History lessons
Topic: History

So the wife and I had a discussion today about some lost tidbits of history. The first issue concerned the fact that one of France's greatest writer, Alexander Dumas, was African-American...sorry, black. This probably does come as a surprise to some people but I don't think the fact is lost on the French. Of course, he is most famous for "The Count of Monte Cristo" and "The Three Musketeers" but there is much more. There is a perfectly lovely
site dedicated to this history so I won't recap it all here. Suffice it to say, he was born to a Haitian slave and, in his own words,'My father was a Creole, his father a Negro, and his father a monkey; my family, it seems, begins where yours left off.' This quote is obviously a clever insult but seems to imply that even his father was of mixed decent. History should just be set straight.

A probably more significant failing of how history is taught in america is the fact that many people seem to see the west as purely white. This is of course incorrect. Estimates seem to indicate that blacks (or people of mixed black heritage) made up from 1/6th to as much as 1/3rd of the early pioneering forefathers. There are a lot of different sites dedicated to this history,
Black Cowboys and
NCSU, so definitely take the time to check out some of the history. You all know about the
Buffalo Soldiers, thanks to the legendary sounds of The Wailers, but many more people made significant impacts on history. Probably the most famous of these is pictured to the left, Bill Pickett. Ol' Bill invented the famous cowboy maneuver of bulldogging which involves riding alongside a steer and wrestling it to the ground. Blacks are being credited with a lot more of the innovations necessarily created by those treated as lower classes doing the back breaking work. This of course isn't to downplay the contribution of many other peoples contribution in the
multicultural west including Latinos and Asians.
I approve of this message The Man
at 10:45 PM EDT