Stars in the Texas Music Sky

Texas music comes from all corners of the Lone Star State, from singing cowboys, and in German immigrant dance halls, to Mexican balladeers and laboring field hands. And along the Gulf Coast, Texas music has produced countless stars, fed on a diet of blues, country, Tejano, western swing, Zydeco, rock, and hip-hop. Here are some of lesser known stories of Texas musical legends.

Sam "Lightnin" Hopkins playing guitar and singing into a mic at a studio
Sam “Lightnin’” Hopkins in the studio. Texas Music Collection, Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries. Image courtesy of Hip Hop in Houston.

Lead Belly

Can a song get you out of prison? Future blues legend Huddie Ledbetter (AKA Lead Belly) found out after he performed for sitting Governor Pat Neff while incarcerated in the Sugar Land, Texas state prison. Lead Belly’s lyrics and performance impressed the governor to such an extent that he vowed to pardon the musician closer to his sentence’s end. During his stint, Lead Belly kept out of trouble by working the fields and playing his music. In one of his very last acts as governor of Texas, Governor Neff made good on his promise. Lead Belly lived in nearby Houston for a few months before returning to his family in Shreveport, Louisiana, where he ran afoul of the law once more, this time landing in the famously-hellacious Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola. By the time folklorist John Avery Lomax arrived at Angola looking to record dying musical traditions, Lead Belly had a bona fide folk standard in his setlist — Midnight Special. Once the blues musician was paroled, he and Lomax toured the nation, performing as the embodiment of living African American folk music, and giving the next generation of blues, R&B, and rock musicians the gift of history.

“I found…a small group of girls who were bravely striving to climb back up the ladder. It’s harder for a girl to make up for her mistakes than it is for a man to live down his past…but these girls are all trying.” —prison inmate and banjo player Reable Childs

O.G. Style sitting in the studio posing for the camera
O.G. Style at the Plex Studio. Courtesy of Carlos Garza (DJ Styles). Image courtesy of Hip Hop in Houston.

The Goree Girls

In the early decades of the 20th century, prison rodeos and prison musical shows performed for the surrounding communities. Eventually, prison bands developed and found audiences on the radio. In 1938, the new live show Thirty Minutes Behind the Walls from station WBAP in Fort Worth took to the airwaves, taking listeners inside the penitentiary walls to hear prisonersʼ songs. By 1940, due in part to the popularity of female performers at the prison rodeo, The Goree All-Girl String Band debuted on the weekly show. Even the Goree performers were serving heavy prison sentences, they came across as stars, projecting a sense of penitence, which earned them compassion and respectability. The limitations of their gender and their incarceration kept them from “breaking out” as Lead Belly had, and no recordings exist.

What’s Going On in H-Town?!

Hall of Fame Texas music legends like Willie Nelson, Bob Willis, Buddy Holly, and Stevie Ray Vaughn have spread the soul of country and fire of rock around the world. And for decades, amateur blues and jazz musicians went to Houston to make it big, and established acts came to cut records. But beginning in the 1990s, hip-hop developed new styles and its own unforgettable musical stars — in Houston. While few would argue Beyoncé is the most famous living Houstonian, the Bayou City’s reputation for innovation was cemented years before Bey exploded onto the scene.

The Geto Boys

If hip-hop culture is all about geography, then the East Coast and West Coast are nothing like the Gulf Coast. Born in the Bronx, hip-hop has occasionally been constrained by its own social and political boundaries. The so-called Third Coast found its voice in the late 1980s when Houston’s Rap-A-Lot record label was founded. The Geto Boys, as developed and produced by James Prince, would become Houston’s first nationally recognized hip-hop group, on the strength of the group’s signature song, 1991’s “Mind Playing Tricks on Me.” The album, “We Can’t Be Stopped,” was the appropriate title, it also reflected the City of Houston’s own response to years of noise from haters and detractors. The Houston scene was something to be reckoned with. To that point, in 2012, Rolling Stone magazine ranked the paranoid hip-hop masterpiece “Mind Playing Tricks on Me” as the fifth-greatest hip-hop song ever.

Screwston graphic of a cassette tape with "Screwston" written on it
Screwston graphic from James Glassman.

DJ Screw

Hot on the heels of The Geto Boys, a young DJ named Robert Earl Davis Jr. began hawking his own mixtapes that would reinvigorate hip-hop and give Houston its own sound. Davis dubbed himself DJ Screw and perfected a technique where he rapped over slowed-down versions of existing songs — mostly Houston and West Coast rap, R&B, and funk and reggae. His new recipe would become known around the world as “chopped and screwed.” Screw’s influence grew following his death in 2000, and his style can still be heard in fellow Houston rappers Bun B, Pimp C, Paul Wall, Chamillionaire, and Slim Thug. And even Beyoncé herself acknowledged the musical legacy of chopped and screwed when her cut “Bow Down/I Been On” where she cemented her own royalty and repped Houston’s hip-hop legends, and even included verses from rappers Bun B, Scarface, Willie D, Lil’ Keke, and Z-Ro, with each giving props to Houston’s hip-hop history.

10 Steps to Tracing Your Roots: Beginner’s Guide to Genealogy

Some people develop an interest in genealogy–tracing the history of their family tree– for very specific reasons. Others hop right in almost on a whim without giving it a lot of previous thought. Whatever the case may be for you, you’ll be happy that you took the initiative.

It’s only natural to be curious about where you come from and to want to learn the unique story of your own family tree. You could discover heroes, new adventures and mysteries, or solve age-old questions. Genealogy research also comes with many other benefits. For instance, studying your family’s history and origins can make it possible for you to:

  • Validate your relatives’ favorite family stories.
  • See if your family tree contains any famous or noteworthy people among its branches.
  • Discover the details of ancestors who participated in major historic events.
  • Trace the identity of birth parents, either for yourself or an adopted child in your family.
  • Trace details to practical matters like land ownership, medical history, and family inheritances.
  • Preserve your family’s time-honored traditions, culture, and legacy for future generations.

In other words, there’s really no downside to exploring genealogy. However, knowing that you’re ready to get started is one thing. Really understanding how to proceed is another matter. The following tips should help you get the ball rolling in the right direction.

1. Spend some virtual time with older relatives.

A family’s history is a rich and complicated thing. It’s about more than dates, places, names, and records. The actual people, as well as their insights and points of view, are large parts of the equation as well. Start your journey by listening to the stories of your older relatives. You might want to take notes or record the conversation.

Ask them to tell you about their own parents and grandparents and what they know about their genealogy. Focus on getting rich details about the communities where they grew up and what life was like for other people they knew. Not only are these stories invaluable for your research, but you’ll both enjoy spending some quality time together.

Your older relatives will most likely also have a lot of practical information likenames and dates that will help you on your journey. The more information you have to start, the easier it will be to dig up more facts.

2. Compile information in a linear fashion.

Sticky Note Lot

Researching a family history isn’t like falling down an internet rabbit hole, where it’s fine to randomly drift from one point of interest to the next. It’s more like following the trail in front of you. The best approach is to take a methodical, linear path.

Start with what you already know as true, either according to your own records or those of other family members. Use this to find more clues using a step-by-step approach. Eventually, you’ll find a few that lead you from the oldest generation you already know to the ancestors that preceded them. Research each tidbit of information thoroughly before moving on to the next detail. 

Don’t jump ahead, no matter how tempting it may be to do so. Otherwise, you could wind up wasting time and resources tracing the story of someone who isn’t even related to you. Last, but not least, always prove that a connection to a generation or a specific member of your family is correct before regarding it as fact.

Man Wearing Black and White Stripe Shirt Looking at White Printer Papers on the Wall

3. Keep careful records of your genealogy progress.

Family research almost always uncovers a great deal of information, sooner or later. Don’t wait until you feel like you’re in over your head to set up some kind of organizational system. Stay organized right from the very start, and be sure to record all of your progress throughout every stage of work. You need to be able to see exactly where you are in your research and the specific details you’ve already uncovered.

One way to do this is to draw a pedigree chart. Professional genealogists use this tool to organize information in a way that’s easy to read and understand. Also, since pedigree charts follow widely used formats, it will be easier to share your findings with other family historians in the future. Many genealogy websites also have “family tree” features that can further help with the record-keeping process.

Woman Writing on Notebook

4. Make sure you’re also keeping track of your searches.

Successful genealogyfamily history research isn’t just about keeping track of what you’ve found. It’s also about accounting for every search you’ve performed throughout the process, even if you didn’t uncover anything of note. While it might be tempting to think that you can remember all the details right now, that may not be the case months and years down the line.

If you don’t maintain careful records of all your search efforts, you will duplicate searches at some point. Not only is this a frustrating waste of time, but, without records, you may not even realize you’re doing it. Also, what if another family member wants to build on your research at some point in the future? Knowing what leads not to explore will be a huge help to them.

5. Use maps to create a visual record of your genealogy findings.

Pencil on White Smartcase Near Eyeglasses

Lots of people simply assume that if their family has occupied the same town or county for a few generations, they’ve always been there. Every so often, that does turn out to be the case, but it’s pretty rare. At some point in your research, you’ll probably find out that your ancestors moved from another town or state at some point. Many people even wind up tracing their ancestry to other countries as they dive deeper into their research.

Try keeping track of all the different places your ancestors lived using maps. Studying them can also help you uncover clues about previous homesteads; following major lines of communication like rivers and roads may help reveal why your family moved to another town or state.

You may also find it helpful to research the local history of those areas. Regional history books can help unlock the stories of your ancestors, providing valuable details on daily life. Head to your local library or independent book store to learn more.

6. Don’t forget to consider alternate spellings.

Once you start studying a topic like genealogy, history, or culture in detail, you soon find out there is no such thing as “correct spelling” when it comes to surnames. Numerous common names can be spelled in multiple ways, as can uncommon names. Occasionally, this happens within the singular document, especially if your research goes back to the 19th century or so.

Not everyone could read and write back in the old days. As a result, people often had to rely on the judgment of others when it came to recording names on important documents like marriage licenses, immigration documents, or birth certificates. Your ancestors may not have spelled your family name the same way that your immediate family does today. However, it’s likely that the pronunciation was similar, so keep that in mind when evaluating variants. 

7. Don’t assume or take anything for granted.

Detailed research might reveal that your ancestors differed from you in fundamental ways. For instance, you probably didn’t consider getting married at age 14 and becoming a parent by age 16. However, this was common a hundred years ago.

Keeping an open mind will help you from missing key pieces of information. Never assume anything. Be thorough enough to make sure your searches cover all possible scenarios. Again, it is helpful to familiarize yourself with social and cultural norms associated with the time and region you’re researching. You’ll have a better idea of where to look and what questions to ask.

8. Maximize your research time by working effectively.

Each year, more and more records are available online, revolutionizing the way people trace their family history. It’s easier and faster than ever before to locate information since you can hunt for it whenever it suits you, even if it means playing detective at 3:00 AM. However, it’s important to understand that there are limitations that come with online research.

Maximize-Research-Time-Infographic.jpg

Some popular genealogy sites offer researchers access to digitized scans of important documents, making the verification process a lot easier. Leverage the internet to whatever extent you can. Not only is it a time saver, but you’ll be able to use your time more productively when it is time to peruse an archive in person.

9. Share what you’ve learned with the rest of your family.

Of course, there are lots of benefits associated with researching your family tree, but some of the most rewarding will be sharing your discoveries with your relatives. You might discover long-lost family members you never knew you had. Perhaps you can use the information to bring all of your relatives back to the family fold. 

Best of all, you’ll be doing so much to help record, augment, and preserve the stories of your ancestors for generations to come. Add your findings to an online genealogy database and share the details with your family.

10. Consider joining a family history or Genealogy society

There are numerous advantages of joining a family history society, so you’ll definitely want to consider choosing one at some point. You’ll gain instant access to newsletters, mailing lists, and databases that can really help you further your research. Any future queries can be shared with other members, allowing those with similar names or research goals to contact you.

Most family history societies also offer access to educational programs and lectures that can help you develop new skills so you can become a better researcher and genealogist. Look for a regional society located close to where your ancestors lived.

Hopefully, these steps will help you gain knowledge and insight into your family tree. You will likely be surprised and delighted by what you find. Perhaps you recently discovered you have Polish ancestors that hailed from Chicago, or a long-lost relative who ran an ostrich farm in Southern California in the early 19th Century. No matter what you uncover, understanding your past is vital to your future. Get started on your family tree today!

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The Hidden History of New York’s Hart Island

Recently, harrowing and somber images have been circulating the internet and major news outlets. In these pictures, a bulldozer is digging large trenches, while men in protective suits stack coffin upon coffin within them. These men are clearing the eternal resting space for the unclaimed victims of COVID-19 in New York City. 

These images show the largest mass grave site in America, located on a tiny island in the Long Island Sound–but it’s not the first time the island was designated for such a grim task. Many are shocked to learn that over a million people are buried in New York City’s potter’s field on Hart Island. It was “rediscovered” by the general public in 2012, when Hurricane Sandy uncovered human skeletons and tossed bones into the murky river off the coast of the Island.

 Though the story of Hart Island is certainly a sad one, it is rich with reminders of New York City’s past, and the lasting legacy of those who are interred there. These stories, the stories of priceless human lives, should never be forgotten. 

A dramatic beginning

Tombstone dedicated to those interred in the potter’s field cemetery on Hart Island. Courtesy of Claire Yaffa, AIDS Photograph Collection and New York Historical Society.

The earliest known group of inhabitants on Hart Island was the Native American Siwanoy tribe. In the late 1700’s, an Englishman named Thomas Pell purchased Hart Island. This land was bought and sold for private use until 1864, during the heat of the Civil War. Hart Island became a Union training facility for African American soldiers. Residence halls for Union soldiers were erected on the southern end of the island, along with a prison that could hold up to five thousand prisoners of war.

 In 1868, Hart Island was purchased by the Department of Public Charities and the Department of Corrections of the Government of New York. Even today, the Department of Corrections runs operations on the island, including burials and familial visits. 

Because of New York’s ever growing population, the city soon had a burial crisis on its hands. Yellow fever, smallpox and typhoid ravaged the city taking the lives of thousands. Graveyards such as the well-known Trinity Church Cemetery became overcrowded, and some people were interred less than two feet underground. The stench was horrible, and citizens took pains to avoid many cemeteries in the city at all costs. 

RELATED: Murder in the Adirondacks: Murderer Jean Gianini and the Insanity Defense – Crime Capsule >

No stranger to pandemic

In an effort to, in the current parlance, “flatten the curve,” and mitigate these diseases’ effect on the city, politicians attempted to quarantine infected New Yorkers on nearby islands, including Hart Island, where a psychiatric hospital and a medical facility for tuberculosis were also erected in the late 1800’s. 

Bellevue Hospital was founded on March 31, 1736, and is the oldest public hospital in the United States. Its morgue became the gateway to Hart Island because all autopsies conducted in New York City during the nineteenth century were performed there. Courtesy of NYC Health and Hospitals

Eventually, Hart Island became New York City’s potter’s field in 1869, and began mass burials in 1875 in response to the overcrowding of cemeteries within the city limits.The first person buried on Hart Island was a young immigrant named LouisaVan Slyke, who had contracted Yellow Fever.

Since then, many other mental institutions, hospitals, schools, and a Cold War missile site have come and gone on Hart Island. Prisoners from Hart Island and Blackwell Island were placed in charge of interring the bodies laid to rest there. 

OTHER STORIES: Blood, Black Gold, and a town called Borger>

From Hart, to Rikers, and back again

In 1932, a prison on Rikers Island was opened, and by the end of World War II, inmates on Hart Island were all moved there. To this day, the prisoners of Rikers Island bury the dead on America’s largest potter’s field. 

People of all backgrounds and walks of life are interred there. Immigrants, locals, paupers, actors, the elderly and stillborn are all laid to rest alike in tightly packed groups. A singular white marker denotes each group of one thousand coffins. People who are buried there are often unidentified, can’t afford a private burial, or have no family to claim them. But each person laid to rest there has a story to tell: a story blessed with the gift of a life, of humanity.. 

New York City's Hart Island: A Cemetery of Strangers

New York City’s Hart Island: A Cemetery of Strangers

Just off the coast of the Bronx in Long Island Sound sits Hart Island, where more than one million bodies are buried in unmarked graves. Beginning as a Civil War prison and training site and later a psychiatric hospital, the location became the repository for New York City’s unclaimed dead. The island’s mass graves are a microcosm of New York history, from the 1822 burial crisis to casualties of the Triangle Shirtwaist fire and victims of the AIDS epidemic. Author Michael T. Keene reveals the history of New York’s potter’s field and the stories of some of its lost souls.

Explore nearby history…

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The Real-life Sources for Washington Irving and His Spooky Tales

Washington Irving’s The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is one of the best-known pieces of American literature. But the story is not just a work of imagination. It is rooted in the landscapes and lore of New York’s Hudson Valley, a region whose atmosphere of mystery helped inspire Irving’s legend.

And wouldn’t you know: Aaron Burr may have played a key role!

Call Me Ichabod

There lived an actual man named Ichabod Crane. An officer during the War of 1812, Major Ichabod Crane’s campaign adventures in Sackets Harbor, New York, though noteworthy, were not exceptionally heroic.

His exploits interested Washington Irving enough for a meeting after the war. It provided the author with an onomatopoeia description for a bird-beaked scarecrow of a schoolmaster. Lockie Longlegs alliterates, lopes and looks good on paper, but the name Ichabod Crane sang out for a Yankee pedagogue.

Later, some sources say the real war bird objected vigorously to this appropriation of his moniker. He felt tainted by association with the snipenosed teacher.

One look at the daguerreotype of an elderly Colonel Crane, pictured above, shows a resemblance in name only. Irving’s Ichabod shaped the archetypical, charmingly clueless nerd we love to frighten. He is the geek who goes on to get some revenge on the bullies either as a lawyer or a Sleepy Hollow ghost. And we all know how much Americans love ghosts!

Headless Horsemen

A dramatic black and white photo of wirey trees with a glowing light gleaming through them
Sleepy Hollow, 2008. Photo by Todd Atteberry, www.thehistorytrekker.com. Image sourced from Legends and Lore of Sleepy Hollow and the Hudson Valley.


Irving avidly collected stories of the American Revolution. Later, living in an amazing Hudson Valley home, he wrote an extensive biography of his namesake, George Washington. One source of Irving’s tales sprang forth from Aaron Burr. The Irving family always maintained friendship with the disgraced former vice president. Indeed, in 1825, Washington Irving even wrote a sympathetic story about the Little Man in Black who is unfairly branded a witch. His readers knew the darkened man was Burr.

Aaron Burr served as aide-de-camp to the “Old Wolf,” General Israel Putnam, who fought with Heath and Washington at the Battle of White Plains. One of Putnam’s militiamen from what is now Rockland County suffered a terrible fate. Abraham Onderdonk, according to a neighbor quoted in a Hackensack, New Jersey newspaper, “was killed by a cannon ball from the enemy separating his head from his shoulders.”

Surely this is the kind of incident Burr would share with a wide-eyed Washington Irving around long-stemmed pipes and brandy. Distinguished Irving biographer Andrew Burstein concurs. “It is not unreasonable to consider that Irving might have known the details” of this tale.

Other scholars say Irving converted the headless patriotic American into a reviled Hessian for a more dramatic effect. Why base The Legend on a true tale gleaned from the Little Man in Black, when it is more reasonable to accept that Washington Irving read about the Hessian’s decapitation in General Heath’s 1798 published memoir? Stories of headless soldiers floated in the gloomy Sleepy Hollow air when Irving first passed through in the 1790s. A documented account of a Hessian made headless on Halloween 1776 is the core of the kernel of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.

Add Jesse Merwin’s charivari, scores of local curses, spells and ghost stories, and Washington Irving certainly has enough material for his 1818 epiphany crossing London Bridge. Another rich source, however, for the lore of the Headless Horseman of Sleepy Hollow needs some exploration.

The Past is Female: Tales of the Suffragette Revolution

For the past few years, a popular t-shirt has been sighted on social media and at rallies across the nation. Maybe you’ve seen it…The Future is Female. It’s an exciting and optimistic message that has, and continues to, inspire women and men on the prospect of more women entering politics specifically, or simply making a difference in general. However, examples of societal change by women are as old as the republic itself. But the most exciting transforming events for women happened during the suffragette movement when women demanded and won the right to vote. Here are some stories from the suffragette revolution.

New York State

The State of New York was ground zero for the women’s suffragette movement. In 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott and other like-minded women convened the first Woman’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, New York.

“That it is the duty of the women of this country to secure to themselves their sacred right to the elective franchise.” — Woman’s Rights Convention

A photo portrait of Alva Vanderbilt c.1919
Alva Vanderbilt Belmont (circa 1919) was an ardent suffragist who devoted much of her fortune to the cause. Courtesy Library of Congress. Image sourced from Women in Long Island’s Past.

These women, who would soon include Susan B. Anthony, worked ceaselessly for woman’s rights and suffrage. There, power remained scant and failed to grow much beyond New York. It wasn’t until several wealthy Long Island women, including Katherine Duer Mackay and Alva Vanderbilt Belmont, brought financial support to the suffrage movement in the early 1900s. After her second husband’s death in 1908, Alva Smith Vanderbilt Belmont dedicated her energies to suffrage and women’s causes, inviting suffrage leaders to her Newport, Rhode Island mansion, and in founding the Political Equality Association (PEA).

Photo portraits of Harriet Stanton Blanch (left) and Harriet Burton Law (right)
(Left) Harriot Stanton Blatch (circa 1917) brought radical suffrage tactics to New York from England and held suffrage events at her Shoreham home. Courtesy Bryn Mawr College Library, Special Collections, C.C. Catt Collection.

(Right) Harriet Burton Laidlaw (circa 1917) and her husband held offices in national and state suffrage organizations and hosted suffrage events at their Sands Point home. Courtesy Bryn Mawr College Library, Special Collections, C.C. Catt Collection.

Images sourced from Women in Long Island’s Past.

Other notable New York State suffragettes came from the ground up — Cady Stanton’s younger daughter Harriot Stanton had the suffrage movement in her blood. After assisting her mother and Susan B. Anthony with their book History of Woman Suffrage, Harriet Stanton travelled in Europe, observing more radical suffrage strategies. Upon returning to New York, she and her British husband and their daughter, Nora, moved to New York City where they lived with her mother, Cady Stanton, her aunt and her brother. She organized what became the Women’s Political Union (WPU) and held street meetings and parades, which became popular and respectable annual events. Her efforts led Blatch to work closely with Alva Belmont and the radical wing of the suffrage movement.

Massachusetts

In the early twentieth century, Massachusetts was the nation’s most urban state, with three-quarters of its residents living in cities, teeming with impoverished immigrants who sought relief from low wages, long hours, and dangerous working conditions. Economically advantaged white women had more freedom to explore political activism as demonstrated in the formation of the Massachusetts Federation of Women’s Clubs in 1893. By 1900, more than eight thousand Massachusetts women belonged to over fifty-five women’s clubs, with the woman suffrage movement being a major beneficiary. Both well-to-do and blue collar women would join forces, and thrive.

Photo portrait of Mary Kenney O’Sullivan
Mary Kenney O’Sullivan. Courtesy of Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University. Image sourced from Massachusetts in the Woman Suffrage Movement.

In 1903, the Women’s Trade Union League was founded, representing Massachusetts’ spectrum of women. Just look at it two founders: Mary Kenney O’Sullivan was the daughter of Irish immigrants, who was convinced that women must organize to improve working conditions. She established a union of women bookbinders in Chicago and was the first national woman organizer of the American Federation of Labor (AFL). In contrast, Mary Morton Kimball Kehew’s maternal grandfather had been governor of Massachusetts, her father was a banker, and her husband was a wealthy oil merchant. The two women founded an auxiliary of the Union for Industrial Progress to encourage trade unionism among women. Their activism culminated in the formation of the Women’s Trade Union League, which would be an umbrella organization of women’s trade unions dedicated to supporting existing labor unions, aiding the formation of new ones, and advancing legislation to improve pay and working conditions. Neighboring suffragists found kinship in the progressive, like-minded activists in the labor movement, and saw advantages to an alliance.

Virginia

Like New York State, Virginia had a long tradition of women suffragettes. Through groups like the Equal Suffrage League and the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, suffragists came to believe that an amendment to the Constitution of the United States was the best way to secure voting rights for all women. Those women endorsed what was called the Susan B. Anthony Amendment, which Anthony had drafted in 1875, and the U.S. Constitution’s Fifteenth Amendment stating, “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.”

A street view of a suffrage parade in Washington, D.C.
Thousands of suffragists, including more than one hundred from Virginia, marched in the woman suffrage parade in Washington, D.C., on March 3, 1913. Library of Congress. Image sourced from The Campaign for Woman Suffrage in Virginia.

For standout leaders in Virginia, look no further than Alice Paul, who helped to reinvigorate the national campaign for an amendment to the Constitution of the United States. Born into a well-off Quaker family with a belief in equal rights and woman suffrage, Paul participated in numerous events, became an organizer, and was arrested multiple times. Frustrated with the state-by-state campaigns, she joined the National American Woman Suffrage Association and became chair of its Congressional Committee. In 1913, she triumphed organizing a suffrage parade with floats, bands, mounted brigades and groups of women marching behind banners in color-coordinated attire, with as many as eight thousand women participating.

Tennessee

After failing to pass for several decades, the 19th Amendment finally succeeded in both chambers of congress on June 4, 1919. Within a month, eleven state legislatures had ratified the amendment. Needing three-fourths of states to ratify, the 19th Amendment stalled, and Suffragists held out hope that Delaware, North Carolina or Tennessee would be the “Perfect 36th” state. Even though a significant number of Tennessee voters in both parties opposed suffrage, a voted was scheduled for August 5. Carrie Chapman Catt barnstormed the Volunteer State on a speaking tour. It would all come down to one man’s vote in the Tennessee legislature.

Harry T. Burn and other officials shaking hands with suffragettes on the steps of the state capitol
Burn (above right) shakes hands with Anita Pollitzer on the steps of the state capitol. Courtesy of the Burn family. Image sourced from Tennessee Statesman Harry T. Burn.

Poor Harry T. Burn, the Tennessee politician who was pressured from all sides for his support, both for and against women’s suffrage — Burn had the power to put it over the top and enfranchise millions of American women. Despite urging from peers, supporters, and mentors, Burn ultimately voted in favor…because his mother told him to! On August 18, 1920, the Tennessee General Assembly ratified the 19th Amendment. American women had won the right to vote.

Detroit: A City of Reinvention

Detroit. The name alone may bring up the image of the classic American Muscle car. Designed and built in the Motor City. The car’s radio blaring the unmistakable sound of a Motown hit. For others, the name of the city may bring memories of watching a game at Tiger Stadium or seeing the Lions play on Thanksgiving Day. 

From Fur Post to Fort

Founded by Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac in 1701 and named Fort Pontchartrain, its purpose was to control the rich fur trade by French Colonists. Europe looked to France for fashion influence and Fur was in. The outpost would find many changes in its early history.  The fort would come under British control during the French and Indian war in 1760 and renamed Fort Detroit. Under the Treaty of Paris in 1783, which brought an end to the Revolutionary War the city passed to the Americans. 

Like the Phoenix…

In 1805, Detroit would face another change. This time it would not come as a result of one flag being exchanged for another but a fire that would sweep through the city. Instead of abandoning the site of the town the people rebuilt. Detroiters modeled their rebuilt town after the young nation’s new capital, Washington. The fire is remembered in the flag of the city which in the center features two women with a fire burning in the city behind them and around them is a Latin motto which means: “It will rise from the ashes.” 

An overview map of Detroit, 1807.
A portion of the Woodward Plan for Detroit after the fire. Detroit City Plan, 1807. Art, Architecture & Engineering Library Lantern Slide Collection, University of Michigan. Image sourced from Hidden History of Detroit

The strategic location of Detroit would bring war to the city’s doorstep during the War of 1812 when they surrendered to the British. Americans regained the city just over a year later after Commodore Perry achieved a victory on Lake Erie and General William Henry Harrison (future president) also gained a victory at Thames River.  

An Industrial Boom

A faded advertisement for the Melrose Hotel on a brick building
The long-faded sign for Hotel Melrose is visible along Canfield Street west of John R. Street in Midtown Detroit. Image sourced from Fading Ads of Detroit

The city was surrounded by farmlands and became an important commercial center and served as a capital city before that honor moved to Lansing. After the Civil War, the landscape of the city began to change when industry began to move in. Through the late 1800s, the situation was set for Detroit to become the place for companies such as the big 3–Ford, General Motors, and Chrysler–to call home. But before Detroit was Motor City it was known as Thunder City as train cars loaded with ore and other goods made their way to and through the city. The trains would carry loads from Detroit all over the United States and Canada. 

Detroit’s Musical Range

Music would play a role in Detroit’s history but that story goes back a little further than you may think. The Great Migration of the 1920s brought jazz to the city, specifically the big band sound. Skipping ahead to the 1950’s Detroit put its mark on the Blues scene and the gospel scene. It was the 60’s however where Motown’s distinct sound would make its way into music history. From Gospel to blues to rock Detroit has a varied musical history. 

Planes, Trains, and Automobiles

Four people sitting in a jeep convertible watching workers harvest fruit.
The military car called the Jeep was also a flexible work vehicle for civilians after World War II. Author’s collection. Image sourced from Lost Car Companies of Detroit.

Detroit’s factories have a varied history as well. Before the United States found itself in World War II Ford Motor Company had already begun production on B-24 Liberators. Ford had the ability to produce a B-24 at the rate of 1 an hour. The company would produce over 8,000 B-24’s before the war was done. Chrysler built tanks, rolling their first one off the line before the plant itself was complete. Three different companies: Willys-Overland, Ford, and Bantam made the workhorse of the army that would become known as the Jeep. And the man who led the charge, telling other Detroit Executives, “Gentlemen We must out build Hitler” was the President of General Motors, William Knudsen. Knudsen would give up his lucrative salary to work for Uncle Sam for $1.

Shaped By Change

An exterior photo of the Eastown building in Detroit
The Eastown’s exterior is covered in reliefs and still grand, though the attached apartment building has suffered fire damage. The building’s location in a rough part of town hinders its chances of survival. Image sourced from Lost Detroit.

Detroit’s influence reaches out past its city limits. Look in any parking lot to see a car designed in Detroit. You can still turn a radio dial and hear music written and recorded in Detroit. We still enjoy freedom won due to the industry and machines manufactured in Detroit. The city has played an important role in our country’s history, and while it may seem like its best days are in the past, look again at the city’s flag and read aloud the motto: “Speramus Meliora Resurget Cineribus.” It will rise from the Ashes. No doubt. 

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