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Posted: 2024-02-06T17:12:35Z | Updated: 2024-02-08T18:08:54Z Why Is Black History Month In February, The Shortest Month? | HuffPost Life

Why Is Black History Month In February, The Shortest Month?

This is what Black History Month really signifies.
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People often question why Black History Month happens in February, the shortest month in the calendar year. 

Historians say theres a simple answer: Black History Month which began in 1926 as Negro History Week  is in February because it coincides with the birthdays of two important figures in the abolitionist movement: President Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass.

February 12 is the birth date of Lincoln, who signed the Emancipation Proclamation  in 1863, freeing enslaved people in the Confederate states. February 14 is the birth date abolitionist, and orator Frederick Douglass chose for himself after escaping slavery in 1838.

There was no sinister reason for Februarys selection, said Burnis R. Morris, a professor of journalism and mass communications at Marshall University and a biographer of Carter G. Woodson,  the creator of Negro History Week whod later be called The Father of Black History Month.

Morris told HuffPost, The study of Black History has two periods: before Woodson and after Woodson.

Woodson, who was born in 1875 in Virginia to formerly enslaved parents, wanted to honor the heritage and achievements of Black Americans in the wake of emancipation.

Sixty years after the end of slavery, those contributions had largely been ignored in history books, or worse, distorted and misrepresented, said LaGarrett King, a professor and director of the Center for K-12 Black History and Racial Literacy Education at the University at Buffalo. 

When Black peoples history was written, the narratives painted Black people as savages who had to be saved by Europeans, he told HuffPost. Additionally, slavery was written as a sort of humane act, and it was suggested that Black people were actually happy during enslavement.

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Heritage Art/Heritage Image via Getty Images // Bettmann via Getty Images
A pin featuring Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, who both have birthdays that fall during Black History Month. To the right, a photo of Carter G. Woodson, whos known as The Father of Black History Month.

As founder of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, Woodson was intent on changing that perception and altering the trajectory of Black Americans.

He wrote five Black history textbooks, conducted home study courses, and developed a teachers journal to help teachers teach Black history, King said.

Woodson was bullheaded on his mission, said Morris, because he feared Blacks would be candidates for extermination if they and the broader public did not learn about their past.

Through the books and articles he and his associates published on Black history, Woodson grabbed the attention of the nation and world.

In his work, he emphasized the education side and also the need to improve race relations, Morris said. Negro History Week was widely celebrated by many Black people and the Black press. In segregated America, even white people and the mainstream press in a number of communities joined the annual celebrations. 

The creation of Negro History Week happened at an opportune, much-needed time, said Devin Fergus, a professor of history and Black studies at the University of Missouri and a John Hope Franklin fellow.

In the broader context of the 1920s, it can be said that Negro History Week was created to push back against things like colonization, eugenics  and racialized immigration policies which were affecting all folks of color who are in the U.S., he said. 

The push for a more outsized celebration rather than just a week picked up steam as a result of the Civil Rights and the Black Power movements of the late 1960s and early 1970s, Fergus told HuffPost.

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Wally McNamee via Getty Images
Protesters at the landmark civil rights demonstration, the March on Washington. Protest and political awakening ushered in a push for a longer Black History Month.

Black educators and students at Kent State University in Portage County, Ohio, proposed the first Black History Month in February 1969 . In 1976, President Gerald Ford proclaimed it an official national celebration.

We can seize the opportunity to honor the too-often neglected accomplishments of Black Americans in every area of endeavor through our history, he said at the time

Since then, every U.S. president has officially designated February Black History Month. Other countries around the world, including Canada and the United Kingdom, have followed suit: Canada celebrates in February as well, while the U.K. observes it in October.

Today, some worry that Black History Month has been tokenized and diluted. As a Washington, D.C. elementary school teacher told The Atlantic in 2016,  having a month for black history compartmentalizes the issue, as if once the month is over we can turn our attention away from it again until the next year. 

That may be a fair argument, but one month is better than never. In the last few years, a growing number of states, particularly Florida , have limited how schools can teach about race.  Predominantly white parent school boards have removed books from the library that they say promote critical race theory and make white children feel inferior to minorities.

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Alejandra Villa Loarca/Newsday LLC via Getty Images
A case displaying books for Black History Month at the Elmont Memorial Library in Elmont, New York, on Jan. 29, 2021.

Some question Black History Months usefulness, but currently, Black history isnt often taught in classrooms despite what conservative activists say , King said.

When it is taught, its typically, it is taught poorly; studies have indicated that most state social studies curriculum do not do a good job in presenting a holistic Black history education, only focusing on slavery, reconstruction, and the Civil Rights Movement, he said. 

In an ideal academic world, Black History Month should be the annual culmination of a year-long commitment to including Black history in our national story, the professor said. Woodson himself believed Black history should be studied throughout the year, not just for a scant week or month. 

The biggest misconception is that Black History Month is the time for teaching Black history, King said. Actually, BHM was created to be a celebration of the Black history that was taught throughout the year. February was essentially an assessment and showcase of Black history learning.

Before You Go

Black History Books
(01 of23)
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Isabel Wilkerson shines a light on the human stories behind the mass movement of black people in the rural South to Northern, Eastern and Western cities after 1915. (Find it here. ) (credit:Vintage)
(02 of23)
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An inside look at the Civil Rights Movement, from one of its most prominent figures. (Find it here. ) (credit:Simon and Schuster)
(03 of23)
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This economic history argues that the evolution of American capitalism was deeply intertwined with slave labor, and documents the inhuman cruelties of the domestic slave trade and productivity pushes that allowed the cotton trade to burgeon in the South. (Find it here. ) (credit:Basic Books)
(04 of23)
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Family Properties explores an oft-forgotten historical injustice: redlining, a practice by which federal agencies denied mortgage insurance to buyers in black or integrated areas. Redlining rapidly drove segregation and left black families prey to exploitative sellers. Beryl Satter, whose father battled these injustices as a Chicago lawyer, paints both a personal and a sweeping portrait of the phenomenon. (Find it here. ) (credit:Metropolitan Books)
(05 of23)
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For anyone who remains unclear on the problem with white feminism, Killing the Black Body makes it eminently clear. Dorothy Roberts lays out the many distinct ways black womens reproductive rights have been systemically infringed upon, such as forced sterilization injustices which have often been ignored by a mainstream feminism focused on white, middle-class womens concerns. (Find it here. ) (credit:Vintage)
(06 of23)
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A portrait of a legendary Supreme Court justice as a lawyer, Devil in the Grove catches up with Thurgood Marshall shortly before he brought the seminal Brown v Board of Education suit The book focuses on Marshalls defense of four young black men in Florida targeted by prosecutors and the KKK after a young white woman made rape allegations. (Find it here. ) (credit:Harper Perennial)
(07 of23)
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Ibram X. Kendi examines how racist ideas were spread throughout American history in this sweeping, award-winning history of thought. Bonus: He recently published a reading list in The New York Times, consisting of 24 books he describes as the most influential books on race and the black experience published in the United States for each decade of the nations existence. (Find it here. ) (credit:Nation Books)
(08 of23)
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A detailed history of an influential Chicago-based newspaper that gave voice to the black community, The Defender traces the publication from its founding in 1905 to its role in speaking out about Jim Crow to its profound impact on politics in the middle of the century. (Find it here. ) (credit:Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
(09 of23)
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The Original Black Elite demonstrates the crushing power of Jim Crow by telling the story of Daniel Murray, a black man who, along with a cohort of outstanding contemporaries, achieved wealth and status in the post-Civil War era -- until their assimilation into the white upper class was stymied by the rise of segregation. (Find it here. ) (credit:Amistad)
(10 of23)
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It's always a good time to read The New Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander's chilling analysis of how black men are disproportionately targeted and more heavily punished by the criminal justice system -- and the oppressive consequences for the black community. (Find it here. ) (credit:The New Press)
(11 of23)
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In a new history of the Emmett Till case, Timothy B. Tyson recounts the horrific story of a young boy who was brutally lynched after a white woman (falsely) alleged that he made lewd comments to her. The Blood of Emmett Till weaves this infamous event, and its aftermath, into a broader story of white supremacist violence and rhetoric that extends into the present day. (Find it here. ) (credit:Simon and Schuster)
(12 of23)
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If you somehow missed this book about a black woman's DNA being exploited for decades of research -- catch up fast. This year it's becoming a movie starring Oprah . (Find it here. ) (credit:Broadway Books)
(13 of23)
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The women profiled in Hidden Figures -- which is already a major motion picture -- made meaningful, intentional contributions to the science of American space exploration, only to be largely ignored by history. (Find it here. ) (credit:William Morrow)
(14 of23)
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First published in 1872, black abolitionist William Still's contemporaneous accounts of the Underground Railroad offer a peephole into the experiences of people escaping slavery. The account is drawn directly from his interviews of the hundreds of people he aided in escape. (Find it here. ) (credit:Dover)
(15 of23)
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First published in 1933, The Mis-education of the Negro examines how the educational system itself worked against black children, teaching them not to seek out ambitious life paths. (Find it here. ) (credit:Tribeca Books)
(16 of23)
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Chancellor Williams's 1971 tome excavated the submerged history of black people in Africa and beyond. The extensively researched book unsettled the problematic common assumption that black civilization created no meaningful cultural or historical achievements. (Find it here. ) (credit:Third World Press)
(17 of23)
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In an extensive oral history, E. Patrick Johnson tells the stories of black gay men who have made their homes in the South. (Find it here. ) (credit:University of North Carolina Press)
(18 of23)
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Malcolm X collaborated with journalist Alex Haley to write his autobiography over the two years leading up to his assassination. The final result has been a landmark influence on many black thinkers and activists. (Find it here. ) (credit:Penguin Classics)
(19 of23)
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Assata Shakur's autobiography takes readers inside black activist movements of the 1970s, giving a first-person account of her involvement and of how targeting by federal agencies eventually weakened groups like the Black Panthers. (Find it here. ) (credit:Chicago Review Press)
(20 of23)
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A now-classic history of the Haitian Revolution of 1794-1803, The Black Jacobins tracks and analyzes the massive, sustained slave revolt, led by Toussaint L'Ouverture, that led to the formation of the free state of Haiti. (Find it here. ) (credit:Vintage)
(21 of23)
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The Souls of Black Folk is a groundbreaking early work of sociology, published in 1903, and advocates for black education, voting rights and other civil rights while capturing the state of affairs and of debate at the time. (Fid it here. ) (credit:CreateSpace)
(22 of23)
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An expansive, lavishly illustrated history of the variegated black experience in America, Life Upon These Shores has a wide scope but is rooted in specificity through hundreds of photos and careful scholarship. (Find it here. ) (credit:Knopf)
(23 of23)
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You can call it current events or history in the making, but Wesley Lowery, a Washington Post reporter who has been covering police brutality and Black Lives Matter, brings together the results of his reporting -- both political and personal. (Find it here. ) (credit:Little Brown and Company)

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