9 episodes

Sharing untold accounts of history.

My Account of It Byrhonda Lyons and Theresa Adams

    • Arts

Sharing untold accounts of history.

    An Army General Resigns

    An Army General Resigns

    In 1861, General Robert E. Lee wrote a letter to his cousin. General Lee is explaining that he has resigned from the U.S. Army to fight for the Confederate Army. Listen.

    • 2 min
    Salute To National Poetry Month

    Salute To National Poetry Month

    Happy National Poetry Month from My Account of It

    #1 The Negro Speaks Of Rivers read by Quincy Jones for the album Poems by Langston Hughes
    #2 Kitchenette Building read by Gwendolyn Brooks
    #3 And Still I Rise read by Maya Angelou from the book And Still I Rise

    • 5 min
    President Lincoln's Assassination

    President Lincoln's Assassination

    A first-person account of President Abraham Lincoln's assassination. This account was written by James Suydam Knox. Listen.

    • 12 min
    Phillis Wheatley - Poet

    Phillis Wheatley - Poet

    Phillis Wheatley published her first collection of poems in 1773. It was the first book published by an African American.

    • 9 min
    Bessie Coleman: First Black Woman Pilot

    Bessie Coleman: First Black Woman Pilot

    Bessie Coleman worked hard to be successful at something she loved, flying. Although instructors in the United States refused to teach her how to operate an airplane, she did not let it stop her. She just went around the obstacles. “She refused to take no for an answer” and became the first black woman to earn her pilot’s license.

    • 3 min
    Elizabeth Keckley: Looking For Liberty In Washington, D.C.

    Elizabeth Keckley: Looking For Liberty In Washington, D.C.

    Elizabeth Keckley wrote Behind the Scenes, or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House (1868) to call attention to the struggles newly freed slaves faced when they arrived in Washington. Her role as a seamstress in the White House afforded her a unique perspective on their lives and the life of the first lady. The book was not well received because of the widespread belief that it violated the privacy of the former first lady.

    • 6 min

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