BLACK WALL STREET AMENDMENT

BLACK WALL STREET AMENDMENT BLACK WALL STREET AMENDMENT MUTUAL ASSISTANCE ASSOCIATION

BLACK OWNED MUTUAL FUND CO. & REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST

11/28/2016

In 1847, Robert Gordon, while enslaved on a wealthy yachtsman yard in Richmond, Virginia, used the slack, the coal dust the slaver availed to him to start his entrepreneurial business. He sold it to the local manufacturers and blacksmiths of the city, accumulating thereby in the course of time thousands of dollars.

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He purchased himself in 1846 and set out for free soil. He went first to Philadelphia and then to Newburyport, but finding that these places did not suit him, he proceeded to Cincinnati. He arrived there with $15,000, some of which he immediately invested in the coal business in which he had already achieved marked success. He employed bookkeepers, had his own wagons, built his own docks on the river, and bought coal by barges.62

Unwilling to see this Negro do so well, the white coal dealers endeavored to force him out of the business by lowering the price to the extent that he could not afford to sell. They did not know of his acumen and the large amount of capital at his disposal. He sent to the coal yards of his competitors mulattoes who could pass for white, using them to fill his current orders from his foes' supplies that he might save his own coal for the convenient day. In the course of a few months the river and all the canals by which coal was brought to Cincinnati froze up and remained so until spring. Gordon was then able to dispose of his coal at a higher price than it had ever been sold in that city. This so increased his wealth and added to his reputation that no one thereafter thought of opposing him.

Gordon continued in the coal business until 1865 when he retired. During the Civil War he invested his money in United States bonds. When these bonds were called in, he invested in real estate on Walnut Hills, which he held until his death in 1884. This estate descended to his daughter Virginia Ann Gordon who married George H. Jackson, a descendant of slaves in the Custis family of Arlington, Virginia. Mr. Jackson is now a resident of Chicago and is managing this estate.63 Having lived through the antebellum and subsequent periods, Mr. Jackson has been made to wonder whether the Negroes of Cincinnati are doing as well to-day as Gordon and his collaborers were.

This question requires some attention, but an inquiry as to exactly what forces have operated to impede the progress of a work so auspiciously begun would lead us beyond the limits set for this dissertation.
C. G.Woodson

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Gain from a new Tide as B.O.B. Whisks in with new soap. ((-_-)))

True Products LLC, the makers of “True Detergent” is a black owned company which created a product that all of us need. This is a company focused on making one of the most effective laundry detergent currently available. It’s a truly safe detergent without any caustic ingredients or animal essences....

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This is a movement! Re-Educate, Agitate & Organize! "The ACTIONS" to create our economic advantage & Black/African privilege.

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On July 29, 1910, citizens in the small, predominately African American town of Slocum, Texas were massacred. This was one of many towns, such as Rosewood and Tulsa, where a successful, self-sufficient African American community was the subject of a terrorist attack designed to maintain economic white supremacy. In each town, the incident that sparked the attack was relatively insignificant and often fabricated. The death toll was comparable if not higher than in the Rosewood massacre and the Tulsa race riot (massacre), but few have heard of Slocum. A new book, The 1910 Slocum Massacre: An Act of Genocide in East Texas is an invaluable resource on this history. Continue reading here: http://zinnedproject.org/2014/07/slocum-massacre/ Also read, "Convenient Amnesia in Texas—The Slocum Massacre": http://bit.ly/1o4oFQA A Texas school principal who is a descendant of the Slocum Massacre has asked the Zinn Education Project to help shine a light on this seldom told history. Teach about this practice in history with the lesson "Burned Out of Homes and History" by Rethinking Schools author Linda Christensen: http://bit.ly/1fDOUvG

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The photo shows a child rescuer on June 1, 1921 carrying a younger child to safety during attacks by angry white mobs that destroyed their town.
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"The attack on Black Wall Street in 1921 was covered up by Tulsa’s municipal government and the Oklahoma state government for many years. The official stance was that it didn’t really happen or that whatever may have happened was due to the actions of the Black people. It did not appear in any historical text books or official archives.
There were many years of behind-the-scenes legal battles by attorneys working on behalf of the Black people falsely charged with inciting the riot. In 1992, 75 years after the event, all charges were dismissed and the national public finally learned about the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921.
Several white people have complained to me about bringing this event back into the open. They questioned the wisdom of rehashing something that happened 92 years ago. They felt that it would only stir up anger when Black people need to forget about those unpleasant moments in the past and move forward."
.. Quote From http://sfbayview.com/2013/10/oklahoma-police-chief-apologizes-for-1921-attack-on-black-wall-street/

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