Their contribution to African Americans and American society and culture holds a month of black history in February every year. Since arriving in America as a slave in 1619, African Americans have been fighting for independence and are considered equality. These struggles create many historical figures and events, they are proud of all Americans, and some are disappointed. The following are chronological events affecting the history of black people, and brave men and women leading the future generation.
Slavery in the United States was brought to the North American colony of Jamestown, Virginia in 1619 when the first African slave was taken, and ended in the American Civil War in 1865. Although it is impossible to provide accurate figures, it is estimated that only six to seven people in the 18th century had millions of slaves entering the New World and robbing the healthiest and most competent men and women on the African continent There are also historians to do. One-third of soldiers fighting for EFF are immigrants, one-tenth of them are African-Americans. Approximately 200,000 African Americans serve as soldiers and crew members in the Allied Forces, most of whom escape from the owner and participate. Federal troops were furious with armed black soldiers and refused to regard them as prisoners of war. For example, in Tennessee's fortress pillow massacres, Confederate soldiers cruelly killed more than 300 African-American soldiers.
The conflict of names and names began when the African ancestors of the so-called "African Americans" entering a slave ship of the United States (and Europe) started toward the Americas. African ancestry experienced a transition from "Africa" to "slave" instantly when they got on the American (and European) slave ship. At that moment, arrested Africans are no longer Africans (and humans!), But became the property of their white Americans and kidnappers in Europe. Arrested Africans converted to slaves that could be moved before they arrived in the United States and were maliciously expressed as nonhuman and / or sub-human. When they arrived in the United States they became slaves of Americans - they became American slaves (not African slaves!) - they are American wealth - in African wealth There is none!