copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
Yocum African American History Association | Changing Perspectives . . . The Yocum African American History Association (YAAHA) is a 501 (c) (3) organization dedicated to sharing educational resources about Black history and providing historical milestones that prove that Black history is American history
Resources | Yocum African American History Association Black history is American history, and the Yocum African American History Association (YAAHA) provides lesson plans, PowerPoints, videos, Illustrations, and other resources to convey the breadth of this history These lesson plans are divided into four 100-year sections starting with 1619 and ending with 2019
About Us | Yocum African American History Association Yocum African American History Association (YAAHA) is dedicated to finding new ways for our talented board members to bring lesson plans, storytellers, and performances that will enrich the lives of your children, grandchildren, and adults to help spread this rich Black history at the grassroots level
Shop - Yocum African American History Association We are a 501 (c) (3) organization dedicated to sharing educational resources about black American history Read our up-to-date news page to view our progress and newsworthy mentions as we broaden the knowledge of the public by making available documented African American history
Board Members - Yocum African American History Association The Yocum African American History Association (YAAHA) is dedicated to bringing powerful stories of heroes and leaders who made a difference in our country and teaching that in every milestone in American history, Blacks were there
A Black Man’s Court Case Legalized Slavery | Yocum African American . . . Did you know that a black man, Anthony Johnson, won a court case in Northampton County Court in 1655 to keep his slave, John Casor, and the ruling became the first legal sanction of slavery in America? Johnson arrived in Jamestown in 1619, was treated as an indentured servant and eventually became a prosperous land and slave owner Casor claimed that he was an indentured servant and not
Yocum African American History Association can experience from the era of slavery until modern times In this landmark history, Yocum and Rice promote awareness and preserve significant information and material that ca truction, Jim Crow, the Civil Rights movement, and beyond This history documents the profound impact that African-Americans hav
Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom - Yocum African American History . . . In 1848, Ellen and William Craft devised an unusual and successful plan to escape slavery in the deep South of Macon, Georgia Within eight days after devising the plan, they were free from the constraints of slavery Ellen was the daughter of her first master and his black slave Ellen looked white and was often mistaken for her first master’s widow’s child Annoyed, the widow gave Ellen