Carter · G · Woodson is known as "father of black history". Because he is working hard to ensure that the black history is taught and studied by the students at school. He also started a black history magazine in 1916 and other publications in the coming years to confirm that the black history is not forgotten. He founded the Black History Month because he strongly believes that people should understand the history and culture of African-Americans and still celebrate around the United States of America.
Carter Woodson and former slave son Carter · Woodson and "Father of Black History Month", although African Americans are in the center of the American story, their accomplishments are almost ignored in books and arguments in American history I observed it. He founded the African American Life History Research Association (ASALH) to promote, research, preserve, interpret and disseminate information about the lives, history and culture of black people. Woodson and ASLH held "Black History Week" in February - Frederick Douglas' birthday week - to help the school deepen the history of black history. Universities and colleges in the United States began to extend the Black History Week to one month and in 1976 Black History Mans was enacted as the National Day.
In 1926, Carter G. Woodson, a father of black history, spent a week in February as a "Black History Week" and evolved into a "Black History Month". In the shortest and the coldest moon, the history of the black people was celebrated strangely. Many people often ask, is it enough for a month? No, one month is not enough, for the history of the blacks is everyone's history. So, Black Wall Wall Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma, black Americans have their own school, foodstuffs, banks and economy? I did not mention it. What is the reason for establishing these higher education institutions for the situation of black universities and universities (HBCU) that have been established for a long time, and descendants of children of free slavery and slaveowners is very urgent Is it? Modern textbooks have only one or two mention of HBCU