free people of color in the New Orleans area, especially in the faubourgs Marigny and Tr
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New Orleans Data News Weekly 1 June 2010: n. pag. Nola Beez. Web. 7 Apr. 2013. Crutcher, Michael. Tremé; Race and Place in a New Orleans Neighborhood. Athens: The University of Georgia Press, 2010. Print. "Faubourg Tremé - The Untold Story of Black New Orleans." Faubourg Tremé - The Untold Story of Black New Orleans.