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Old 02-13-2018, 04:10 PM   #76
A1.
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you are Black and you made history
For being an "outing whore" ....
Congratulations
Houston Knows Everything and it wasn't disputed not once.

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Old 02-13-2018, 05:09 PM   #77
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Oscar Dunn

(1826–1871)

Oscar James Dunn became the Louisiana's lieutenant governor in 1868. He was one of the first black men to hold executive office in the United States. Learn more

Oscar James Dunn became one of the first black men to serve in an executive political position in the United States when he was elected lieutenant governor of Louisiana in 1868. It was at this time—a short period during Reconstruction—that many African Americans ascended to power in the state’s highest offices. In an era when Dunn’s race alone would have drawn derision, even his political opponents reported that he was incorruptible and a man of integrity. No political scandals were ever brought against him, which was rare for a politician in the chaotic post-Civil War environment of the defeated Confederacy. His early death at age 45 perhaps prevented him from being a United States senator or potential vice-presidential candidate.

Dunn was born in 1826; his father, James, had been emancipated in 1819 by James H. Caldwell, founder of the St. Charles Theatre and the New Orleans Gas Light Company. James subsequently purchased the freedom of his wife, Maria, and their two children, Oscar and Jane, in 1832. James was a carpenter and Maria operated a boarding house for actors in New Orleans. Oscar apprenticed as a plasterer. He also became a respected violinist and taught private lessons.

Political Calling

During the Civil War, Dunn did not serve in an active capacity. Near the end of the four-year conflict, he opened an employment agency where freedmen described as “good servants and field hands” were hired out to residents of New Orleans and surrounding parishes. Working in collaboration with the newly freed laboring class of African Americans, Dunn championed their struggle for freedom and became a strong advocate of land ownership for blacks, education for all black children, and equal protection laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. He became secretary of the Advisory Committee of the Freedmen’s Saving and Trust Company of New Orleans, a branch of the national agency. In 1866, he organized the People’s Bakery, an enterprise owned and operated by the Louisiana Association of Workingmen.

Dunn’s sympathy and desire to aid the cause of freedom and universal suffrage would be a stepping stone into politics and elective office. Reconstruction-era politics were brutal and often resulted in violent outbreaks across the defeated Confederacy as freedmen, carpetbaggers, and Radical Republicans began to wrest power from the white supremacist establishment of the antebellum South. A dispute between President Andrew Johnson and Congress came to a head when the forces in Congress who blamed the South for the Civil War won a majority. The enactment of Reconstruction Acts (1867) called for five military districts with commanders and the registration of blacks as voters as well as a new state constitution—with federal approval—before states could be readmitted to the Union. Louisiana and Texas comprised the Fifth District, with General Philip H. Sheridan as commander. In August of that year, Sheridan appointed Dunn to the Board of Aldermen of New Orleans. Dunn exhibited a “clear vision of the city’s civic needs,” observed biographer A. E. Perkins. It was Dunn’s acumen as a councilman that brought about public education for the city and later for the state. He chaired a committee charged with altering Article 5, which addressed the enrollment age of children attending public schools. He set the ages between 6 and 18 without distinction of color and placed responsibility for education on the Board of Aldermen. Although the resolution was laid on the table, his move to enact such an ordinance was realized in the Constitutional Convention of 1867-68, when a similar law was enacted and become one of the most progressive actions taken in opening all schools to all races. Other issues Dunn took on included the establishment of an efficient firefighting system, the requirement that qualified electors should hold appointments, a reconfiguring of the chain of command at City Hall to place it under the general supervision of the mayor, and the creation of council rules for operation.

Lieutenant Governor

After Congress approved Louisiana’s new constitution, elections to state offices were conducted. In 1868, Dunn would become the candidate for lieutenant governor when the wealthy and highly educated octoroon Francis E. Dumas—the highest-ranking non-white officer in the Union Army and a former slave-owning proprietor of a sugar plantation—refused the nomination. Dunn was drafted and ran on a ticket with gubernatorial candidate Henry C. Warmoth, a carpetbagger from Illinois whom Dunn had befriended. Warmoth and Dunn won the election based on the newly enfranchised black voting bloc and the exclusion of former Confederates from the polls. As the new state legislature took its oath on June 30, Dunn led a movement to require an additional oath for new legislators. He wanted state senators to take a stringent “test oath” to declare that they had not fought against the US or had aided those who did, and an African American colleague in the House requested the same oath of its members. To avoid a confrontation, a letter from President Ulysses S. Grant resolved the matter by requiring only the oath in the Louisiana Constitution be used in the swearing in of the legislature. Dunn not only discharged his duties as lieutenant governor but also was president of the Metropolitan Police, an integrated militia that protected the Radical Republican administration under Gov. William Pitt Kellogg. Dunn was also a member of the Printing Committee and president of the Board for the Distribution of Pensions to Veterans.

Political Strife

Shortly after the election, Dunn realized that Warmoth was not the friend of freedmen and Louisiana that he had thought. Warmoth’s personal ambitions created divisions within the Republican Party. When he was unable to discharge his duties, Dunn stepped in and performed so well that even his bitter opponents in the Democratic press complimented his skills. The acrimonious factional strife between the governor and the lieutenant governor widened when Warmoth was unable to control the Executive Committee and its leadership fell to Dunn. When Dunn captured the Republican State Convention’s chairmanship, some historians claim that he was on track to become governor of Louisiana in the 1872 election. From that post, many believe he would have been elected to the US Senate and then eventually would have become a potential choice for vice president.

The “Customhouse Group” branch of the Republican Party, which opposed Warmoth, included numerous federal appointees and had the support of President Grant, whose wife Julia’s brother-in-law, James F. Casey, was collector of customs. Along with US Marshal Stephen B. Packard, the group moved to abandon Warmoth. Many accused him of appointing Democrats to key positions, and his veto of a civil rights bill and other key legislative efforts rankled more progressive Republicans. The governor’s supporters withdrew and formed a “rump” convention that was disapproved by President Grant and most Republican state officials.

Mysterious Death

At this critical point in Reconstruction, on November 20, 1871, Dunn became violently ill. Within two days he was dead. Speculation and unanswered questions surrounded his untimely death. Some researchers say it was caused by foul play, with poisoning most assumed to be the cause. Four doctors were called at various points during his mysterious illness; all four physicians pronounced Dunn’s cause of death as “congestion of the brain.” One doctor added an additional statement that said death was due to excessive vomiting.

In 1866 Dunn had married Ellen Boyd Marchand, a widow. He adopted her three children, Fannie, Charles, and Emma. The couple had no children of their own. His funeral was held at St. James African Methodist Episcopal Church on North Roman Street. Mississippi Secretary of State James Lynch delivered the eulogy. The twelve-block-long funeral procession was reportedly witnessed by approximately fifty thousand people along Canal Street. The Louisiana State House, public schools, city hall and all federal buildings were closed as a sign of respect. Dunn was interred at St. Louis Cemetery No. 3.

From:
http://www.knowlouisiana.org/entry/oscar-dunn-2
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Old 02-13-2018, 05:32 PM   #78
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Girl stop! I see you breaking out all your fake handles talking to yourself, commenting with yourself back to back. You have been following me around since I lived in Denver. I should be old pussy to you by now. Aren't you tired of following me ?

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1+1 seems to speculate a lot and has no facts.
Don't you remember when your 1+1 fake handle was banned cus you make up all kinds of bullshit.

I see you wish you were black, I guess that's why you want to take over the black history month thread.
I live what you want to be....you can have this thread.
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Old 02-13-2018, 05:40 PM   #79
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Baby Dolls

As part of the Mardi Gras celebration in New Orleans, a new krewe called the baby dolls was formed in 1912. The baby dolls were a group of black prostitutes who worked in an area outside the legal red-light district called (black) Storyville. They would dress up on Mardi Gras to out-do the red-light district workers. Their name was said to originate from the nickname already given to the women by their pimps: baby dolls.

The style of the baby doll in the Mardi Gras celebration was tight or skimpy clothing, some adorned with money and cigars, throwing it at the observing men. Their instruments included the washboard, the kazoo, the guitar, and a big No. 3 tub for the bass drum. Throughout the years, the women expanded their group, collecting dues and possibly becoming the first women’s organization in the Mardi Gras celebration. Their styles then varied, even being dressed as actual babies, or baby dolls, depending on the group.

As debutante balls took over and the traditions of Mardi Gras changed, the baby dolls faded for decades. However, after Hurricane Katrina, a new group honoring the women called the 504 Eloquent Baby Dolls of New Orleans formed. This is the newest group of baby dolls, as others in existence include the Gold Digger Baby Dolls, the Treme Million Dollar Baby Dolls and the Ernie K-Doe Baby Dolls.

While the tradition started with local prostitutes of the Storyville area, the new groups of baby dolls urge to bring back cultural tradition and entertainment on Fat Tuesday. The groups are comprised of women from different professions, including a professional dance troupe.

The culture behind the baby dolls groups is explained through an exhibit at the Louisiana State Museum. In addition, Kim Marie Vaz, Associate Dean at Xavier University in New Orleans has released “The Baby Dolls: Breaking the Race and Gender Barriers of the New Orleans Mardi Gras Tradition.” Their history is also told in the book “Gumbo Ya-Ya” (1947).
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Old 02-13-2018, 05:45 PM   #80
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WELL NOW!! THERES THAT!! LOL..

HAPPY FAT TUESDAY BITCHES!!

VERY IRISH ANNIE!

XXOO ANN
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Old 02-14-2018, 04:41 AM   #81
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Originally Posted by annie@christophers View Post
Says a chick that not only lives in a trailer but carries it round with her.. lmaof. Priceless...

Xxoo annie

Etta fitzgerald??
I think Annie’s Irish eyes are combining Etta James & Ella Fitzgerald both talented legends.
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Old 02-14-2018, 06:57 AM   #82
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Free Annie!
I'll get Ella Fitzgerald up
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Old 02-14-2018, 08:43 AM   #83
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She is banned again? Lol
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Old 02-15-2018, 02:51 PM   #84
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She is banned again? Lol
Lost count



Social media star causing a backlash after blasting black men who only date white women

https://nypost.com/2017/10/06/white-...e-white-women/
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