Posts tagged ‘African American’

EVENT: Finding African America Roots – From Oral History Back to Slavery

Shamele Jordon will use her personal research, as well as her professional experiences to help attendees understand opportunities and new approaches to uncover the sometimes complex trail faced by African Americans in researching family history.

Continue Reading January 31, 2010 at 9:07 pm Leave a comment

Guion Bluford: First African American in Space

The first African American to fly in space and the woman astronaut who helped rescue the Hubble Telescope will join other NASA heroes in the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame this June.

Guion “Guy” Bluford became the first Black person in space as a member of the first space shuttle crew to launch and land at night.Guion Bluford

Until 2007, Kathy Thornton held the record for the longest spacewalk by a woman. She was paired with astronaut Tom Akers to repair Hubble during two of the mission’s five spacewalks, “including the installation of COSTAR, or the Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement, which served as contact lenses to refocus light bouncing off Hubble’s primary mirror,” according to Collectspace.com.

Bluford’s four space flights opened the door for other African-American astronauts.

“We had to, as a crew, figure out the techniques that were required to launch the thing at night and as well as land the thing at night,” Bluford told collectSPACE in 2002 on the anniversary of his first mission in 1983. That flight, the STS-8 mission, was dedicated to deploying a multipurpose India-built satellite and conducting medical measurements to understand the effects of space flight on the human body. Bluford’s other missions included the first of the German-directed Spacelab science flights (STS-61A in 1985) and two Department of Defense-dedicated missions (STS-39 in 1991 and STS-53 in 1992).

“I feel very proud of being a trailblazer with reference to space flight, particularly for African-Americans,” he said. “I recognize I was one of several African Americans that came into the program, and I think we have all made significant contributions to the program.”

During her mission to repair Hubble, Thornton also jettisoned one of the telescope’s damaged solar arrays.

“It looks like a bird,” she commented, as the large array began to flap as the result of the shuttle’s thrusters being fired.

In addition to her work on Hubble, Thornton flew on three other shuttle missions, including STS-33, a 1989 defense flight; STS-73, also with Bowersox; and the 1992 maiden flight of orbiter Endeavour, during which she served as the spacewalk coordinator, or IVA officer, for the only three-person EVA in history. She then made a spacewalk of her own, demonstrating “how not to build a space station.”

December 19, 2009 at 2:36 pm Leave a comment

America’s Last Plantation

While not the sole factor, historic discrimination has helped drive Black farmers out of the business in huge numbers, many of them losing their homes, their farms, and their land. While 14% of all farmers were Black at the turn of the last century, by 2002 only 1.4% were Black.

Continue Reading May 17, 2009 at 6:17 pm Leave a comment


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Speaker Opportunities

Would you like to be a speaker at an AAGG meeting?

AAGG receives a number of speaking requests throughout the year, and in order to provide the requested speaking support the Speakers Bureau needs genealogy speakers. The Speakers’ Bureau is a volunteer-driven service to promote genealogical research in the African American community. If you are interested in being a speaker for the Speakers’ Bureau, please contact send an e-mail to: info@aagg.org.

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