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UMG started as a media cooperative with the members of the group African Americans Community in Ghana
Realising the gap that exist between Africa, Americas and the Diaspora we decided to setup United Media Group.

31/03/2024

in 1962, while in Baltimore, Malcolm X visited Morgan State College and participated in a debate with Professor August Meier in the Old Murphy Auditorium.

24/02/2024

Very happy to announce that I will be voicing several characters on this show which is Disneys first collaboration with African production teams and set in NIGERIA!!!!

Journey to a world where nothing is as it seems with , an all-new limited series from Disney Animation and . All episodes are available February 28 on .

31/01/2024
31/01/2024

WE THE TO KEEP THE ‼️

🚨🚨CALL THE “STOP THE BEEF ” TO END A WITH NO INVOLVEMENT TO RESOLVE CONFLICT!!🚨🚨

👉🏿443-431-3705 or 443-522-7848

🗣WE MUST THE KILLING !!!!

WWW.WEOURUSMOVEMENT.ORG













01/01/2024
24/11/2023

🚨 Get ready for the premiere episode of "Heal Women, Heal the World" with Dr. Robyn White on the She is Still Dope Podcast Network: S01 E01 "A Celebration of Life."

📺 Join us on Saturday, November 25, 2023, at 12noon EST for an emotional and heartwarming conversation as Dr. Robyn honors the memory of her sister Angela Clark-Richardson, a veteran and mighty woman of God.

Tune in via YouTube.com/SheisStillDope
and on All Major Podcast Platforms!

In this moving premiere episode, Dr. Robyn White celebrates Angela's life, sharing heartfelt moments that illuminate her sister's incredible journey and contributions to the world. Dr. Robyn also engages in a short intimate conversation with their mother Vera, discussing life's trials and joys as they reflect on their family's resilience.

This episode sets the stage for a groundbreaking series centered around women's health and well-being, focusing on overcoming obstacles faced by women in pursuit of holistic wellness.

Every last Saturday of the month, "Heal Women, Heal the World" delves deep into topics essential for empowering women and achieving collective well-being. Become part of this thriving community seeking sustainable solutions for a healthier world!

Tune in via YouTube.com/SheisStillDope

Learn more at SheisStillDope.com 🔍
Join the Movement! – SheisStill.com/Community 🌐
Follow us ✨

She is Still Dope – Igniting Change Globally 🔥

👍 Hit like, 🔄 Share, and 📣 Spread the message!

11/11/2023

!!!! MAJOR ANNOUNCEMENT FOR THE AFRICAN DIASPORA (6th REGION) AND AFRICAN DESCENDANT EXPATS/REPATS ON GROUND IN AFRICA !!!!* GOOD BUSINESS IN AFRICA ALL…

26/10/2023
24/10/2023

If you’re in Ghana 🇬🇭 check out this red carpet event. It’s going to be lit🔥

I’m being honored with the Exceptional Author Under 25 Award 🏆

Thank you! (IG)♥️

BIG ANNOUNCEMENT COMING SOON! 📣



21/10/2023

Breaking barriers, one luxury car at a time. 🚗✨ Meet Thomas Moorehead, the trailblazer who made history as the first African-American Rolls Royce dealer globally and the inaugural Lamborghini and McLaren dealer in the United States. His journey is a testament to passion, perseverance, and a commitment to excellence. 🌟 Beyond the wheels, he's paving the way for minority auto dealers, setting new standards with heart and philanthropy. Here's to leaders like Thomas, who inspire us to reach for the stars and drive change. 🌍🔑

21/10/2023

Distinguished Sumner High School teaching faculty, 1930. Sumner High School was the first African-American high school west of the Mississippi River. Founded in 1875, by the 1930s Sumner boasted
many faculty with Ph.D.s and were in fact noted scholars or scientists in their fields of study.

20/10/2023

A powerful theme that speaks to the core of the nation. Solid speakers, not one of them will drop the ball.Shaping minds, promoting talents, pushing progress...

19/10/2023

In 1874, Edward Bouchet became the first African American to graduate from Yale College. Or so the university's histories tell us—and we've reported it ourselves more than once.

Yet that very year, a Quaker publication from Philadelphia recognized an earlier pioneer:

"The first colored graduate of the Academical Department of Yale," it says, "was Richard Henry Green, in 1857." At least two other newspapers published similar items around the same time in 1874.

Green, a New Haven native who died in 1877 at age 43, seems to have been lost from Yale history. Now he has been found again, thanks to research by an archivist at Swann Auction Galleries in New York City.

“It’s a fascinating story," the archivist, Rick Stattler, says in a phone interview. "I sort of stumbled across it by accident" while researching Green family papers that will be auctioned in April.

When he discovered that Richard Henry Green "may have been a pioneer African American student at Yale, I was a little skeptical," Stattler says. "But it turned out to be true.”

A "Mulatto" Clerk

How Green's race was viewed at Yale—by the college, by his classmates, and by Green himself—is unknown. Yale records don't mention his race, and no images or physical descriptions of him have been found, says Judith Schiff, the university's chief research archivist and author of the Yale Alumni Magazine's "Old Yale" column.

But the 1850 US census lists Richard Henry Green as a 17-year-old "mulatto" clerk, living in New Haven with other "mulatto" family members. The 1860 census records Green's race as "black."

And in 1874, while Green was still alive and with Edward Bouchet seemingly making history, somebody at the Society of Friends in Philadelphia knew that Green was actually "the first colored graduate" of Yale College.

New Haven Roots

Green's father, Richard Green, was a bootmaker—one of just a handful of African American tradesman at the time in New Haven—and a founding officer of St. Luke's Episcopal Church, a historically black house of worship on Whalley Avenue, about a half-mile from Yale's Old Campus. In the 1840s, the elder Green was a candidate to become an Episcopal deacon, although he was never ordained.

Schiff confirms Stattler's finding that Richard Henry Green graduated in 1857. As a Yale student, she says, Green lived at home and belonged to the literary society Brothers in Unity and to the Sigma Delta fraternity. Yale catalogues list a home address on Chapel Street, then later an address on State Street. (Another black man, Courtland Van Rensselaer Creed, earned a Yale medical degree in 1857.)

After Yale, Green went to medical school at Dartmouth and served as an assistant surgeon in the US Navy. (A transcription of his application to the Navy includes a descriptive note from the board that examined him: "Fresh from school; no practical experience—sprightly and tolerably well booked. Weighs 220 lbs.") His Yale obituary also relates that he was born in New Haven on November 14, 1833; after college, he "taught school in Milford, Conn[ecticut], for about 18 months, and then in the Bennington Seminary" in Vermont; he earned his medical degree in 1864, served in the Navy from November 1863 "until the close of the war," and died of "disease of the heart."

The Country Doctor

We also know that Green practiced medicine in upstate New York from 1865 until his death in 1877. An 1897 book called Landmarks of Rensselaer County reported that the doctor was "fond of the study of natural history and spent much time collecting plants and objects of interest in that department. He was a most amiable and genial man, and a practical Christian."

In 1870, a census-taker in Hoosick, New York, recorded the race of Dr. Green, his wife—the former Charlotte Caldwell of Vermont, whom he had married in 1864—and their daughter as "white."

But that census notation “doesn’t give us any firm evidence” about how Green presented his own race, says Stattler, who is Swann's director of Printed & Manuscript Americana.

Rather than inquiring about a person's race, “I think it would have been more common for the census-taker to make the [racial] identification themselves," he says. "It’s more likely that the census-taker showed up at the door, conceivably just met with the wife and daughter, and said, 'Oh, this is a white family.'”

Fifteen years earlier at Yale, "It’s possible that he was understood to be white by his classmates," Stattler says. "Or it’s possible that he was understood to be African American, and"—with racial tensions rising and the Civil War approaching—"they tried not to make a big deal out of it.”

When Stattler first looked at the "small group of papers" that a dealer brought to Swann, he thought they had "minimal value." The collection contains letters to and from Green, his wife, his daughter, and his brother-in-law John Caldwell, as well as some business records. One of the letters is from a Yale classmate of Green's.

Caldwell, a white merchant, went south after the Civil War and "became what we know as a carpetbagger" in Alabama, selling what were described as “negro shoes," among other goods, Stattler says. Initially, “I thought that might be the most historically significant” part of the collection.

Then he started to put together the pieces of Richard Henry Green's life.

“I don’t think I’ve ever made a find of this kind of historical significance,” Stattler observes.

Bouchet's Legacy

But what of Edward Bouchet, whose name and story have long been so important? Bouchet is memorialized in a graduate honor society founded at Yale and Howard University and in an award given by the American Physical Society, among others, and he is frequently suggested as a namesake for one of Yale's two proposed residential colleges. Bouchet's national reputation does not by any means rest only on his being the first African American Yale College graduate: he was also the first known African American in the country to receive a PhD (Yale 1876), and he was the sixth American—of any race—to earn a PhD in physics.

We plan to follow up on Green in an upcoming print issue of the Yale Alumni Magazine. So check back for new developments in this 157-year-old story.

https://yalealumnimagazine.com/blog_posts/1719-yale-college-s-first-black-grad-it-s-not-who-you-think

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