Decolonize Black History Month

Day 01: Drusilla Dunjee Houston

In 1926, Harpers Ferry-born Drusilla Dunjee Houston published Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire Book 1: Nations of the Cushite Empire, marvelous Facts from Authentic Records. Houston's work, and its sequel, shared her historical findings of the ancient African civilization. Research highlighting Africa's past was rare at this time and Houston's texts have been a continuous influence on succeeding historians.

Houston was born on January 20, 1876 into a Baptist missionary family. She was one of ten children. In addition to being a historian, she was a playwright, a poet, editor of a newspaper, a pianist, and a religious director. Houston founded McAlester Seminary for Girls, as well as the Oklahoma Vocational Institute for Fine Arts and Crafts. She also helped to establish the Dogen Reading Room and the Oklahoma chapters of the YWCA, the NAACP and the Red Cross. Though she was undoubtedly an intellectual, Houston never received formal higher education.
When manhood is shackled, into its place
Nature oft forces a courageous race
Of women, who with heroic spirit,
Stamp within unborn children the merit
Denied their fathers. For what man’s disdain
Keeps from one generation, the next will gain.
from America's Uncrowned Queens, 1917.

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