December 28 - Good Idea / Bad Idea

Posted on December 28, 2017

It's not so easy to sort out good ideas from bad ones.

And when you consider the mixed motivations behind ideas - wow! What a mess of good-and-bad you generally get!

Once upon a time, in a young nation increasingly divided over slavery, a man who was part African American and part Native American had an idea. He knew how difficult life in America was for non-white people - although he himself was a successful businessman! 

Paul Cuffee built a shipping empire, but he also was an activist. He was involved in the abolition movement - the efforts to end slavery in America - and he built the first racially-integrated school in Westport, Massachusetts. 

Here was his idea: Let's settle freed American slaves in Africa. 

Remember, Cuffee had an African father and was passionate about ending slavery and making life in America better for African Americans. I can see not an iota of bad motivations in him.

Cuffee didn't just sit around thinking his idea - he talked about it to other free black people and to members of both the British government and the American government. He was able to create enough support that he took 38 black Americans to the British colony of Sierra Leone.

The very next year Cuffee died, so he did no further work on his idea. But the idea didn't die.

On this date in 1816, a group called the American Colonization Society was founded. It, too, supported the migration of free African Americans to Africa.

This organization seemed to be headed by only white men. I looked to see how free black Americans greeted the startup of the ACS, but I couldn't see much support. Instead, I read that many free black people were against the Society and skeptical of its motivations and its goals.



No wonder! The group was made up of an unlikely blend: White abolitionists who were staunchly against slavery, who believed that the enslavement of people was evil and should be eliminated from the nation and the world, on the one hand, and white slave owners who stood by the institution of slavery, on the other!

No matter whether they were pro-slavery or anti-slavery, the white people who started the American Colonization Society were worried about free black people in America. Some white folks were rightly concerned about the prejudice black people faced and, they were sure, would continue to face. Some white folks were anxious that the presence of free black people would encourage enslaved people to run away or revolt. Some white folks were certain that black people were inferior in intellect and in morals, and they didn't want a bunch of them integrating into white society. Even many of the abolitionists were racist in the extreme.

The ACS helped more than 13,000 Americans emigrate to Africa - and the colony they helped found became the independent nation of Liberia. (Read more about Liberia here and here.)




December 27 – Nation Smashes a Bar!

Posted on December 27, 2017

The story of Carry Nation is really crazy to me.

She was a woman who faced tragedy - her first husband was a heavy drinker, and he died young from his alcohol abuse - and who had little power to make a difference in her own life or in society. In the 1800s, when Nation lived, women couldn't vote or hold most elected offices, and women were not allowed to gain educations or jobs in many fields. 

Still, some women did work for the betterment of society.

And Carry Nation was positive that society would be much better if men didn't drink so much alcohol. As a matter of fact, she thought alcohol was so bad, it should be illegal.

She was wrong, in my opinion.

I know very well that drinking alcohol can lead to problems. Driving after drinking can be deadly - including deadly to innocent victims - and of course it's against the law. Alcohol abuse and alcoholism are huge problems for many. 

But, even though I don't drink even a smidge of alcohol, many, many people enjoy drinking wine, beer, and/or cocktails, and they drink responsibly. 

Also - and this is important - making alcohol illegal doesn't mean that nobody drinks alcohol. As a matter of fact, making it illegal makes more problems than it solves - as the U.S. was about to find out, thanks to people like Carry Nation.

Anyway, Carry Nation meant well as she worked with others to eliminate alcohol from America, and she also put in effort on other important issues such as women's right to vote.

In 1880, Kansas became the first state to outlaw the production and sale of alcohol. However, the new ban wasn't enforced fairly - or, in some places, much at all. Nation began to think that her usual non-violent methods weren't enough.

And then she did something that was very, very wrong:

On this date in 1900, she went into a hotel bar in Kansas, and she used a hatchet to smash up the place. She didn't hurt anyone, but she caused thousands of dollars in damage.


Of course, Nation was put in jail for doing that!

But only for a short time - and a weird thing happened - Carry Nation became famous!

Well, maybe the fact that she became famous wasn't that weird, but I found it surprising that she became famous IN A GOOD WAY - for some people, at least.

Nation began to carry her hatchet around with her as she gave speeches about the evils of alcohol - and once in a while she smashed up other bars!







Like I said, some people admired her, and Nation sold souvenir hatchets to her fans in order to pay her expenses as she traveled about, giving speeches.

She was fighting a losing fight against alcohol.


I call it a "losing fight" because, even though Nation and others who urged support of "temperance" and therefore a ban on alcohol SEEMED to win when alcohol was banned in 1920 (this ban is called Prohibition), the alcohol ban was soon repealed, in 1933.

What do you think about a famous person smashing others' property and selling souvenir hatchets? It's all very weird, right?



December 26 – Junkanoo!

Posted on December 26, 2017

Today is celebrated as Boxing Day and as the Second Day of Christmas (see below for both), in many different nations. It is also Junkanoo in the Bahamas!

I've already written about Junkanoo Parade Day in the Bahamas, in the Caribbean, which occurs in July. But the street parade that is called Junkanoo also occurs on Boxing Day (today!) and on New Year's Day.

Check out the-day-after-Christmas, Bahamas style. And remember, the Bahamas is in the Northern Hemisphere, so these islands ARE experiencing winter...Just a pretty tropical version of winter!









Also on this date: