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Black HeroesSamuel Sharpe
1801-1832 ‘Daddy’ Sam Sharpe, as he was affectionately called was to carry on the Resistance against slavery effecting at the young age of...
Read More ... Norman W Manley
1893-1969. Norman Washington Manley founded the People’s National Party which later was tied to the Trade Union Congress and the N.W.U. Together...
Read More ... Marcus Mosiah Garvey
1887-1940. Marcus Mosiah Garvey stands out in history as one who was greatly committed to the concept of the Emancipation of minds. Garvey who was bor...
Read More ... Paul Bogle
Birth date uncertain-died 1865. Paul Bogle, a Baptist Deacon was generally regarded as a peaceful man who shunned violence. He believed in the teachin...
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History Trivia
Garrett Augustus Morgan (March 4, 1877 - August 27, 1963), was an African-American inventor and businessman. He was the first person to patent a traffic signal. He also developed the gas mask (and many other inventions). Morgan used his gas mask to rescue miners who were trapped underground in a noxious mine. Soon after, Morgan was asked to produce gas masks for the US Army. InventorsNorbert Rillieux
Norbert Rillieux (1800-1894) was born as a free African American. He revolutionised the sugar industry when he invented the multiple-effect evaporator...
Read More ... Thomas Jennings
Thomas Jennings (1791-1859) was the first African American to receive a Patent. As the owner of a New York dry cleaning store, Jennings patented a pro...
Read More ... George Crum
The potato chip was invented in 1853 by George Crum. Crum was a Native American/African American chef at the Moon Lake Lodge resort in Saratoga Spring...
Read More ... Henry Boyd
Henry Boyd, a skilled carpenter, was born into slavery in Kentucky in 1802. Young Henry wanted to be a carpenter. He learned early that many Black car...
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Alexander Bustamante was an aggressive, outspoken young man who understood the dynamics of labour relations. A charismatic and impressive speaker, he used the media to criticise the prevailing political system and its attendant social problems. He started the Industrial Trade Union in 1938 and was jailed for 17 months following labour riots. He became Jamaica’s first Chief Minister, a position he held until 1954, being knighted that same year by the queen. On August 6, 1962 Jamaica was granted full independence. At the first session of Parliament, Bustamante received the Instruments of Independence from the queen’s representative, Princess Margaret. This time in Jamaica’s history drastic changes were heralded, not by bloodshed but by peaceful negotiations.
George William Gordon was a free black land owner and an associate of Bogle. As a member of the House of Parliament, he used his position to highlight the sufferings of the people and to make a plea for changes. The Morant Bay Rebellion and the resultant deaths of Bogle and Gordon precipitated the beginning of a new era in Jamaica’s development. The British government became compelled to make changes including outstanding reforms in education, health, local government, banking and infrastructure.
Nanny of the Maroons stands out in history as the only female among Jamaica’s national heroes. She possessed that fierce fighting spirit generally associated with the courage of men. In fact, Nanny is described as a fearless Asante warrior who used militarist techniques to foul and beguile the English. Like the heroes of the pre Independence era, Nanny met her untimely death at the instigation of the English sometime around 1734. Yet, the spirit of Nanny of the Maroons remains today as a symbol of that indomitable desire that will never yield to captivity.
What we now call Black History Month was originated in 1926 by Carter Godwin Woodson as Negro History Week. 


