[Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly, left, and Olivia Cousins, members of a new Queens chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Chester Higgins, Jr./New York Times]
(John Malveaux of www.MusicUNTOLD.com brought this article to our attention)
The New York Times
By SARAH MASLIN NIR
Published: July 3, 2012
Olivia Cousins can trace her family in the United States to a soldier
who joined the rebelling colonists when he was just 17. But when a
friend suggested she join the Daughters of the American Revolution, an
organization whose members can prove they are related to someone who
aided the rebels in 1776, Dr. Cousins nearly laughed.
Dr. Cousins is black. And the D.A.R., as it is commonly called, is a
historically white organization with a record of excluding blacks so
ugly that Eleanor Roosevelt renounced her membership in protest.
Yet last week, in a circa-1857 stone chapel in Jamaica, Queens, Dr.
Cousins was named an officer in a small ceremony establishing a new
chapter. Her daughter took photos. The pictures documented a singular
moment for the D.A.R., founded in 1890: 5 of the 13 members of the new
chapter are black.
Perhaps more strikingly, the Queens chapter is one of the first in the
organization’s nearly 122-year history that was started by a black
woman: Wilhelmena Rhodes Kelly, from Rosedale, who is also its regent,
or president. Ms. Kelly traces her origins to the relationship between a
slaveholder and a slave, who appear to have considered themselves
married, and her new position is part of a remarkable journey for both
her family and the organization.
“My parents understood that they were Americans and that they were a
real important part of the American story,” said Dr. Cousins, who, like
the other members, is a passionate student of genealogy. Her
Revolutionary War ancestor was a free man of mixed race. “Their whole
thing was that segregation is unacceptable,” she said of her parents.
For her, she said, “de facto segregation was unacceptable.”
No comments:
Post a Comment