Enabling Others
This series of messages focus on individuals who paved the way for others to be successful.
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John and Sylvia Webber – Southern Underground Railroad Conductors
John Webber was born in Vermont late in the 18th Century. He was a medic in the War of 1812. After the war, he settled in Mexico, in what would later become Texas after the Texas Revolution. Sylvia was born into slavery in 1807 in what is now Louisiana. She later...
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Alice Dunnigan: Asking Tough Questions
Alice Dunnigan was born in Kentucky in 1906. Her father was a sharecropper and her mother took in laundry. She was raised in a strict family that valued education. She had learned to read before entering the first grade. Since the local schools only provided 10 years...
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Judith Cohen: Saving Apollo 13
Apollo 13 kept the world on edge when an oxygen bank ruptured in the service module. Life support systems were disabled. The solution was to use the backup systems on the lunar module. Millions of people rejoiced when Apollo 13 splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, and...
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Margaret McFarland: A Neighborhood Genius
Margaret McFarland was born near Pittsburgh in 1905. Her father died when she was 5 and her mother never remarried, and she had a lifelong regret for a lack of fathering growing up. Her mother however did provide inspiration for her future interests in child...
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Funding the Civil Rights Movement
Mollie Moon was born in 1912 in the state of Mississippi. She trained as a pharmacist but also studied education and social services. After a career as a pharmacist, she refocused her life’s work on to one of lifting up the status of African Americans. She worked on...
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Augustus Julliard – Enabling Talent
Augustus Julliard was born at sea as his parents were immigrating to America from France. His father was a cobbler and Augustus’ upbringing was like many of middle-class Americans. He never attended college. Augustus began his career in the textile industry in...
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An Education Pioneer
Mary Lyon was born in 1797 in Massachusetts. Her parents had a farm, and her childhood was a tough one. Mary lost her father when she was five and her mother at age 13 when she remarried and abandoned her children. Mary stayed to take care of her brother. In spite of...
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Like Father, Like Son
Benjamin Davis, Jr. was born in Washington DC in 1912. At the time, his father was a lieutenant in the U.S. Army. His father would later become the first African American to reach the rank of Brigadier General. At the age of 13, Benjamin had the opportunity to fly...
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Opening up the Military
Benjamin Davis, Sr. was born in Washington DC in 1880. He was the grandson of slaves. While in high school, he became infatuated with the military. While his parents wanted him to go to college, he had other ideas. He lied about his age and joined the military. His...
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Mentoring Civil Rights Leaders
James Lawson was born in 1928 in Uniontown, PA as the sixth out of nine children. Both his father and his grandfather were ministers and James became a licensed minister while still in high school. When he was in college, he was drafted into the military but refused...
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