The History Channel 2003 Black History Month
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			THE HISTORY CHANNEL 2003 BLACK HISTORY MONTH 
 
 
 
THE HISTORY CHANNEL 2003 BLACK HISTORY MONTH  
 
The History Channel honors the African-American experience throughout  
February.  
 
February 1:  
 
MLK: March on Washington and End of the Dream  
 
8 am ET/PT  
 
Mike Wallace reviews this crucial time in the history of civil rights,  
with classic CBS News footage from the March on Washington and from  
Martin Luther King's landmark speeches. This program chronicles the  
events that made the march necessary, and looks at the legacy of the  
march on the civil rights movement.  
 
February 2:  
 
African American Historical Sites  
 
8 am ET/PT  
 
James Horton of THC's History Center leads viewers on a tour of famous  
as well as little-known African-American landmarks. From the Underground  
Railroad to the Civil Rights Movement, these landmarks help bring to  
life the story of the African-American experience from the 18th century  
to the present.  
 
WORLD PREMIERE!  
 
HISTORY CENTER: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN WORLD WAR II  
 
9 am ET/PT  
 
Host Steve Gillon is joined by leading scholars, historians and  
journalists as they look at the role of African Americans in World War  
II and racism, prejudice and segregation in the military.  
 
February 4:  
 
The 54th Massachusetts  
 
7 am ET/PT  
 
The story the first black fighting unit to be assembled in the North  
after the Emancipation Proclamation and its heroic but fateful assault  
on Ft. Wagner, South Carolina.  
 
February 8:  
 
George Wallace and Black Power  
 
8 am ET/PT  
 
Alabama was the most violent battleground in the struggle for civil  
rights in the U.S. and leading the resistance was feisty governor George  
Wallace, who rode a populist platform to national prominence. Meanwhile,  
fed up with the slow progress of the civil rights movement, the Black  
Power movement was formed to use more extreme means for racial justice.  
 
THC PREMIERE!  
 
MOVIES IN TIME: A SOLDIER'S STORY  
 
8 pm/12 am ET/PT  
 
Howard E. Rollins stars as a military attorney sent to a 1944 Southern  
army base to investigate the murder of an unpopular black sergeant.  
Denzel Washington, Adolph Caesar and Patti LaBelle costar in this 1984  
drama nominated for three Oscars, including Best Picture, Best  
Supporting Actor (Caesar) and Best Adapted Screenplay. Based on Charles  
Fuller's award-winning play.  
 
February 9:  
 
WORLD PREMIERE!  
 
HISTORY CENTER: JULIAN BOND ON CIVIL RIGHTS  
 
9 am ET/PT  
 
Host Steve Gillon is joined Julian Bond as they discuss the struggles  
and successes of the civil rights movement and where things stand  
today.  
 
February 11:  
 
WORLD PREMIERE!  
 
ALCAN HIGHWAY  
 
10 pm ET/PT  
 
The two-lane, 1,500-mile long Alaska Highway is an unrivaled  
engineering feat. It took 11,000 soldiers, nearly 4,000 of them black,  
only eight months to build this highway in 1942. Crossing the Canadian  
Rockies, plowing through thick virgin forests and skirting raging rivers  
and lakes, the soldiers dealt with long hours, horrible weather,  
isolation and wild animals to build a highway the equivalent in length  
to the distance from Washington D.C. to Denver, Colorado.  
 
February 13:  
 
Black Aviators: Flying Free  
 
8 am/2 pm ET/PT  
 
The stories of African-American men and women who defied the odds to  
fly high as 20th century aviation pioneers.  
 
February 15:  
 
Little Rock and Boston Busing  
 
8 am ET/PT  
 
In 1957 Little Rock, Arkansas, the governor takes on the federal  
government to prevent nine black children from entering a formerly  
all-white school. A generation later in the mid-1970s, the battle over  
school segregation moves north. Boston, the cradle of liberty, becomes  
home of the most virulent anti-busing movement north of the Mason-Dixon  
line.  
 
February 22:  
 
America's Black Warriors  
 
8 am ET/PT  
 
The story of African-Americans in the U.S. military during World War II  
and the integration of the army. Colin Powell and other prominent black  
military figures discuss how blacks had to go above and beyond the call  
of duty to earn the respect of fellow soldiers, how they fought against  
racism, and their effectiveness on the battlefield.  
 
February 25:  
 
John Brown's War  
 
7 am ET/PT  
 
A profile of the controversial crusader whose 1859 anti-slavery raid on  
the federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia foreshadowed the  
violence of the Civil War.  
 
February 28:  
 
Mississippi State Secrets  
 
8 am/2 pm ET/PT  
 
In 1956, the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission was formed to spy on  
people thought to be associated with the Civil Rights movement. Funded  
by the state through 1972, it sometimes operated like George Orwell's  
"1984," and other times, the Keystone Cops. Recently-opened files offer  
a startling look at some of the violent and bizarre activity that this  
organization conducted to try to foil the civil rights movement.  
 
Port Chicago Mutiny  
 
9 am/3 pm ET/PT  
 
The story of the biggest home front disaster during World War II and  
why fifty black sailors were court-martialed in its aftermath when they  
refused to return to work that was considered too dangerous for white  
sailors.  
 
BLACK HISTORY MONTH  
 
CABLE IN THE CLASSROOM PROGRAMMING  
 
All shows air at 6 am ET/PT:  
 
February 3  
 
Black Aviators: Flying Free  
 
The stories of African-American men and women who defied the odds to  
fly high as 20th century aviation pioneers.  
 
February 4  
 
Ships of Slaves: The Middle Passage  
 
The powerful story of the Transatlantic Slave Trade-the 400 years  
during which millions of Africans were systematically kidnapped and  
shipped under inhumane conditions to the New World.  
 
February 5  
 
The Night Tulsa Burned  
 
The Greenwood section of Tulsa, Oklahoma, one of the most affluent  
all-black communities in America, was the scene of a deadly 1921 race  
riot sparked by an inaccurate charge that a black man had assaulted a  
white woman. Despite numerous deaths and millions of dollars of damage,  
no one was charged with any wrongdoing, no reparations were ever made,  
and accounts of the riot were literally cut out of newspaper archives.  
 
February 6  
 
America's Black Warriors  
 
The history of African-Americans in the U.S. military and the  
integration of the army. Colin Powell and other prominent black military  
figures discuss how blacks had to go above and beyond the call of duty  
to earn the respect of fellow soldiers, how they fought against racism,  
and their effectiveness on the battlefield.  
 
February 7  
 
Harlem Hell fighters  
 
A look at the 369th Infantry, a Harlem-based New York National Guard  
unit, whose battles against discrimination were just as difficult as the  
fight against the Germans in 1918.  
 
February 24-25  
 
The Underground Railroad  
 
Meet the men and women, black and white, who risked their lives to  
bring slaves to freedom, including Harriet Tubman, Harriet Beecher  
Stowe, William Still and John P. Parker. Learn how the railroad was run  
and where you can find traces of it today.  
 
February 26  
 
Frederick Douglass  
 
A biography of the life and work of the most prominent African-American  
of the 19th century and his influence on the abolition of slavery and  
equal rights.  
 
February 27  
 
African American Historical Sites  
 
James Horton of THC's History Center leads viewers on a tour of famous  
as well as little-known African-American landmarks. From the Underground  
Railroad to the Civil Rights Movement, these landmarks help bring to  
life the story of the African-American experience from the 18th century  
to the present.  
 
February 28  
 
Greatest Journeys on Earth: South Africa  
 
This journey through South Africa takes you on a voyage to the soul of  
the different nations of this country-black, white, Indian and colored
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
			
				__________________ 
				Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. ** Greater Service, Greater Progress Since 1922  
			 
		
		
		
		
		
			
				  
				
					
						Last edited by NinjaPoodle; 01-30-2003 at 04:13 PM.
					
					
				
			
		
		
		
	
	 |