CincinnatiLocated on the banks of the Ohio River, Cincinnati was incorporated as a town in 1802. It became a major stop on the Underground Railroad and the gateway to the North for thousands of African Americans during the Great Migration after the Civil War. Cincinnati's African American heritage is revealed here through fascinating images of African American life in the community, churches, education, politics, entrepreneurship, civil rights, community benevolence, and sports. |
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Contents
Acknowledgments 69 | 6 |
An Underground Railroad with a Religious Highway | 23 |
A Beacon of Light in the Education Wilderness | 45 |
A Vote with a Voice | 79 |
A Quest for Civil Rights during Uncivil Times | 99 |
Real People Giving Real Service | 113 |
Bibliography | 127 |
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Common terms and phrases
African American African American community African American woman Americans in Cincinnati antislavery Archives and Rare basketball became Cincinnati Archives Cincinnati Historical Society civil rights Club Coney Island Dabney Dana Blackwell DeHart Hubbard Donald Spencer Douglass School Eckstein Errostine European American Ezzard Charles Fred Shuttlesworth free African Americans freedom Gaines High School graduated from UC Hamilton County INCINNA Ken Blackwell Kentucky left to right Lincoln Heights lived Lockland Luther King Jr Manggrum Marian Spencer Martin Luther King mayor Medal migrated to Cincinnati Mount Zion Mount Zion Baptist moved to Cincinnati NAACP National Negro Ohio General Assembly Olympics Otis Moss Jr pastor Paul Hogue photograph police president Rare Books Library second row segregated slave slavery Stowe school Street teacher Ted Berry third from left Underground Railroad Union Baptist University of Cincinnati Walnut Hills WCIN-AM West End wife William women Woodlawn Xavier University Zion Baptist Church