Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Fred's Book Visiting Black America (2014)




VISITING BLACK AMERICA: HISTORY AND SITES                                  $ 18.95



PREFACE: TRAVEL FOR HISTORY..………………………………………. p.


CHAPTER ONE: THE EARLIEST YEARS……………………………………  p.

THE FIRST BLACK TO VISIT NORTH AMERICA: ESTEBANICO
PRELIMINARY BACKGROUND: SUGGESTIONS ABOUT SLAVERY INFORMATION
THE FIRST BLACK COLONISTS: INDENTURED SERVANTS
THE IMPORTATION OF BLACK SLAVES
THE INTERNAL SLAVE TRADE
SLAVERY ON EARLY PLANTATIONS
           DRAYTON HALL
          MAGNOLIA PLANTATION
          BOONE HALL
THE BLACK BELT OF THE DEEP SOUTH


CHAPTER TWO: THE EARLY REPUBLIC …………………………………… p.

SLAVERY AND THE FOUNDING FATHERS
          SLAVERY AT MOUNT VERNON OF GEORGE WASHINGTON
          SLAVERY AT GUNSTON HALL OF GEORGE MASON
          SLAVERY AT MONTICELLO OF THOMAS JEFFERSON
FREE BLACKS AT FORT MOSE
EARLY CHURCHES OF BLACKS
          SAVANNAH
          CHARLESTON
PHILLIS WHEATLEY


CHAPTER THREE : FOLLOWING THE DRINKING GOURD ……………… p.

VESEY CONSPIRACY
UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
SOJOURNER TRUTH
HARRIET “MOSES” TUBMAN
FREDERICK DOUGLASS: FOUNDER OF CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT
JOSIAH “UNCLE TOM” HENSON


CHAPTER FOUR: THREATS TO FREE BLACKS IN THE NORTH ……… p.

“FUGITIVE” ANTHONY BURNS OF BOSTON
SOLOMON NORTHUP, TWELVE YEARS A SLAVE
DRED SCOTT
FREE BLACKS AS WHALERS


CHAPTER FIVE: THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT …………………………… p.

BLACKS IN THE CALIFORNIA GOLD RUSH
FOLSOM, CALIFORNIA
REV. JEREMIAH SANDERSON
MIFFLIN WISTAR GIBBS
DOWNIEVILLE


CHAPTER SIX: THE CIVIL WAR ERA ----------------------------------------- p.

FREE BLACKS OF THE SEA ISLANDS (SOUTH CAROLINA)
BLACK CIVIL WAR HERO: GORDON
BLACK CIVIL WAR SOLDIERS OF THE 54TH REGIMENT
BLACKS ON THE MARCH TO THE SEA
MASSACRE AT PORT PILLOW


CHAPTER SEVEN: RECONSTRUCTION …………………………………………. p.


BUFFALO SOLDIERS
RECONSTRUCTION SENATOR HIRAM R. REVELS
FRANCIS LEWIS CARDOZO OF SOUTH CAROLINA
HO FOR KANSAS: PAP SINGLETON, THE BLACK MOSES
NICODEMUS, KANSAS


CHAPTER EIGHT: BLACKS AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY ……………. p.

PLESSY v FERGUSON
BOOKER T WASHINGTON AND TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE
NOTEABLE BLACK INVENTORS
          GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER
          ELIJAH MC COY
ROSA YOUNG: THE MOTHER OF BLACK LUTHERANISM
BLACKS AND THE KLONDIKE GOLD RUSH


CHAPTER NINE: THE THIRTIES AND FORTIES ………………………………… p.


CARTER G. WOODSON: FATHER OF BLACK HISTORY
THE SCOTTSBORO BOYS AND THE MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE
DORIS MILLER: HERO OF PEARL HARBOR
BLACKS BUILDING THE ALASKAN HIGHWAY (ALCAN)
TEXAN GROUND BREAKER JUANITA CRAFT
JOE LEWIS: THE BROWN BOMBER


CHAPTER TEN: THE FIFTIES ………………………………………………………….. p.

NAT KING COLE
BROWN V. BOARD OF EDUCATION, TOPEKA
JUSTICE THURGOOD MARSHALL
LITTLE ROCK NINE OF ARKANSAS
DADDY KING OF ATLANTA
ROSA PARK
JACKIE ROBINSON, NUMBER 42


CHAPTER ELEVEN: THE SIXTIES …………………………………………………… p.

GREENSBORO: THE WOOLSWORTH SIT-IN
FREEDOM RIDERS
JAMES MEREDITH
MARTYRDOM OF MEDGAR EVERS
1963 MARCH ON WASHINGTON
BLOODY SUNDAY: SELMA, ALABAMA
BENJAMIN ELIJAH MAYS, THE MENTOR
MINISTRY AND MARTYRDOM OF MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.


CHAPTER TWELVE: THE SEVENTIES ………………………………………………. P.

SHIRLEY CHISHOLM: UNBOUGHT AND UNBOSSED
MUHAMMAD ALI, THE GREATEST
SIDNEY POITIER: HOLLYWOOD BREAKTHROUGH


CHAPTER THIRTEEN THE LEGACY GOES ON …………………………………… p.

BILL COSBY, SYMBOL OF DECENCY
JOHN HOPE FRANKLIN, DEAN OF SOUTHERN HISTORY
MAYA ANGELOU: THE MILLION-MAN MARCH
REGGIE WHITE, MINISTER OF DEFENSE
SECRETARY OF STATE, CONDOLEEZZA RICE
HUNGER, THE CRUSADE OF “PASTOR” OTIS WOODARD
OPRAH WINFREY: QUEEN OF ALL MEDIA
FIRST BLACK PRESIDENT: BARRACK OBAMA
DR BENJAMIN CARSON: “RUN, BEN, RUN”


POSTLUDE: THE RIGHT STUFF …………………………………………………… p


BACK COVER

This book is an attempt by the author to help others vicariously relive history by visiting the many sites of black history that are easily accessible to the average traveler. Yet this book is not just a directory of sites, but also a lively biographical approach to black history, that of itself, makes for interesting reading. The many photographs and illustrations help the readers to journey back into time; while the brief narrative approach makes for easy start-and-stop reading.

Black history is laden with stories of tragedy, courage and feats of overcoming unbelievable obstacles. The author of this book believes that the blacks featured herein provide the desired “habitual visions of greatness,” a phrase associated with Alfred North Whitehead, that motivates us to be all that we can be (Whitehead, Aims of Education). In the book of Philippians 4:8 the inspired Apostle Paul tells us: “Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.” Visiting Black America provides such worthy visions through great African-Americans who lived lives of selfless devotion to others.

PREFACE: TRAVEL FOR HISTORY

History comes alive and seems so real when a person travels to locations where great events had actually taken place. When one sees concrete objects associated with historical meanings, the mind is able to conjure images that recreate the dramas of the past. Black history is laden with stories of tragedy, courage and feats of overcoming unbelievable obstacles. Historic figures like Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King Jr. and others can best be understood when tied to locations closely associated with their lives.

Dr. Cornel West, an African-American believes “Deep education requires a habitual vision of greatness” (Facebook, October 12, 2012). Most of the heroes I set forth here came from deeply religious homes and a good number were ministers. Some of their successes can be attributed to the fact church leaders were the best educated, when education was such a vital key; yet it was so often their Christian faith that kept them going in a life of service to others. It was a sense of service that makes all of them worth emulating.

A number of the sites mentioned in this book were from personal visits by the author as he toured the country while conducing travel study tours for college students. While trekking there were opportunities to meet notable people. In my quest for black history I met well-known blacks such as Ralph Abernathy, Shirley Chisholm, John Hope Franklin and Otis Woodard.

Of course, students met many “great” blacks while roaming the country, just plain good friendly people. Meeting people from different races and cultures helps promote good will and an appreciation of achievements by others. Students who took my studies tours earned college credits, usually four semester credits in social studies. The real plus was visiting areas outside the Midwest, beyond our parochial world. Most of the original tours were in the United States, of thirty days duration, and concentrated on geographical regions of the nation. Later tours included Mexico, Russia, Kenya, Tanzania and European countries. This book, however, centers on blacks history of the United States and Canada.

At the end of each day of exploration, discussion sessions were held at our lodging facilities to compare observations. Before offering college courses for Dr. Martin Luther College, informal tours were led by this professor for just plain enjoyment. Since the potential for learning was so great on these trips, formal syllabii were drawn up and presented to the DML College Board of Control for adoption as courses.

Students who had joined those educational expeditions over the years found history can become alive and meaningful just by roaming historic sites. Where scheduled local guides were not available we tried to carry on conversations with the locals. As much as possible, we tried to room right at the historic sites and to eat picnic style lunches right on location.


In the course of arranging and carrying out the plans for college tours, it became evident to me that racial prejudice was still alive in the country. When administrators of historic sites read Dr. Martin Luther College (named after the German Reformation leader) written on the letterhead, the name was often mistaken for Dr. Martin Luther King College. When I wrote to the site of the former Jefferson Davis plantation in Mississippi requesting permission to visit, I received a letter addressed to Dr. Martin Luther King College denying my request – even though the time requested was within the hours of operation. A similar occurrence took place when I made a reservation with a dude ranch in Wyoming, a ranch I had visited earlier with my family. When our study tour group arrived we found our assigned sites were down by the horse barn. After the desk receptionist saw we were white, she quickly reassigned us to a more favorable location by the clubhouse.


Actually, experiences such as these can be valuable as teaching moments. Our visit to the Jefferson Davis retirement mansion with an extensive park-like setting off of the Gulf of Mexico gave us a lesson in subjectivity-objectivity. While our guide at this Jefferson Davis family-run operation in Mississippi talked of how “mistreated” Jefferson Davis had suffered at the hands of the Yankee victors, he did not answer student questions about the slave labor used to build the elaborate mansion. Students also noticed propaganda type books were sold in the gift shop of the visitor center, while the major scholarly biographies of Jefferson Davis were noticeably absent. However, I have noticed over the years that fairer treatment of minorities has been clearly discernable. More historical sites and information centers have also been added since then to promote black history.

Monday, July 21, 2014

ARCHIVE OF WULFF BLOGS

(Photo: Annette & Fred in Rio, 1993)

IF YOU WAIT A MINUTE OR TWO, THE FULL LISTING OF TITLES WILL APPEAR ON THE RIGHT (INSTEAD OF JUST DATES).

I created this  list below to serve as a table of contents. The blog entries are in chronological order starting with the most recent. If you do not wait for full entries, blogs may be accessed in the COLUMN ON THE RIGHT by clicking on the arrow for THE YEAR OF ENTRY. When you click on that year the subheadings will appear. Then click on the site desired. Added note:  1960s are under the year 1970; because of site limitations I was forced to improvise for those entries.

Periodically I delete entries, but the photos are still stored in a storage photo bank.  If anyone should want past photos retrieved, let me know.


Photos may be duplicated by dragging them over to your desktop.


ARCHIVESOF WULFF BLOGS

Entertainment at the Plaza

Fred's book: Visiting Black America

2014 Alaska Princess Cruise

Meet Me in St. Louis (mixture of photos)


2013 Grand Princess Hawaii cruise

 2013 Caribbean Cruise (Aruba) Crown Princess


2013 Annette Wulff funeral 06/08/13

2013 Fred's second book: Sunshine and Rain


2013 Easter gathering of the Wulff family


2013  Cruise of Med Sea, Suez Canal, Red Sea, Luxor, Oman and Arab Emirates


2013 Fred's newly published non-fiction book: The Great White Elk

2012 Transatlantic Cruise: Spain, Canary Islands ...

2012 Cruise of Coastal Norway: I Southampton, Bergen & Geiranger

2012 Cruise of Coastal Norway II: Honnigsvag, Tromso & Lofoten Islands

2012 Cruise of Coastal Norway III: Flaam & Stavanger

2012 Pacific Cruise I:  Kobe & Kagoshima, Japan

2012 Pacific Cruise II: Nagasaki, Japan & Pusan, Korea

2012 Pacific Cruise III: Vladivostok & Days at Sea

2012 Pacific Cruise IV: More Sea & Kodiak Island

2012 Pacific Cruise V Glacier Bay, Sitka & Canadian Passage

2011 Mexico: Playa Del Carmen Resort and Maya Ruins

2011 Cruise (Part I) to Haiti, Jamaica & Mexico

2011 Cruise (Part II) to Haiti, Jamaica & Mexico

2011 Tunisia Part I: Tunis, Carthage, Dougga & Roman Ruins, plus Dougga

2011 Tunisia Part II Kerkouane, Kairouan, Monastir, Sbeitla & Tozeur

2011 Tunisia Part III: Salt Flats, Sahara Desert, Bedouins, Tataouine and Ksar Routes

2010 Vietnam Part I: The North: Hanoi, Tho Ha and ...

2010 Vietnam Part II: Hue, Da Nang and Central Highlands

2010 Vietnam Part III: Saigon, Mekong Delta & Return to Bangkok

2010 Wulffs' 50th Wedding Anniversary (& Family Reunion)

2010 Missouri: St. Louis LWMS w/Field Trips & Branson, MO  Shows

2010 Hail Damage and Repairs: Wulff Residence

2010 The Minnesota Sioux Uprising of 1862 Tour

2010 A Tour of the Martin Luther College Campus in New Ulm, MN

2010 The Republic of Malta and the Island of Gozo

2010 Sicily Part I Taormina, Catania, Mt. Etna & Siracusa

2010 Sicily Part II: Palermo, Corleone, Agrigento, Erice & Cefalu

2010 Cruise to Belize, Honduras and Mexico

2009 East Europe Part I: Berlin, Poland & Zakopane...

2009 East Europe Part II Hungary, Slovakia & Czech Republic (w/Prague)

2009 Africa Part I Botswana, Namibia, Zimbabwe & Zambia

2009 Africa Part II SA: Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town,  Durban, Zulu Land & Kruger

2009 India Part I: New Dehli - Rajasthan

2009 India Part II: Taj Mahal - Ganges River  w/Varanasi

2008 Panama Canal: Columbia, Panama, Costa Rica & Guatemala

2008 Michigan: Mackinaw Island Michigan Vacation

2008 So. America: Around Cape Horn: Chile , Falklands, Uruguay & Argentina

2008 Turkey I Istanbul, Troas, Smyrna, Pergamum & Ephesus

2008 Turkey II: Capadocia, Hierapolis. Underground Cities & Ankara

2007 Egypt Part I: Cairo, Pyramids & Alexandria

2007 Egypt Part II Abul Simbel, Aswan, Edfu, Karnac, Luxor & Dendera

2007 Riverboat Cruise on Columbia & Snake Rivers

2007 Great Rivers of Europe I: Amsterdam, Cologne, Mainz & Heidelburg

2007 Great Rivers of Europe II Wurzburg, Bamburg, Nuremberg, Regensburg & Vienna

2007 Rome: Bernini Sites, St. Peters, Vatican Museum,  St. Maggiore, etc.

2007 Rome Part II Roman Ruins

2007 Mexico's Copper Canyon I Railroad Adventure

2007 Mexico's Copper Canyon II Reverse Trip & Chihuahua...

2006 China Part I Shanghai & Suzhou

2006 China Part II Xian & Beijing

2006 Heart of Italy I Tuscany & Umbria

2006 Heart of Italy II: San Marino, Veneto & Lombardy

2006 Rhine & Mosel Rivers I Basel, Strasbourg, Baden Baden & Speyer

2006 Rhine & Mosel Rivers II Boppard, Bernkastel, Trier & Luxembourg

2006 Rhine & Mosel Rivers III Koblenz, Dusseldorf. Kinderdijk & Antwerp

2006 Israel Part I Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Masada & Dead Sea

2006 Israel Part II Jordan Valley, Golan Heights, Galilee, Capernaum, Nazareth & Joppa

2005 Peru Part I Lima & Pachacamac Inca Ruins

2005 Peru Part II Iquitos, Amazon River, the Rain Forest & Nauta

2005 Portugal & Spain I Cascais, Lisbon, Cape Roca & Sintra

2005 Portugal & Spain II Tavira, The Algarve (Santa Luzia, Loule, Sagres & Lagos)

2005 Portugal & Spain III Torremolinos, Malaga, Mijas, Gibraltar & Morocco (N. Africa)

2004 Panama Canal San Diago, Cabo, Aculpulco, Panama Canal, Aruba & Florida

2004 Med. Cruise I: Venice, Kusadasi, Athens, Naples & Rome

2004 Med Cruise II Pisa, Monaco & Barcelona

2004 Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia & Montenegro

2003 French Art Tour I: Paris to Fontainebleau

2003 French Art Tour II: Giverny, Rouen, Caudebec, Honfleur to Caen Normandy

2003 Baltic Cruise I: Kiel Canal, Helsinki, Petersburg & Tallinn (Estonia)

2003 Baltic Cruise II: Copenhagen, Oslo & London

2003 Golden Triangle: Thailand, Burma & Laos

2002 Scotland Part I: Glasgow, Edinburgh , Hadrian's Wall & Northern Highlands

2002 Scotland Part II: Orkney Islands, Isle of Skye, Isle of Mull & Inveraray

2002 Ibiza & Formentera (Balearic Islands)

2002 Mexican Riviera: Puerto Vallarta - Mazatlan

2001 New Zealand (North and South Islands) & Fiji

2001 Voyager of Seas: Haiti, Jamaica & Mexico

2001 Mallorca in Balearic Islands

2000 Alpine Tour I: Italian Alps (includes Locarno)

2000 Alpine Tour II Swiss Alps & Liechtenstein

2000 Alpine Tour III Austrian Alps

2000 Alpine Tour IV Bavarian Alps & Southern Germany (Munich,  Dachau, Ulm, Augsburg)

2000 Virgin Islands Barbados, Antigua & St. Martinique

1999 TransAtlantic on QE2 plus London, Oxford & Cambridge

1999 Castle Stay, Tyrol in Austrian Alps

1999 Turkey Riviera and Turquoise Coast

1998 So. Africa I: Cape Town, Hout Bay & Robben Island

1998 So. Africa II Rhodes Sites, Cape Point & Whale Cruise

1998 Puerto Rico: San Juan, Ponce, Mayaguez & Luquillo

1998 Eastern Germany Part I Berlin, Brandenburg. Spandau & Potsdam

1998 Eastern Germany Part II Wittenberg, Quedlinburg, Eisenach & Erfurt

1998 Eastern Germany Part III Weimar, Dresden, Leipzig, Halle & Magdeburg

1997 Eastern Canada Part I Ontario, Quebec & Prince Edward Island

1997 Eastern Canada Part II Nova Scotia & Cape Briton Island

1997 Eastern Canada & US Part III: Campobello, Acadia, Lowell & Lake Placid

1997 African Safari:  Part I: Kenya with Nairobi,  Masai Village & Amboseli National Park

1997 African Safari Part II: Tanzania with Arusha, Serengeti, Ol Duvai Gorge & Ngorongoro Crater

1997 Balkans Part I Athens, Thermopylae, Thessaloniki & Istanbul

1997 Balkans Part II Bucharest (Romania) Veliko Tarnovo & Sofia (Bulgaria)

1997 Balkans Part III Peloponnese (Epidaurus, Naplion, Mycennae & Corinth)

1996 Danube River Cruise I: Vienna, Austria

1996 Danube River Cruise II : Hungary

1996 Danube River Cruise III: Hungary, Slovakia & Germany

1996 Andalusian Spain  I Torremolinos & Seville

1996 Andalusian Spain Part II Malaga, Cordoba Granada, Ronda, Nerja

1996 North Africa: (w/Gibraltar ), Tangiers & Casablanca in Morocco                                

1995 Ireland Part I Shannon, Dingle, Ring of Kerry & Blarney

1995 Ireland Part II Cobh, Waterford, Wexford, Glenalough & Dublin

1995 Ireland Part III Boyne Valley, Sligo, Donegal, Balleyshannon & Cliffs of Moher

1995 Central Spain:  Madrid, Segovia, Avila & El Escorial

1993 Brazil: (Miami),  Rio de Janeiro and Petropolis

1993 Bahamas Cruise: Freeport & Nassau

1992 Fred Conducted European Tour Part I: UK, Holland & Belgium

1992 Fred Conducted European Tour Part II: France & Switzerland

1992 Fred Conducted European Tour Part III: Germany & Austria

1992 Fred Conducted European Tour Part IV: Italy (Venice, Florence, Rome & Pompei)

1992 Fred Conducted European Tour Part V Greece (Patras, Delphi & Athens)

1980s Part I Fred conducted College Tours of Northwestern US

1980 Part II Fred conducted College Tours Southwest; Southern US

1980s Part III Fred conducted College Tours of Northeastern US

1980s Part IV Fred conducted College Tours of Mid-West US

1980s Part V Fred conducted College Tours of Alaska & Hawaii

1970s Wulff Family Life

1970s PhD Program: TCU, Oxford Studies in England & UWM Live-In Indian Seminar

1960s "Eggheads " of DML College

1960s St. Paul's Lutheran School, Franklin WI

1960s Wulff Family Life

Stored OWLS events

Archives of the Class of 1956







2012 OWLS National Convention Mankato MN





2012 Previous OWLS meetings