Knowing our history is a journey and the vehicle of that journey is READING.
One Crazy Summer is an engaging story (especially for girls) about 3 sisters who travel to California to meet their mother for the first time. the girls are introduced to the Black Panther movement from the vantage point of pre-teens. Our book club participants said they learned a lot and could easily identify with the 3 sisters. Stamped Racism, Antiracism, and You is an easy-to-absorb remix of Ibram X. Kendi's book Stamped From the Beginning. Learn about some key people and events that created what we call black history in America. If you are ready to be informed, this is an excellent starting point. Book titles are linked to Pyramid Books, a black-owned South Florida book store and a Spady Museum partner.
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When Mose Norman, a prosperous African American farmer who had been leader of an energetic effort to register Black voters, showed up at the polls to vote that day, he was turned away, but assured by a judge that he was within his rights, he returned, reportedly with a shotgun, only to be driven off again, but this time with a racist mob in pursuit of him, eventually attacking the home of his friend July Perry, another successful landowner who also helped to register voters, whom they would later capture and lynch after he defended his home with gunfire, wounding one and killing two of the intruders..
His lynching would begin an all-out assault on the Black community of northern Ocoee, in which 30-50 were estimated to have been killed as all were forced to flee, taking refuge in surrounding woods while their homes, churches, schools and property were burned to the ground, some with people inside. written by Dinizulu Gene Tinnie Racial equity protests, global pandemic responses, the passing of iconic civil rights leaders, and a pivotal election. Now more than ever, history and historical context are important, as citizens cope with these forces simultaneously. However, these forces are not new. The world has seen them before, and lessons have been learned. Sharing these lessons is increasingly important, as Charlene Farrington relates in this article, published in the July issue of Palm Beach Illustrated. #ICYMI, read about how the Spady Museum and its staff are working to educate, enlighten and inspire, even during the most transformative days of 2020. READ
The Spady Cultural Heritage Museum was one of three nonprofits arts organizations in Palm Beach County and one of 855 organizations nationwide to receive funding from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.
The Spady Museum will receive $50,000 from the NEA to support staff salaries, fees for artists or contractual personnel, and facilities costs. Announced on July 1, 2020, the grant funding will offset some of the revenues that have been lost to cancellations of fundraising and programming events, due to the COVID-19 pandemic response. Boca Raton Museum of Art and Palm Beach Opera also received funding.The Spady Museum received additional funding stemming from the CARES Act: $7,500 from Florida Humanities Council and $1,929 from Florida Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs.… Your Support Helps Too! Thanks for every dollar Thanks for supporting our ongoing operations! With your donations, we’ve been collaborating, going online with virtual exhibits, celebrating Juneteenth with Porch Stories, and discovering books with our youth. Please continue to #SupportSpady by giving to paypal.me/spadydelray. |
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