Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Reading Blogs

I read 3 blogs: Laura's about the Gibson Girls, Jamaree's about The Start of the Sport basketball, and Madison's about Crime. My favorite of all 3 blogs was the one about basketball because it's kept my attention the most and just made me think bout how much our society has changed over the past 100 years. It brought to my attention the things that started out small like things as basketball, has turned into, today million dollar + money making sports. I really liked it, it makes you  think, " what if I could start doing something fun in my leisure time and it a 100+ years in America's favorite sport to play or watch"

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

It Meant Much More For a African American Woman

Ask yourself, "if I was African American in the late 19th and early 20th century, what would I find myself doing all day in my leisure time?" Most people, at first thought would say tending to household duties, taking care of family, friends, or neighbors, trying to find work, or even understanding exactly what it means to be a free independent African American in the United States. If you answered with these answers you are on an accurate road, but what would you say the other half of African Americans did in between the time they were not tending those specific duties at times? Would you argue that some actually had time to sit down and read books, magazines, and newspapers? Because in fact they did!
                            During the late 19th and early 20 century black entertainment was just getting started. This was a time when a hand full of blacks were still trying to close the gap on being illiterate. They understood that they needed community were blacks could get information about other blacks apposed to other whites. The magazines, or newspaper and advertisement had information that one, would keep blacks informed on the latest news, jobs, schools, and two, keep them informed on new trends, recipes, cooking utensils, and even how other blacks were living day to day. Popular Magazines that I would consider to have been the most beneficially to blacks during this time period included "Ringwood's Afro American Journal of fashion, Half Century Magazine for the Colored Homemaker, and the Tan Confessions. 
(1950's)
(1950's) What Tan Eventually became

While doing research on leisure time for blacks, I found that "Julia Ringwood Coston" was among the few blacks that had ever edited a Magazine during her time. She exclaimed also that her rational for doing articles that related to blacks was to in fact bring them closer. By bringing blacks closer, things in the articles would talk about other things that Afro Americans might be donig, and if it was working out as planned, or how other black children were doing. It seemed as if Julia realized that by having other blacks understand what was going around in the community, they could all come together and be more beneficial to each other.








It was very hard to find a lot about Leisure time about blacks because this time period was also the time period were blacks, although may have been free were not always treated as so. I will also say that during this time period it was substantially harder for a black male or female to get his her her work out for anyone to read and look at.  
Another interesting thing that I did find out by doing this project was that whites had more entertainment activities to choose from. They had more magazines, more books and more newspapers than blacks. I found out that most of the things that blacks read had basely come from the magazines that whites read like the True Confessions. A predominantly white magazine that is almost like the blacks magazined " The Tan Confessions.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

1880-1920 Policemen

During my research project I have been researching Policemen of the 1880's-1920's. 
The basic things that I have Found out about Policemen in this era is that being a policemen wasn't just about "a job" but was more of a pride thing in the community. It was looked at as a good dead because more crimes started to break out during this time.  I have also learned that the "Crooks" of this time were treated with harsh punishment and sent to diseased prisons and some where sentenced to the electrical chairs. 
So far, I have come to the conclusion that I do not find this topic as interesting as I thought and now I am changing, to something else.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Nation of immigrants

What I think it means to be a nation of immigrants is that we, as the United States of America, are not just made up of one religion, color or ethnicity but It means that were are exactly the opposite of that. I don't think that there is a group of people who have singly shaped the culture of America, because of all the different practices America is made up of. When I do think about the people who moved from their original homelands to come to America and try and successfully create a better life style for themselves and family ,I do not think solely about the natives, or Europeans who claimed to be the first settlers. I think about how the Slavs, Germans, poles, Africans, Hispanics, British have come together to give off one stuck cultural shape of America. When I say "stuck" I mean that each group of settler has it's ways of doing things they way they were used to. And working with another ethnicity group without problems and becoming loving neighbors who care about the satisfaction of one another, is the cultural shape, that has been stuck of in America

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Rockerfeller Foundation

John D. Rockerfeller was a philatropist who donates his money to causes that help our world today. Some of the causes that the Rockerfeller Foundation supports is a cure for Maleria, world hunger, the invention of the microscope and computer. The Rockerfeller Foundation also support scholarship and educational opportunity—to colleges, schools, research institutions, and libraries—has been a part of the Foundation’s work in virtually .