All posts by thegamuttblog

#BlackHistoryMonth Moment: self-made millionaire, #MadameCJWalker! [details]

As the end of Reconstruction ushered in a volatile period in which former Confederate states instituted laws that severely restricted the upward mobility of African Americans, life for Black people largely remained just as harsh as it was during slavery. Black residents along the Mississippi River began to flee the South in the late 19th century, settling North for better opportunities. Among those making the journey was an entrepreneur who would become known as Madam C.J. Walker. Walker not only worked her way to becoming a self-made millionaire, she also became a staunch advocate for Black women.

Continue reading #BlackHistoryMonth Moment: self-made millionaire, #MadameCJWalker! [details]

STAR TRACKS: #KekePalmer WOWS in #Balmain! [vid]

Keke Palmer was a VISION in white at the American Black Film Festival Awards!

We love her bold take with Balmain Men’s Shirt gown, right!?

Continue reading STAR TRACKS: #KekePalmer WOWS in #Balmain! [vid]

WATCH: #Sistas season 8 ep 18 ‘War to Roses’ [full]

Andi and Jordan determine the future of their relationship, Danni receives grave news about her job, and Hayden handles an issue driven by his hidden truths……………WATCH ‘Sistas’ season 8 episode 18 AFTER the JUMP!

Continue reading WATCH: #Sistas season 8 ep 18 ‘War to Roses’ [full]

WATCH: #TheOval season 6 ep 6 ‘Power Play’ [full ep]

With tension at an all-time high inside the White House, Hunter must orchestrate a plan to regain his power. Elsewhere, Jason is formulating a way to escape the compound….. WATCH ‘The Oval’ season 6 episode 6 AFTER THE JUMP!

Continue reading WATCH: #TheOval season 6 ep 6 ‘Power Play’ [full ep]

#TheGamutt After Dark: #MarshallPrice FREAKING! [NSFW vid]

Viral sensation, Marshall Price is often on X, wilding out with his thirst traps, but rarely do we see him in action (unless you are on his OnlyFans) until NOW!

Check him out in ACTION!!

Continue reading #TheGamutt After Dark: #MarshallPrice FREAKING! [NSFW vid]

#LHHATL season 12 episode 21 ‘Skating the Issue’ [full]

The Harris’ continue to be the talk of the streets, as Jessica reveals she caught Mendeecees riding dirty; Banks struggles to get Karlie over the drama and into T. Woods; Zane hopes his gesture will get him and Ashley back..,………. ………………………….. WATCH ‘Love & Hip Hop Atlanta’ season 12 episode 21 BELOW!!

Continue reading #LHHATL season 12 episode 21 ‘Skating the Issue’ [full]

#DjDnice #ClubQuarantine is SPINNING Live NOW! [LIVE ]

DJ Dnice is SPINNING Live NOW! Welcome in! HAPPY BIRTHDAY SMOKEY ROBINSON VIBES!! LOG ON!

Log on HERE to DANCE!

Continue reading #DjDnice #ClubQuarantine is SPINNING Live NOW! [LIVE ]

WATCH: #LHHMIA season 6 ep 14 ‘Small Fry’ [full ep]

Marcus intervenes in Ray J. and Princess’ marriage, with disastrous results. Amara makes a stunning decision about the future of her family………… WATCH ‘Love & Hip Hop Miami’ season 6 episode 14 AFTER THE JUMP!

Continue reading WATCH: #LHHMIA season 6 ep 14 ‘Small Fry’ [full ep]

WAKE UP JAM: #Zhané ‘Groove Thang’ [vid]

WAKE IT UP!!

Remember when Zhané had us is a CHOKEHOLD in the 90’s!!! Their DEBUT album ‘Pronounced..’ churned out hit after HIT!!!

Continue reading WAKE UP JAM: #Zhané ‘Groove Thang’ [vid]

#BlackHistoryMonth Moment: #LucyTerryPrince-the 1st African-American Poet! [details]

Lucy Terry Prince

Lucy Terry Prince died in 1821. Her obituary appeared in the August 14, 1821 issue of the Vermont Gazette newspaper. The author wrote that she was a “remarkable woman” with rare qualities. At that time, newspaper obituaries were usually short. Lucy Terry Prince’s obituary was long and said many good things about her intelligence and talents. This was unusual for two reasons: she was a woman, and she was Black.

In the 1800s, society thought that white men were more important than Black people and women. What did Lucy Terry Prince do in her lifetime to be called a remarkable woman in the newspaper?

White slave traders kidnapped Lucy Terry as a baby from Africa in the 1730s. She lived as an enslaved person in Rhode Island and Deerfield, Massachusetts.

Lucy Terry is credited as the author of the of the first poem composed by an African American woman, Lucy Terry Prince was a remarkable woman whose many accomplishments included arguing a case before the Supreme Court. Lucy was stolen from Africa as an infant and sold to Ebenezer Wells of Deerfield, Massachusetts.

Lucy Terry Prince died in 1821. Her obituary appeared in the August 14, 1821 issue of the Vermont Gazette newspaper. The author wrote that she was a “remarkable woman” with rare qualities. At that time, newspaper obituaries were usually short. Lucy Terry Prince’s obituary was long and said many good things about her intelligence and talents. This was unusual for two reasons: she was a woman, and she was Black.

In the 1800s, society thought that white men were more important than Black people and women. What did Lucy Terry Prince do in her lifetime to be called a remarkable woman in the newspaper?

White slave traders kidnapped Lucy Terry as a baby from Africa in the 1730s. She lived as an enslaved person in Rhode Island and Deerfield, Massachusetts.

In Massachusetts, several community members and friends died in a French-led Abenaki raid in 1746. Lucy Terry created a poem about the raid. This poem, called The Bars Fight, was meant to be shared out loud. It was published about 100 years later. This poem made Lucy Terry America’s first published African American poet. Terry was well known for being intelligent and gifted with language.

Lucy Terry married a Black man named Abijah Prince around 1750. He was no longer enslaved and helped Lucy Terry Prince gain her freedom. Together, they had six children. The family moved to farmland in Guilford, Vermont, in 1775.

In Guilford, the Princes had racist neighbors. The neighbors tore down their fences and destroyed their crops. Lucy Terry Prince argued her family’s case before the Governor of Vermont in 1785. She impressed the Council with her skilled speech and “captivated all around her.”

The Prince family won their case, but that did not stop the abuse. Later, a mob led by the neighbor burned the Prince’s hay and harmed their farmhand. Vermont courts found the mob guilty. But the damage to the farm was already done. After her husband’s death in 1794, Lucy Terry Prince left Guilford.

Prince and some of her children moved to Sunderland, Vermont. Her husband bought land there many years earlier. To claim the land, they argued in the Vermont Supreme Court and won. In Prince’s old age, many would visit her home to hear her speak and share stories. When she died in 1821, she was a well-loved and respected member of the Sunderland community.

The following obituary was published for Prince on Tuesday, August 21, 1821, in the Greenfield, Massachusetts, paper The Frankylin Herald:

At Sunderland, Vt., July 11th, Mrs. Lucy Prince, a woman of colour. From the church and town records where she formerly resided, we learn that she was brought from Bristol, Rhode Island, to Deerfield, Mass. when she was four years old, by Mr. Ebenezer Wells: that she was 97 years of age—that she was early devoted to God in Baptism: that she united with the church in Deerfield in 1744—Was married to Abijah Prince, May 17th, 1756, by Elijah Williams, Esq. and that she had been the mother of six children. In this remarkable woman there was an assemblage of qualities rarely to be found among her sex. Her volubility was exceeded by none, and in general, the fluency of her speech was not destitute of instruction and education. She was much respected among her acquaintances, who treated her with deference.[16]

The Prince family was remembered in Guilford for many decades after their death.