History of the Department
Key Facts: The First Fifty Years
#Conscious2Woke2020
Timeline |
1966 |
- Carver Club, an informal Black student organization, established at UMass Amherst (primarily undergraduates, a few graduate members)
- Upward Bound summer program brought students to UMass Amherst for educational enrichment and college preparatory courses
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1967 |
- A committee of Black students met with Dean Tunis and presented a proposal to increase the number of Black students on the UMass Amherst campus
- CCENS/Committee for the Collegiate Education of Negro Students established (later CCEBS)
- Randolph Bromery
- Lawrence Johnson
- William Julius Wilson
- William Darity Sr.
- John Spencer
- Five College Committee on Negro Education
- UMass Amherst
- William Julius Wilson, chair & faculty
- Lawrence Johnson, faculty & assistant dean, School of Business Administration
- Randolph Bromery, faculty
- William Darity Sr., faculty
- Smith College
- Amherst College
- Afro-American Student Association established as a recognized student organization at UMass Amherst
- Cheryl Evans, President
- Cheryl Eastmond, Vice-President
- Paula Diggs, Treasurer
- Carol Seales, Secretary
- First Afro-Am Student Association social event held in Belchertown
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1968 |
- First Black Arts Festival:
- UMass, Cheryl Evans
- American International College, Henry Thomas III
- Springfield College, Don Brown
- Amherst College, Cuthbert O. “Tuffy” Simpkins
- Arrival of first CCENS class of 125 students recruited to attend UMass Amherst; campus administration housed the students on Orchard Hill, Cheryl Evans Assistant Area Coordinator, Sept.
- Students marched on the Whitmore Administration building and presented twenty-two demands for change, including Black Studies, Nov.
- University administration established the Committee on Afro-American Studies (CAS)/Afro-Am Studies Committee to write a proposal for a Black Studies department at UMass
- Afro-Am Cultural Center at Smith College opened
|
1969 |
- Five College Black Studies Committee formed
- Afro-American Studies program established in the Department of English
- Black Students’ Alliance at Smith College presented list of demands for Black Studies, 19 March
- Smith College faculty, in an emergency meeting, approved an Afro-American Studies major to begin in fall, 9 April
- Students presented UMass administration a petition for a Black Studies department; for Black Studies courses to count as core requirements; and for a Five College Black Studies Institute, Dec.
- The Drum Magazine founded by Robyn Chandler Smith with offices in the Black Cultural Center located in Mills House
- Dedication of Du Bois Homesite: Ossie Davis and Julian Bond
|
1970 |
- Students occupied Mills residence hall while defending against anti-Black attackers, Feb
- Student activists from across the Valley occupy four buildings on the Amherst College campus, 28 February
- CAS submitted proposal for Black Studies department
- George Mills House residence hall became the Black Cultural Center
- Amherst College established the first Black Studies department in the Pioneer Valley, March
- University of Massachusetts Board of Trustees approved the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies, 22 April
- W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies began its first academic year with nine faculty offering fourteen courses. Faculty: Allan Austin, Johnnetta Cole, Playthell Benjamin, Ivanhoe Donaldson, Cherif Guellal, Femi Richards, Esther Terry, Michael Thelwell, and Ben Wambari, Sept
- Smith College Department of Afro-American Studies began in fall under the chairmanship of Sethard Fisher, a visiting professor along with affiliated faculty: Walter Morris Hale (Government) and Peter Rose (Sociology).
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1971 |
- Black Cultural Center Art Gallery opens; later named the Augusta Savage Gallery
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1972 |
- New Africa House replaces Mills as the name for the building housing the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies
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1973 |
- W.E.B. Du Bois Library completed
- Afro-American Cultural Center at Smith College renamed the Mwangi Cultural Center to honor Dr. Ng’endo Mwangi, Smith class of ’61 and the first woman physician in Kenya
|
1996 |
- Du Bois Department doctoral program established—the second department in the nation to offer the PhD in Black Studies
- Smith College President Ruth J. Simmons proposed establishing a journal dedicated to publishing scholarship by and about women of color
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2000 |
- First issue of Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism published at Smith College
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2002 |
- Paula J. Giddings edited Meridians at Smith College until 2016
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2016 |
- The Department of Afro-American Studies at Smith College was renamed the Africana Studies Department
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2020 |
- The Fine Arts Center at UMass Amherst was renamed the Randolph Bromery Center for the Arts
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