ausetkmt · 9 months ago
Text
Knights of Liberty - Wikipedia
Tumblr media
Pictured here is Moses Dickson, from the frontispiece illustration of the 1879 book A Manual of the Knights of Tabor and Daughters of the Tabernacle. In 1872, the Rev. Moses Dickson founded the International Order of Twelve of Knights and Daughters of Tabor, an African-American fraternal order focused on benevolence and financial programs. Dickson was born a free man in Cincinnati in 1824, was a Union soldier during the Civil War, and afterwards became a prominent clergyman in the African Methodist Episcopal Church. Dickson showed an interest in progressive fraternal organizations early on – in 1846 Dickson, with others, founded a society known as the Knights of Liberty, whose objective was to overthrow slavery; the group did not get beyond the organizing stages. Dickson was also involved in Freemasonry – he was the second Grand Master of the Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Missouri.
Dickson’s International Order of Twelve of Knights and Daughters of Tabor – or Order of Twelve, as it’s more commonly know – accepted men and women on equal terms. Men and women met together in higher level groups and in the governance of the organization, although at the local level they met separately – the men in “temples” and the women in “tabernacles” (akin to “lodges” in Freemasonry). The Order of Twelve was most prominent in the South and the lower Midwest. The major benefits to members – similar to many fraternal orders of the time – was a burial policy and weekly cash payments for the sick.
What many people today remember about the Order of Twelve is an institution founded in Mound Bayou, Misssissippi in 1942 – the Taborian Hospital. Michael Premo, a Story Corps facilitator, posted his appreciation for the impact that the Taborian Hospital had on the lives of African-Americans living in the Mississippi Delta from the 1940s-1960s. The Taborian Hospital was on the Mississippi Heritage Trust’s 10 Most Endangered List of 2000, and an update to that list indicates that the hospital still stands vacant and seeks funding for renovation. Here are some photos of the Taborian Hospital today.
Want to learn more about the Order of Twelve? Here are a few primary and secondary sources that we have here in our collection (with primary sources listed first):
Dickson, Moses. A Manual of the Knights of Tabor and Daughters of the Tabernacle, including the Ceremonies of the Order, Constitutions, Installations, Dedications, and Funerals, with Forms, and the Taborian Drill and Tactics. St. Louis, Mo. : G. I. Jones [printer], 1879. Call number: RARE HS 2259 .T3 D5 1879
—-. Ritual of Taborian Knighthood, including : the Uniform Rank. St. Louis, Mo. : A. R. Fleming & Co., printers, 1889. Call number: RARE HS 2230 .T3 D5 1889
Beito, David. From Mutual Aid to the Welfare State: Fraternal Societies and Social services, 1890-1967. Chapel Hill, N.C. : University of North Carolina Press, 2000. Call number: 44 .B423 2000
Skocpol, Theda, Ariane Liazos, Marshall Ganz. What a Mighty Power We Can Be : African American Fraternal Groups and the Struggle for Racial Equality. Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2006. Call number: 90 .S616 2006 (1)
(1)  From The National Heritage Museum -   http://nationalheritagemuseum.typepad.com/library_and_archives/2008/05/moses-dickson-a.html
SOME ADDITIONAL INTERESTING INFORMATION ABOUT MOSES DICKSON
Moses Dickson, prior to the Civil War was a traveling barber.  Later he became an AME minister and was known as Father Dickson.
He was one of the Founders of the Lincoln Institute, now Lincoln University in Jefferson City, Misouri.
In 1879 along with others such as James Milton Turner, John Wheeler and John Turner he helped create the Committee of Twenty Five, organized to set up temporary housing for the more than 10,000 travelers who passed through St. Louis each year.
He was President of the Refugee Relief Board in St. Louis which helped to shelter and feed 16,000 former slaves who relocated to Kansas.
Moses Dickson was the first Grand Lecturer of the Most Worhipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge of Missouri upon its foundation in 1865.  He was the second Grand Master of this Grand Lodge and the Grand Secretary in 1869.
In 1876 Companion Moses dickson was elected Deputy Grand High Priest of the Grand Chapter of Holy Royal Arch Masons of Missouri and Jurisdiction.
Moses Dickson wrote the Ritual of Heroines of Jericho penning the “Master Mason’s Daughter,” the “True Kinsman,” and “Heroines of Jericho” degrees. It was sold and distributed by the Moses Dickson Regalia and Supply Co., Kansas City, Missouri and entered into the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. in the year 1895.
The Knights of Liberty was organized by 12 Black Men in secret in August, 1846 in St. Louis, Missouri.  They were also known as the Knights of Tabor or the International Order of Twelve. Tabor is a Biblical mountain in Israel where the Israelites won a big victory over the Canaanites.
Moses Dickson was a leader of the Underground Railroad.  He and 47,000 other Knights enlisted in the Union Army as soon as Linclon authorized Black men to sign up.
Disbanded by the Civil War many of the Knights of Liberty reformed after the War was over into a benevolent fraternal society named the International Order of the Twelve Knights and Daughters of Tabor. Moses Dickson authored “International Order of Twelve 333 of Knights and Daughters of Tabor,” a book outlining the Constitution, Rules and Regulations of the Temples of the Uniform Rank of Tabor and Taborian Division.
Moses Dickson died on November 28, 1901. A truly remarkable man!
Originally published at the National Heritage Museum’s blog. The National Heritage Museum is an American history museum founded and supported by 32° Scottish Rite Freemasons in the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States of America.
Tumblr media
19 notes · View notes
lboogie1906 · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Sarah Mapps Douglass (September 9, 1806 – September 8, 1882) was an educator, abolitionist, writer, and public lecturer. Her painted images on her written letters may be the first or earliest surviving examples of signed paintings by an African American woman. These paintings are contained within the Cassey Dickerson Album. The album is a rare collection of 19th-century friendship letters between a group of women.
She was born in Philadelphia to a prominent abolitionist family, the only daughter of abolitionists Robert Douglass, a baker, and Grace Bustill Douglass, a milliner, and teacher. Her grandfather, Cyrus Bustill, a Quaker who owned a bakery, and operated a school run from his home, was one of the early members of the Free African Society, an early African American charity organization. Her brother was artist Robert Douglass Jr. Her cousin was artist David Bustill Bowser.
She began teaching in Philadelphia at a school organized by her mother with James Forten. She taught at the Free African School for Girls, before establishing her school for African American girls. She was soon recognized as a talented teacher, of the sciences and arts, at which she excelled, and for holding her students to high standards. In 1838, the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society took over the school, retaining her as the headmaster. In 1854, the school merged with the Institute for Colored Youth, and she became the head of the primary department. She studied anatomy, female health, and hygiene, and acquired medical basic training at the Female Medical College of Pennsylvania (1853-77), becoming the first African-American female student, and at the Ladies’ Institute of Pennsylvania Medical University. Her work at the medical institutes influenced her decision to lecture and teach evening classes to African-American women at meetings of the Banneker Institute on issues of physiology and hygiene.
She married William Douglass (1855-61) the African American rector of the African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas, a widower with nine children. After her husband died, she resumed her antislavery activities and taught full-time. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
3 notes · View notes
delurkr · 8 months ago
Text
I know "St. David's Episcopal Church" wasn't named after David Milton but what if was
9 notes · View notes
fuckyeahmarxismleninism · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
New York City: People Speak Out to Stop Racism, Poverty and World War III
Friday, January 13 - 6:00 to 9:00 p.m.
St. Mary's Episcopal Church of Harlem, 521 West 126 St., Manhattan
COVID protocols. Must wear masks.
In honor of Dr. King's legacy: We need jobs, housing, food & healthcare, not war!
NO WAR & SANCTIONS on the people of Russia, Donbass, China, Cuba, Haiti, Zimbabwe, Palestine, Yemen, Philippines, Venezuela, Iran, Syria, Puerto Rico
STOP FUNDING white supremacy from Ukraine to the U.S.
SHUT DOWN NATO, the Pentagon & the CIA
STOP racism, transphobia, union busting, and attacks on women's rights, LGBTQ+ people and immigrants
SPEAKERS INCLUDE:
Rev. Annie Chambers, National Welfare Rights Union co-chair & public housing advocate;
John Parker, Socialist Unity Party, Calif. U.S. Senate Candidate who recently traveled to Donbass;
Margaret Kimberley, Black Agenda Report executive editor;
David Clennon, action & activist;
Melinda Butterfield, Struggle-La Lucha co-editor & author of "U.S. Proxy War in Ukraine & Donbass";
Berta Joubert-Ceci, Women In Struggle/Mujeres En Lucha;
Joe Lombardo, United National Antiwar Coalition national coordinator;
Ellie McCrow, Pratt Workers United organizing committee
(partial list)
SPONSORS INCLUDE: Struggle-La Lucha newspaper; Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice; Women In Struggle/Mujeres En Lucha; Voices of Resistance; United National Antiwar Coalition; Youth Against War & Racism; Socialist Unity Party; Peoples Power Assembly; Freedom Road Socialist Organization; December 12th Movement; Shut Down the Pentagon & CIA (list in formation)
http://StopNato.org [email protected]
48 notes · View notes
scotianostra · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Saint Cuthbert's Churchyard, Edinburgh.
It is possible that the first church to St Cuthbert was built in around the 8th century. In 1127, King David 1 granted all lands below Edinburgh Castle to St Cuthbert’s. The first burial is thought to have been an English Templar Knight who died at Bannockburn in 1314. In 1738 the boundary walls were raised to a height of eight feet.
The watchtower, as seen in the second pic was built to deter 'Resurrectionists' stealing bodies. It was restored in the 1990's and has since been let out as offices to various companies since then. The churchyard’s northern section was acquired by St John’s Episcopal Church.
The graveyard was closed for new burials in 1875, I sometimes see homeless people, or at least the signs of them, in the burial ground vaults here.
49 notes · View notes
brookston · 11 months ago
Text
Holidays 12.5
Holidays
AFL-CIO Day
Bathtub Party Day (a.k.a. Party in the Tub Day)
Battle of Longewaia Day (India)
Bhumibol Adulyadej Memorial Day (Thailand)
Blue Jeans Day
Boycott Day
Celebrate Shelter Pets Day
Children’s Day (Suriname)
Colorado Gives Day (Colorado)
Day of Military Honor - Battle of Moscow (Russia)
Day of the Ninja (a.k.a. International Ninja Day)
Die Like a Pirate Day
Discovery Day (Dominican Republic, Haiti)
Father’s Day (Thailand)
Female Community Health Volunteers’ Day (Nepal)
Folding Chair Day
Fraternity Day
International Ninja Day  (a.k.a. International Creep Like a Ninja Day)
International Volunteer Day
International Volunteer Day for Economic and Social Development (UN)
Irrational Exuberance Day
Klozum (Netherlands)
Let's Get Organized Day
Montgomery Bus Boycott Anniversary Day
National Communicate with Your Kids Day
National Commute With Your Baby Day
National Day of the Coral Reef (Colombia)
National DeFi (Decentralized Finance) Day
National Devon Day
National Johnny Day
National Kings of Prohibition Day
Ninjas vs. Krampus Day
Play Hookey Day
Roe Deer Day (French Republic)
Quito Day (Ecuador)
Tinsel Day
World Biomedical Engineering Day
World Soil Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Comfort Food Day
National Pigs in a Blanket Day (UK)
National Repeal Day
Sacher Torte Day
Swap a Christmas Cookie Recipe Day
World Turkish Coffee Day
1st Tuesday in December
World Trick Shot Day [1st Tuesday]
Feast Days
Abercius (Christian; Saint)
Bassus of Nice (Christian; Saint)
Clement of Alexandria (Episcopal Church)
Crispina (Christian; Saint)
Dalmatius of Pavia (Christian; Saint)
David Bomberg (Artology)
Faunalia (Honoring Faunus; Ancient Rome)
Faunalia Rustica (Pagan)
Festival of Faunalia (for Old Roman God Faunus)
Gerbold (Christian; Saint)
Ghidra and Mechaghidra Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saints)
Huyghens (Positivist; Saint)
Justinian of Ramsey Island (Christian; Saint)
Nicetius (a.k.a. Nizier; Christian; Saint)
Niels Stenson (Christian; Blessed)
St. Nicholas Eve [Belgium, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, UK] (a.k.a. ... 
Avond (Leewvarden, West Friesland, Netherlands)
Bonhomme Noel (Celebration of “Goodman Christmas”)
Klausjagen (Switzerland)
Krampus
Krampusnacht (a.k.a. Krampuslauf; Austria)
Sinterklaas (The Netherlands)
Zwarte Piete (Black Peter, companion of St. Nicholas who keeps track of good/bad kids)
Nones of December (Ancient Rome)
Pelinus of Brindisi (Christian; Saint)
Remember the Spanish Inquisition Day (Pastafarian)
Sabbas the Sanctified (Christian; Saint)
Wes (Muppetism)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [66 of 71]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Premieres
Anne of Green Gables (TV Mini-Series; 1985)
Band on the Run (Album; 1973)
Beverly Hills Cop (Film; 1984)
Big and Little Wong Tin Bar (Film; 1962)
The Borrowers (Film; 1997)
Bucks for Boris or The Green Paper Caper (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S3, Ep. 132; 1961)
Bye Bye Baby, by Mary Wells (Song; 1960)
Cadillac Records (Film; 2008)
Café Flesh (Adult Film; 1982)
Charade (Film; 1963)
Chef Donald (Disney Cartoon; 1941)
Come and Get It, by Badfinger (Song; 1969)
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (Film; 2008)
Damaged, by Black Flag (Album; 1981)
Flash Gordon (Film; 1980)
The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, by Giorgio Bassani (Novel; 1962)
Good Will Hunting (Film; 1997)
Hop Skip and Junk or Bullwinkle’s Big Tow (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S3, Ep. 131; 1961)
Juno (Film; 2007)
Let It Bleed, by The Rolling Stones (Album; 1969)
Love in the Time of Cholera, by Gabriel García Márquez (Novel; 1985)
Made in America, by The Blues Brothers (Album; 1980)
The Matchmaker, by Thornton Wilder (Broadway Play; 1954)
Ocean’s Eleven (Film; 2001)
The Pearl, by John Steinbeck (Novella; 1947)
Pioneer Days (Disney Cartoon; 1930)
Serpico (Film; 1973)
The Station Agent (Film; 2003)
Symphonie Fantastique, by Hector Berlioz (Symphony; 1830)
Tweet Dreams (WB LT Cartoon; 1959)
The Village Smithy (WB LT Cartoon; 1936)
Today’s Name Days
Anno, Gerald, Niels, Reinhard (Austria)
Sava, Silva, Silvana, Silviya, Stanislav (Bulgaria)
Krispina, Sabina, Slavka (Croatia)
Jitka (Czech Republic)
Sabina (Denmark)
Selma, Selme (Estonia)
Selma (Finland)
Gérald, Gérard (France)
Gerald, Niels, Reinhard (Germany)
Diogenes, Savas, Savvas (Greece)
Vilma (Hungary)
Giulio, Lucia (Italy)
Klaudija, Klaudijs, Sabīne, Sarma, Sarmīte (Latvia)
Eimintas, Geisvilė, Grafas, Gratas (Lithuania)
Ståle, Stine (Norway)
Anastazy, Gerald, Geraldyna, Kryspina, Krystyna, Pęcisława, Saba (Poland)
Anastasie, Nectarie, Sava (Romania)
Oto (Slovakia)
Anastasio, Elisa, Sabas (Spain)
Sven(Sweden)
Pandora, Sabas, Savas, Wallace, Wally, Walt, Walter (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 339 of 2024; 26 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of week 49 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Ruis (Elder) [Day 8 of 28]
Chinese: Month 10 (Gui-Hai), Day 23 (Ding-You)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 22 Kislev 5784
Islamic: 22 Jumada I 1445
J Cal: 9 Zima; Twosday [9 of 30]
Julian: 22 November 2023
Moon: 46%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 3 Bichat (13th Month) [Huyghens]
Runic Half Month: Is (Stasis) [Day 10 of 15]
Season: Autumn (Day 73 of 89)
Zodiac: Sagittarius (Day 14 of 30)
2 notes · View notes
Text
Today in Christian History
Tumblr media
Today is Thursday, March 30th, the 89th day of 2023. There are 276 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in History:
606: (Probable date) Death on Mount Sinai of John Climacus, an Eastern hermit, author, and abbot. He had authored the popular book Scala Paradisi (The Ladder of Divine Ascent). Twelve centuries later, Danish philosopher-theologian Søren Kierkegaard, writing under the pseudonyms Climacus and Anti-Climacus, will parody this work, loathing any suggestion that humans can ascend to the divine under their own power.
794: Repose (death) of Stephen of Mar Saba, who had been something of a hermit and counseled compassion for nature. The Orthodox Church will recognize him as a saint.
1533: Thomas Cranmer is consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury.
1555: Bishop Ferrar is burned at St. David’s at Carmarthen, the chief town of his former diocese, condemned for violating his vow of chastity. After preaching against Roman Church forms he had been imprisoned by Mary and refused to be reconciled with Rome, saying that he had taken an oath both to Henry VIII and Edward VI never to admit the papal supremacy.
1735: The impious Howell Harris changes course, becoming a leading Welsh revivalist.
1771: Repose (Death) of Bishop Sophronius of Irkutsk, who will be recognized by the Orthodox Church as a saint because of his personal asceticism, wise counsel, championship of women’s rights, and labors to uplift the spiritual life of his remote diocese.
1851: Vietnamese Emperor Tú Dúc issues a severe edict against Christianity; it orders drowning for European priests, and says Vietnamese priests must be cut in half, even if they agree to trample the cross underfoot.
1858: Dudley Tyng speaks to a noon rally of five thousand in Philadelphia, taking as his text, “Go now ye that are men and serve the Lord.” He declares that he would rather lose his right arm than fail to deliver God’s message to his listeners. Deeply moved, one thousand men respond to his solemn words. Two weeks later one of his arms is yanked from its socket in an accident, infection will develop, and it will have to be amputated. These measures will not save him and in a few days more he will die. His last words will be “Stand up for Jesus, father, and tell my brethren of the ministry to stand up for Jesus.” This dying exhortation will inspire the hymn “Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus.”
1876: Death, in California, of James L. Breck, a successful Episcopal frontier missionary and educator.
1899: The steamship Stella strikes some rocks in a fog while sailing to Guernsey. Mary Rogers, a cheerful, kind, and hard-working stewardess, supervises the escape of a large number of women and relinquishes her own lifebelt to the last of them, giving up her place in the lifeboat. Raising her hands to heaven she cries, “Lord, have me!” as the ship sinks beneath her.
1942: Death in Burbank, California, of Anne S. Murphy, author of the hymn “Constantly Abiding.”
2004: Burial of Wilson Rajil Sabiya, a Lutheran defender of Christians and of oppressed tribes. Among his chief opponents were Islamists who sought to incorporate Sharia law into the Nigerian constitution and to control the government, medical, and educational facilities.
6 notes · View notes
brookstonalmanac · 1 year ago
Text
Holidays 6.26
Holidays
Alexandra Rose Day
Anti Drugs Day (India)
Armed Forces Day (UK)
Army & Navy Day (Azerbaijan)
Bar Code Day (a.k.a. UPC Day)
Beautician's Day
Boardwalk Day
Canoe Day
Day of the Armed Forces (Azerbaijan)
Festival of the Tarasque (France)
Flag Day (Romania)
Forgiveness Day
Global Africa Day
Good Earth Day
Good Manners Day
Guru Rinpoche Day (Bhutan)
Harry Potter Day
Human Genome Day
International Angel Shark Day
International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking (UN)
International Day in Support of Victims of Torture (UN)
International Stitch Day
LGBTQ Equality Day
National Beautician’s Day
National Cancer Wellness Awareness Day (Canada)
National Canoe Day (Canada)
National DCE (Director of Christian Education) Day
National Fossil Day (Australia)
National Milkman Day
National Ranboo Day
National Rat Catcher’s Day
National Report Trade Agreement Act Fraud Day
National Sarah Day
National Sports Day (Fiji)
National Toothbrush Day
National Zachary Day
Ommegang Pageant begins (Belgium) [Ends 7.6]
Pied Piper of Hamelin Day (according to the Brothers Grimm)
Same Sex Marriage Day
Senior Citizen’s Day (Mason County, Michigan)
626 Day (Lilo & Stitch)
Shallot Day (French Republic)
Sunthorn Phu Day (Thailand)
Supply Chain Geek Day
UN Charter Day
World Bunny Chow Day
World Nupe Day (Nigeria)
World Refrigeration Day
Wrong Trousers Day (Wallace & Gromit)
Ziua Tricolorului (Flag Day; Romania)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Chocolate Pudding Day
National Coconut Day
National Haskap Berry Day
Tropical Cocktails Day
4th & Last Monday in June
Please Take My Children To Work Day [Last Monday]
Independence Days
Madagascar (from France, 1960)
Schwanensee (Swan Lake; Declared; 2009) [unrecognized]
St. George (Principality Declared; 2007) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Anthelm of Belley (Christian; Saint)
Archie McPhee Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Branwell Brontë (Artology)
Carbonara Day (Pastafarian)
David the Dendrite (Christian; Saint)
El Cid (Positivist; Saint)
Feast of All Saints
Hermogius (Christian; Saint)
Isabel Florence Hapgood (Episcopal Church)
Jack (Muppetism)
Jeremiah (Lutheran)
John and Paul (Christian; Saint)
José María Robles Hurtado (One of Saints of the Cristero War; Christian)
Josemaría Escrivá (Christian; Saint)
Mar Abhai (Syriac Orthodox Church)
Maria (Muppetism)
Pelagius of Córdoba (Christian; Saint)
Pelayo (Christian; Saint)
Solstitium I (Pagan)
Vigilius of Trent (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Sensho (先勝 Japan) [Good luck in the morning, bad luck in the afternoon.]
Premieres
After the Rain, by Nelson (Album; 1990)
Baby, I Love Your Way, by Peter Frampton (Song; 1976)
Darby O’Gill and the Little People (Film; 1959)
Die Walküre (The Valkyrie), by Richard Wagner (Opera; 1870) [Ring of the Nibelung #2]
Donald in Mathematic Land (Disney Cartoon; 1959)
Dragonslayer (Film; 1981)
Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga (Film; 2020)
For Your Eyes Only (US Film; 1981) [James Bond #12]
Full Metal Jacket (Film; 1987)
The Gold Rush (Charlie Chaplin Film; 1925)
Goo, by Sonic Youth (Album; 1990)
The Great Muppet Caper (Film; 1981)
A Hard Day’s Night, by The Beatles (Album; 1964)
The Hurt Locker (Film; 2009)
Jean de Florette (Film; 1987)
Muzzle Tough (WB MM Cartoon; 1954)
My Spy (Film; 2020)
Never a Dull Moment (Film; 1968)
Out of Sight (Film; 1998)
The Philosopher’s Stone (a.k.a. Sorcerer's Stone), by J.K. Rowling (Novel; 1997) [Harry Potter #1]
Spaceballs (Film; 1987)
The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men (Film; 1952)
Stripes (Film; 1981)
Sweet Sioux (WB MM Cartoon; 1937)
Symphony No. 9, by Gustav Mahler (Symphony; 1912)
Ted 2 (Film; 2015)
Who Let the Dogs Out, by the Baha Men (Album; 2000)
Today’s Name Days
Anthelm, Vigilius (Austria)
David (Bulgaria)
Ivan, Pavao, Vigilije, Zoran (Croatia)
Adriana (Czech Republic)
Pelagius (Denmark)
Manivald, Vaane, Vaano, Vaino, Vane, Vanevald (Estonia)
Jarkko, Jarmo, Jarno, Jere, Jeremias, Jorma (Finland)
Anthelme (France)
David, Konstantin, Paul, Vigil (Germany)
Makarios (Greece)
János, Pál (Hungary)
Elisa, Filippo, Rodolfo, Vigilio (Italy)
Ausma, Dzejs, Ingūna, Inguns, Ulvis (Latvia)
Jaunius, Jaunutis, Viltautė, Virgilijus (Lithuania)
Jenny, Jonny (Norway)
Jan, Jeremi, Jeremiasz, Paweł, Zdziwoj (Poland)
David (România)
Adriána (Slovakia)
José, Pelayo (Spain)
Lea, Rakel (Sweden)
Arley, Harlan, Harlene, Harley, Thelma (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 177 of 2024; 188 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 1 of week 26 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Duir (Oak) [Day 15 of 28]
Chinese: Month 5 (Wu-Wu), Day 9 (Yi-Mao)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 7 Tammuz 5783
Islamic: 7 Dhu al-Hijjah 1444
J Cal: 27 Sol; Sixday [27 of 30]
Julian: 13 June 2023
Moon: 50%: 1st Quarter
Positivist: 9 Charlemagne (7th Month) [El Cid]
Runic Half Month: Dag (Day) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 6 of 94)
Zodiac: Cancer (Day 6 of 31)
1 note · View note
blwsessionphotos · 2 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Session Photos - 3.30.95
Chesky Records recording session at St. Peter's Episcopal Church NYC for the Oregon album "Beyond Words."
Audio Magazine feature, September '95 issue - with David Chesky, Bob Katz, Steve Guttenberg, and Oregon (Ralph Towner, Glen Moore, Paul McCandless).
0 notes
globalworship · 2 years ago
Text
Our Song in the Night (Psalm 77) song & dance from Nashville
Posted online in July 2020.
Our Song in the Night (Psalm 77) Performed by musicians and dancers of St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church, Nashville TN Words and music © Michael Van Patter. Used by permission. Arranged and produced by David Madeira. Choreography by Emmaline Weedman.
youtube
+++
Lyrics: In the darkness, can you hear us? When the night comes, are we alone? Have you forgotten all of your children? When we remember you we groan But our hearts cannot be silent
God, be our song in the night when the light is gone God, be our joy, be our strength Be our sheltering place Our song in the night
We are broken-- are we forsaken? Has your love gone down with the sun? And your mercy through all history, Is it abandoned and undone? Oh our hearts cannot be silent
"Man of Sorrows", what a name For the Son of God, who came Ruined sinners to reclaim Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah
0 notes
ausetkmt · 2 months ago
Video
youtube
1971 SPECIAL REPORT: "DEATH OF GEORGE JACKSON'
On August 21, 1971, Jackson met with attorney Stephen Bingham on a civil lawsuit Jackson had filed against the California Department of Corrections. 
After the meeting, Jackson was escorted by officer Urbano Rubiaco back to his cell when Rubiaco noticed a metallic object in Jackson's hair, later revealed to be a wig, and ordered him to remove it. Jackson then pulled a Spanish Astra 9 mm pistol from beneath the wig and said "Gentlemen, the dragon has come"—a reference to Ho Chi Minh.
 It is not clear how Jackson obtained the gun. Bingham, who lived for 13 years as a fugitive before returning to the United States to face trial, was acquitted of charges that he smuggled a gun to Jackson. Jackson ordered Rubiaco to open all the cells and along with several other inmates he overpowered the remaining correction officers and took them, along with two inmates, hostage. Five other hostages, officers Jere Graham, Frank DeLeon and Paul Krasnes, along with two white prisoners, were killed and found in Jackson's cell. 
Three other officers, Rubiaco, Kenneth McCray, and Charles Breckenridge, were also shot and stabbed, but survived. After finding the keys for the Adjustment Center's exit, Jackson along with fellow inmate and close friend Johnny Spain escaped to the yard where Jackson was shot dead from a tower and Spain surrendered.
 Three inmates were acquitted and three (David Johnson, Johnny Spain and Hugo Pinell) were convicted for the murders. The six became known as the "San Quentin Six". There is some evidence that Jackson and his supporters on the outside had planned the escape for several weeks. 
Three days before the escape attempt, Jackson rewrote his will, leaving all royalties as well as control of his legal defense fund to the Black Panther Party. Jackson's funeral was held at St. Augustine's Episcopal Church in Oakland, California on August 28, 1971.
4 notes · View notes
lboogie1906 · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
The African Methodist Episcopal Church grew out of the Free African Society which Richard Allen, Absalom Jones, and others established in Philadelphia in 1787. When officials at St. George’s MEC pulled Blacks off their knees while praying, FAS members discovered just how far American Methodists would go to enforce racial discrimination against African Americans. He led a small group who resolved to remain Methodists. In 1794 Bethel AME was dedicated with Allen as pastor. To establish Bethel’s independence from interfering white Methodists, Allen, a former Delaware enslaved, successfully sued in the Pennsylvania courts in 1807 and 1815 for the right of his congregation to exist as an independent institution. Because Black Methodists in other Middle Atlantic communities encountered racism and desired religious autonomy, Allen called them to meet in Philadelphia to form the AME denomination.
The spread of the AMEC before the Civil War was restricted to the Northeast and Midwest. Major congregations were established in Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, DC, Cincinnati, Chicago, Detroit, and other large Blacksmith’s Shop cities. The slave states of Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, Louisiana, and, South Carolina, became locations for AME congregations. The denomination reached the Pacific Coast in the early 1850s with churches in Stockton, Sacramento, San Francisco, and other places in California. Bishop Morris Brown established the Canada Annual Conference.
In 1880 AME membership reached 400,000 because of its spread below the Mason-Dixon line. Bishop Henry M. Turner pushed African Methodism across the Atlantic into Liberia and Sierra Leone in 1891 and into South Africa in 1896, the AME laid claim to adherents on two continents.
Bishop Benjamin W. Arnett reminded the audience of the presence of Blacks in the formation of Christianity. Bishop Benjamin T. Tanner wrote in 1895 in The Color of Solomon – What? that biblical scholars wrongly portrayed the son of David as a white man.
The AMEC has membership in twenty Episcopal Districts in thirty-nine countries on five continents. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence
0 notes
yungyosh · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
PLF Photo Booth provides selfie rental station services to the Atlanta, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania areas.  Whether you’re planning a baby shower, birthday party, corporate event, family reunion, gender reveal, holiday party, wedding,  or otherwise, a photobooth from PLF Photo Booth is the perfect opportunity to add more fun to your event!  Our photobooths have the ability to take still photos, Boomerangs, and GIFs.  Your guests can instantly share their photos via email or text from the booth.  Click the link in our bio for more information! 📷  #photobooth #partyrentals #partyentertainment #eventplanning #events (at St David's Episcopal Church) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cp8vc5ArVqp/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
1 note · View note
wutbju · 2 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Raymond Ernest Griffith passed away on October 23, 2022 from complications with heart failure. He was 65.
Raymond was born on April 25, 1957 at Mountain Home Air Force Base, Idaho.
Raymond is survived by his wife of 39 years, Tracey; their children, Raymond (Ray) Griffith and his wife Crystal Griffith, Michael Griffith and Susannah Larry, Jonathan Griffith, and Katherine (Katie) Griffith; grandchildren, David and Bill Griffith, Deborah, Gabrielle and Carissa Larry; sister, Patti Lisenbee; and nieces and nephew, Glori and Matt Lisenbee and his wife Sheri.
Raymond graduated from Bob Jones University with a Bachelor's in Social Studies in 1987 and a Master's in Mathematics Education in '89. He then went on to Clemson University receiving a 2nd Master's in Mathematics Statistics in 1991.
He taught math at South Piedmont Community College for 21 years from 1993-2014. For the remainder of his life, he also taught at Ivy Tech Community College, South Western Michigan College, Purdue Polytech and Holy Cross. Raymond's legacy was instilling a love of learning in his children and his students.
Raymond's hobbies included stamp collecting, making jewelry, and professional photography. He was also a writer and enjoyed writing on such topics as faith, theology, science, and social justice and he was a top contributor on Quora.com. Raymond's family and his work were his life. He was a proud father and grandfather and was always bragging about his children and grandchildren. He will be missed.
Services will be held at St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church on Sunday, October 30th. Visitation from 1-3pm. Memorial service at 3:00 pm.53720 N Ironwood Rd, South Bend, IN 46635 Please send donations to an Educational Institution of your choice.
0 notes
freecatholic808 · 3 years ago
Text
"Look, identify, ask"--and take action
“Look, identify, ask”–and take action
First published in the Honolulu Star Advertiser 3/9/2022. Republished here with permission. Nationally, there is the unembarrassed undermining of democracy in this country by the Republicans, an old, but no longer grand party, unwilling to denounce the indecencies of their leaders — and followers. Locally, not a peep out of Hawaiʻi  Republicans as their national organization described the…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
brookston · 1 year ago
Text
Holidays 6.26
Holidays
Alexandra Rose Day
Anti Drugs Day (India)
Armed Forces Day (UK)
Army & Navy Day (Azerbaijan)
Bar Code Day (a.k.a. UPC Day)
Beautician's Day
Boardwalk Day
Canoe Day
Day of the Armed Forces (Azerbaijan)
Festival of the Tarasque (France)
Flag Day (Romania)
Forgiveness Day
Global Africa Day
Good Earth Day
Good Manners Day
Guru Rinpoche Day (Bhutan)
Harry Potter Day
Human Genome Day
International Angel Shark Day
International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking (UN)
International Day in Support of Victims of Torture (UN)
International Stitch Day
LGBTQ Equality Day
National Beautician’s Day
National Cancer Wellness Awareness Day (Canada)
National Canoe Day (Canada)
National DCE (Director of Christian Education) Day
National Fossil Day (Australia)
National Milkman Day
National Ranboo Day
National Rat Catcher’s Day
National Report Trade Agreement Act Fraud Day
National Sarah Day
National Sports Day (Fiji)
National Toothbrush Day
National Zachary Day
Ommegang Pageant begins (Belgium) [Ends 7.6]
Pied Piper of Hamelin Day (according to the Brothers Grimm)
Same Sex Marriage Day
Senior Citizen’s Day (Mason County, Michigan)
626 Day (Lilo & Stitch)
Shallot Day (French Republic)
Sunthorn Phu Day (Thailand)
Supply Chain Geek Day
UN Charter Day
World Bunny Chow Day
World Nupe Day (Nigeria)
World Refrigeration Day
Wrong Trousers Day (Wallace & Gromit)
Ziua Tricolorului (Flag Day; Romania)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Chocolate Pudding Day
National Coconut Day
National Haskap Berry Day
Tropical Cocktails Day
4th & Last Monday in June
Please Take My Children To Work Day [Last Monday]
Independence Days
Madagascar (from France, 1960)
Schwanensee (Swan Lake; Declared; 2009) [unrecognized]
St. George (Principality Declared; 2007) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Anthelm of Belley (Christian; Saint)
Archie McPhee Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Branwell Brontë (Artology)
Carbonara Day (Pastafarian)
David the Dendrite (Christian; Saint)
El Cid (Positivist; Saint)
Feast of All Saints
Hermogius (Christian; Saint)
Isabel Florence Hapgood (Episcopal Church)
Jack (Muppetism)
Jeremiah (Lutheran)
John and Paul (Christian; Saint)
José María Robles Hurtado (One of Saints of the Cristero War; Christian)
Josemaría Escrivá (Christian; Saint)
Mar Abhai (Syriac Orthodox Church)
Maria (Muppetism)
Pelagius of Córdoba (Christian; Saint)
Pelayo (Christian; Saint)
Solstitium I (Pagan)
Vigilius of Trent (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Sensho (先勝 Japan) [Good luck in the morning, bad luck in the afternoon.]
Premieres
After the Rain, by Nelson (Album; 1990)
Baby, I Love Your Way, by Peter Frampton (Song; 1976)
Darby O’Gill and the Little People (Film; 1959)
Die Walküre (The Valkyrie), by Richard Wagner (Opera; 1870) [Ring of the Nibelung #2]
Donald in Mathematic Land (Disney Cartoon; 1959)
Dragonslayer (Film; 1981)
Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga (Film; 2020)
For Your Eyes Only (US Film; 1981) [James Bond #12]
Full Metal Jacket (Film; 1987)
The Gold Rush (Charlie Chaplin Film; 1925)
Goo, by Sonic Youth (Album; 1990)
The Great Muppet Caper (Film; 1981)
A Hard Day’s Night, by The Beatles (Album; 1964)
The Hurt Locker (Film; 2009)
Jean de Florette (Film; 1987)
Muzzle Tough (WB MM Cartoon; 1954)
My Spy (Film; 2020)
Never a Dull Moment (Film; 1968)
Out of Sight (Film; 1998)
The Philosopher’s Stone (a.k.a. Sorcerer's Stone), by J.K. Rowling (Novel; 1997) [Harry Potter #1]
Spaceballs (Film; 1987)
The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men (Film; 1952)
Stripes (Film; 1981)
Sweet Sioux (WB MM Cartoon; 1937)
Symphony No. 9, by Gustav Mahler (Symphony; 1912)
Ted 2 (Film; 2015)
Who Let the Dogs Out, by the Baha Men (Album; 2000)
Today’s Name Days
Anthelm, Vigilius (Austria)
David (Bulgaria)
Ivan, Pavao, Vigilije, Zoran (Croatia)
Adriana (Czech Republic)
Pelagius (Denmark)
Manivald, Vaane, Vaano, Vaino, Vane, Vanevald (Estonia)
Jarkko, Jarmo, Jarno, Jere, Jeremias, Jorma (Finland)
Anthelme (France)
David, Konstantin, Paul, Vigil (Germany)
Makarios (Greece)
János, Pál (Hungary)
Elisa, Filippo, Rodolfo, Vigilio (Italy)
Ausma, Dzejs, Ingūna, Inguns, Ulvis (Latvia)
Jaunius, Jaunutis, Viltautė, Virgilijus (Lithuania)
Jenny, Jonny (Norway)
Jan, Jeremi, Jeremiasz, Paweł, Zdziwoj (Poland)
David (România)
Adriána (Slovakia)
José, Pelayo (Spain)
Lea, Rakel (Sweden)
Arley, Harlan, Harlene, Harley, Thelma (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 177 of 2024; 188 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 1 of week 26 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Duir (Oak) [Day 15 of 28]
Chinese: Month 5 (Wu-Wu), Day 9 (Yi-Mao)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 7 Tammuz 5783
Islamic: 7 Dhu al-Hijjah 1444
J Cal: 27 Sol; Sixday [27 of 30]
Julian: 13 June 2023
Moon: 50%: 1st Quarter
Positivist: 9 Charlemagne (7th Month) [El Cid]
Runic Half Month: Dag (Day) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 6 of 94)
Zodiac: Cancer (Day 6 of 31)
4 notes · View notes