TCU Daily Skiff Thursday, February 26, 2004
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What's your B.H.I.Q.?
(Black history intelligence quotient)

Black History Month began with historian Carter G. Woodson, who early in the last century came up with the idea for a “Negro History Week,” which he envisioned as a celebration of black history and achievement, as well as a time for education.

In 1926, with the support of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, the first “Negro History Week” was held during the second week in February. The timing was meant to honor the birthdays of abolitionist Frederick Douglass and President Lincoln. Over the years, the event grew in popularity, and in the early 1970s, the association (which later changed its name, replacing the word “Negro” with “Afro-American”) expanded the celebration and renamed it “Black History Month.”
Illustration
Illustrations by Ron Coddington/krt
Reflections on Black History Month

Students celebrate the value of black culture through their stories and personal experiences with involvement.
Did you know ...

Black History Month was created from Negro History Week, which was launched by Carter Woodson in 1926. Woodson, who was born to former slaves, began his high school education at age 20. He noticed his history books lacked any recognition of black Americans’ accomplishments and focused on their inferior jobs. Woodson founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History in 1915 in order to bring attention to blacks’ accomplishments.
 
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