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African American
In reply to the discussion: Black history that doesn't make it into the history books v2.0 [View all]Chitown Kev
(2,197 posts)74. Well...here was something I just learned about a couple of weeks ago.
African Americans and Cuba's First Experiment in Tourism: The Joe Louis Commission in Post Revolutionary Havana, 1959-1960
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December 31, 1959 Havana, Cuba
...This enlarged his personal powers and involved him directly in the administration of all new government programs. As president of the National Tourist Institute, Castro launched a campaign to revive Cubas tourist industry.
During the spring of 1959, Castro contacted former boxing champion Joe Louis through Rowe-Louis-Fischer-Lockhart, Inc., an advertising firm based in New York City. Joe Louis and Billy Rowe, a former columnist with the Pittsburgh Courier, had been long-time friends and partners in this advertising business since 1935. The former heavy weight champion helped Rowe recruit clients, made commercial appearances, and participated in social and promotional events arranged by wealthy businessmen who wanted to bask in the fame and national prominence of the Brown Bomber.
Castro, who witnessed the glory years of Louiss boxing career as a Cuban youth in the 1930s, also admired Louiss athletic achievements and his struggle against overwhelming disadvantages as the son of an Alabama sharecropper and great grandson of a slave. The accomplishments of the former boxing champion captured the imagination of African America, elevated the Brown Bomber to the status of the first black hero in white America, and made Joe Louis an international celebrity among colonial subjects who had battled the ravages of American and European imperialism. The Cuban leader also understood that Joe Louis could provide the first serious link with middle-class African Americans. They had tourist dollars to spend but were prohibited by Jim Crow restrictions that were standard problems for African American travelers throughout resort venues in the Caribbean. Louis eventually assembled an impressive delegation of seventy-one prominent leaders, personalities, and newspaper editors who were all well-known throughout black America. Noted members of this delegation included: John H. Sengstacke, Sr., publisher and general editor of the Chicago Daily Defender, the largest black owned daily in the world, and co-founder and past president of the National Negro Publishers Association; Attorney Loren Miller, the editor-publisher and legal counsel for the California Eagle; and Carl Murphy, editor and publisher of the Baltimore Afro-American. Other participants represented the Pittsburgh Courier, the New Orleans Louisiana Weekly, the Los Angeles Sentinel, the Ohio Sentinel, the Philadelphia Tribune, Johnson Publications (Ebony Magazine and Jet Magazine), the Cleveland Call Post, True Magazine, and the New York Amsterdam News.
The Joe Louis Commission was given official governmental recognition in Cuba but in the United States the white press viewed this effort as solely another commercial venture by the former boxing champion desperately seeking to satisfy pressing financial obligations. As American-Cuban diplomatic relations rapidly deteriorated in 1960, Louiss activities in the island were chastised as supportive of a communist inspired regime. The mindset of Cold War policy makers and their anticommunism supporters viewed indigenous challenges to American international supremacy as Communist orchestrated. Ironically, while Louis was attacked, white owned corporations continued to do business with the new revolutionary government.
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December 31, 1959 Havana, Cuba
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Amazing story of the partnerships between black escaped slaves and the native americans
Baobab
May 2016
#72
One set of events that was instrumental in the creation of an underclass was the biggest mistake
Baobab
May 2016
#73
That piece of history also mind blowing. I do know that in one of the old 'wards' in Houston,
freshwest
Jul 2015
#20
Destroying a people with by hiding their history. The truth should've been taught all along!
freshwest
Jul 2015
#19
National Museum of African American History to Display Photos of the Gullah People
Number23
Mar 2014
#5
That's a pretty awesome thread to find from the archives by Brewman_Jax, 23.. Mahalo!
Cha
Jul 2015
#14
M0rpheus, an exceptional DUer, PM'd me and suggested that I pin these two threads to the top
Number23
Jul 2015
#16
Oh, thanks for the history on that and what BrewmanJax is doing now, 23! Yeah, it's too bad about
Cha
Jul 2015
#17
I discovered an amazing historical connection between a black Canadian doctor and Lincoln's...
Spazito
Aug 2015
#22
This is probably the most awesome thing anyone has ever said about ANY group on DU
Number23
Aug 2015
#26
Thanks, xfundy. I think this is one example where it actually DID make it into the history
Number23
Aug 2015
#30
One of the things I love so much about this thread is its international flavor
Number23
Nov 2015
#42
This is such a beautiful contribution to this thread. I love the international flavor here
Number23
Jan 2016
#47
This is amazing. The list of Nazi victims is immense but this is the first time that I've seen peopl
Number23
Jan 2016
#52
You are absolutely right. The US does not and never has cornered the market on racism
Number23
Jan 2016
#54
Girl, THIS kind of thing right here is why every day that you don't post you are so sorely missed!!!
Number23
Mar 2016
#57
Freaking fabulous. How come stuff like this is hardly ever on the History Channel??
Number23
Mar 2016
#63
I love this thread too! It's the best one on DU. I am so glad that Brewman_Jaxx started it
Number23
Mar 2016
#65
Never Forget: America’s Forgotten Mass Lynching: When 237 Black Sharecroppers Were Murdered In AR
MrScorpio
May 2016
#70
Mr. S, a great contribution. There are so many Rosewoods and similar in American history
Number23
May 2016
#71
I have to say, this thread and its creator -- Brewman Jaxx -- are the absolute best this web site
Number23
Jun 2016
#78