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The civil rights movement in Tennessee: A narrative history (U. of Tennessee Press, 2005) online. Lovett, Bobby L. The African-American History of Nashville, Tennessee: 1780-1930 (University of Arkansas Press, 1999) online. Patterson, C. Perry. The Negro in Tennessee, 1790-1865; a study in southern politics (1922) online; PHILLIPS, PAUL DAVID.
A Black Man's Dream: The First 100 Years: Richard Henry Boyd and the National Baptist Publishing Board. Nashville: Mega Publishing. ISBN 1-56742-032-X. Lovett, Bobby L.; Wynn, Linda T., eds. (1996). Profiles of African Americans in Tennessee. Nashville: Annual Local Conference on Afro-American Culture and History, Tennessee State University.
The National Museum of African American Music (NMAAM) is a museum in Nashville, Tennessee. The museum showcases the musical genres inspired, created, or influenced by African-Americans. [1] Its location at Fifth + Broadway in Downtown Nashville, as opposed to historically-Black Jefferson Street, has been controversial.
In May 2019, the Metropolitan Nashville Davidson County Community Remembrance Project (We Remember Nashville) announced its plans together with the Equal Justice Initiative to conduct several days of remembrance and education to mark the local history of lynchings of black men. Brothers Ephraim and Henry Grizzard, killed on April 30 and 24 ...
Pages in category "African-American history in Nashville, Tennessee" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total.
This Black History Month, The Tennessean honors area students who have shown enough promise and potential to be future leaders. This Black History Month, The Tennessean honors area students who ...
Formed by the merger of the Nashville Globe and Nashville Independent. [84] Nashville: The Nashville Globe: 1906 [86] 1930s [86] Weekly [86] LCCN 2014218453, sn86064259; OCLC 13744970, 881287661; ISSN 2373-4892, 2373-4906; Free online archive; Merged with the Nashville Independent to form the Nashville Globe and Independent. [86] Nashville: The ...
Due to other demographic influences and economic changes, by the 1970s, only 22 percent of the city was black. [4] In 1922, Walden University was renamed Walden College and was moved to a 12-acre (49,000 m 2) campus overlooking the black neighborhood of Trimble Bottom. It served as a junior college, with pre-medical and pre-law programs among ...