Joan Trumpauer Mulholland, 1961.
Joan, a 19 year old Freedom Rider, was sentenced to two months in prison for her involvement in the integration of a Jackson, Mississippi bound train. She served more than the required two months because each addition day reduced her $200 fine by $3.
In the Fall of 1961, Joan transferred from Duke University to historically black Tougaloo Southern Christian College because she felt integration should be a two way street.
Today Joan is a retired teaching assistant living in Virginia and mother to five sons. After the 2008 election she brought her Obama pin to the grave of Medgar Evers.
Del Newbigging, Alexander Wood, 2005
Such an embarrassingly bad sculpture.
In 1810, Wood found himself at the centre of a scandal when he investigated a rape case. The victim, referred to as “Miss Bailey”, came to Wood claiming that she did not know the identity of her attacker, however she had scratched her assailant’s penis during the assault. In order to identify the assailant, Wood personally inspected the genitals of a number of suspects for injury. Several contradictory rumours existed about Wood’s conduct during these inspections. It was even alleged that Wood fabricated the rape charge as an opportunity to fondle and seduce young men. To this day, the truth of what actually happened is unknown.
When confronted with the charges by his friend, Judge William Dummer Powell, Wood wrote back, “I have laid myself open to ridicule & malevolence, which I know not how to meet; that the thing will be made the subject of mirth and a handle to my enemies for a sneer I have every reason to expect.” Wood became the subject of ridicule and was tagged with the nickname “Molly Wood”, “Molly” then being a derisive slang expression for a homosexual man. John Beverley Robinson called Wood the “Inspector General of private Accounts.”
Judge Powell buried the potential sodomy charges on condition that Wood leave Upper Canada. Wood left for Scotland in October 1810.
Wood returned to York by 1812, resuming his prior appointment as a magistrate. He fought in the War of 1812 and was on the boards of several organizations. His life in York continued without incident until 1823, when Rev. John Strachan, a longtime friend of Wood’s, recommended him for a position on the 1812 War Claims Commission. Judge Powell was the appointing authority and refused Wood on moral grounds due to the 1810 scandal. Wood sued Powell for defamation and won, but Powell refused to pay and subsequently published a pamphlet attacking Wood even further.
Wood remained in York, continuing his service in civic duties for the next seventeen years. In 1827 he purchased 50 acres (0.2 km²) of land at Yonge and Carlton Streets, which was referred to as “Molly Wood’s Bush” throughout the 19th century.
Although Aida Overton Walker (1880-1914) is little-known today, she was a premiere vaudevillian performer in her own day. Some historians even credit her with popularizing the cakewalk. When she could no longer perform for health reasons, she became an integral force for raising funding for the Industrial Home for Colored Working Girls.
Here she is at her sultry best. The photo is undated but my guess is that it was taken in the early 1900s, at the height of her career.
Former first lady Jackie Kennedy (whose husband President John F. Kennedy had been assassinated in 1963) and Coretta Scott King at Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1968 funeral. /Moneta Sleet Jr/Ebony Collection
Google Exodus
Watch now to see what the Exodus from Egypt would have looked like if Moses had a laptop, Google Maps and Facebook.
Great!
Thanks Piika!
Can you tell I’ve spent some time on the Toronto Archives today?
The Parkdale…but, by the time I saw a matinee there…it was called the Comesee….and I used to have to beg my mother to go.
(22 November 1861 – 23 May 1917) (also known as Ranavalo Manjaka III) was the last Queen of Imerina, a kingdom which dominated what is now Madagascar, from 30 July 1883 to 28 February 1897, when she was deposed by France, which subsequently ruled the island as a colony.>
Funkaoshi posted the This American Life - You Shouldn’t Have - podcast…which prompted me to look up
This Is Your Life: Holocaust Survivor Hanna Bloch Kohner Interview on YouTube, which I’ve posted above.
The 1953 broadcast is a perfect example of how far we’ve come in sensitivity.
I’ll admit that when Hanna and her brother were reunited…I shed a tear.













