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Reply #30 posted 11/20/18 10:53am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Thanks 4 digging this information up

I love old photos, I get lost in them

Strawberrylova123 said:

Strawberrylova123 said:

princes great Aunt mittie maud Lena Gordon

ittie Maud Lena Gordon (Nelson)

Birthdate: August 1884 (77)
Birthplace: Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States
Death: 1961 (76)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Rev. Edward "Ed" Nelson and Emma Nelson
Wife of Robert Holt and William Gordon
Sister of Vieanna Nelson; Clarence Allen Nelson; Roberta Nelson; Cleveland Nelson; Edward Nelson and 4 others

Occupation: President of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia

About Mittie Maud Lena Gordon

Mittie Maud Lena Gordon, president of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia (PME), was born in Webster Parish, Louisiana. Her father, Edward Nelson, was the son of a wealthy white slave owner and a freed Cherokee slave. Her mother, Emma Hardy, was black. Denounced by his half-brothers for his marriage to a black woman, Nelson left Louisiana and traveled throughout Arkansas and Louisian as a minister for the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church. Young Mittie traveled with him from 1897 to 1913. At the age of nine she witness a lynching of a black man by a white mob.

Gordon married Robert Holt in 1903 and had two children. Holt died in 1906, and Gordon was married a second time, in 1920, to William Gordon of Chicago. Having been taught about the theories of Henry McNeal Turner and other earlier black nationalists by her father, Gordon was attracted to Garveyism and the UNIA. She became involved with the UNIA in Chicago and served as a delegate to the 1929 UNIA convention in Jamaica. She was disillusioned by the factionalization she witnessed in Jamaica and returned to Chicago with the desire to found an organization with a single issue that would avoid the over-diffusion she felt had been the downfall of the UNIA. The PME was founded in the back of her husband's Chicago restaurant in December 1932. Beginning with Gordon as president and twelve other members, the stated goal of the new organization was the repatration to Liberia of North America's black population by means of massive federal aid. Gordon's strategy was to circulate petitions among blacks asking for their endorsement of the cause and then to use these petitions for lobbying purposes. A petition with some four hundred thousand signatures was sent to President Roosevelt in 1933 but was, like all future correspondences from the PME, promptly channeled to the Department of State and, within it, to the Division of Western European Affairs, which replied that interference by the United States with European holdings in Africa for the purpose of acquiring land for black colonization was not pragmatic. All other efforts of PME delegates to meet with President Roosevelt were similarily rebuffed.

Failing on her own account to penetrate official circles, Gordon began to formulate alliances with influential white racists who shared her faith in repatriation as a solution to racial tension and as a permanent means for the prevention of amalgamation. Gordon contacted Earnest S. Cox in March 1934. He became the national representative of the PME (1936), and he and Gordon worked in tandem on a four-point program. With Cox as a spokesperson, they continued to try to contact the president, to reawaken the American Colonization Society's interest in colonization, and earn an endorsement for their plan from President Edwin Barclay of Liberia. They also approached the Virginia legislature to present a prorepatriation resolution to Congress.

They were successful with the Virginia General Assembly, where almost one million signatures gathered by the PME, UNIA, and other black organizations were presented to the legislators, who responded by passing the desired memorial in March 1936. This success was followed by an encouraging letter from Barclay's aide-de-camp welcoming African-American immigrants to Liberia. Two members of the PME, David Logan and Joseph Rockmore, went to Liberia as emissaries in 1938. Their passage was paid by PME members who had raised the money through the collectio and sale of rags and bottles. State Department officials reported "that President Barclay does not take seriously the expressed hopes of the PME that financial support will be received from the United States," and thus placed monetary restrictios (proof of at least $1000 in assets for each immigrant) on his "welcome" to potential colonizers. Logan and Rockmore remained in Liberia for one month, spending much of their time in the company of T.J.R. Faulkner, a Marcus Garvey sympathizer and proponent of mass migration.

By 1939 the PME had collected over two million names on its petition. They had also found a new ally in Theodore Bilbo. Both Gordon and Cox were present in Washington D.C., when the Bilbo Greater Liberia Bill was introduced in the Senate on 24 April 1939. Despite Gordon's hopes and several efforts to have it reintroduced in future sessions of Congress, the bill was unsuccessful, dying with its senatorial advocate in 1947.

The third and final alliance forged by the PME in its search for federal backing was the Senator William Langer of North Dakota and the Universal African Nationalist Movement (UANM), an outgrowth of the UNIA in New York. The UANM was headed by Benjamin Gibbons (president general) and Benjamin Jones (executive secretary). The UANM had contacted Langer with its own version of a repatriation bill and Cox convinced Gordon to go against her misgivings and throw PME backing behind their efforts. The Langer bill was first introduced in 1949 and was continually reintroduced until Langer's death in 1959. It was never reported out of committee. Gordon herself died two years later, never having seen Liberia or any lasting effects from her thirty years of extensive lobbying

heres a photo of her

Image result for mittie maude lena gordon

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Reply #31 posted 11/20/18 10:54am

Strawberrylova
123

babynoz said:



Strawberrylova123 said:




babynoz said:





The point is that he isn't some exotical who is different from the rest of us, so yeah, it's true.



THis thread is for FUN, its not meant for anyone to believe it or not. this is meant for the genealogist nerds like me <3





That's all well and good but facts are important when discussing other people's lives. We don't have the right to make it into a game/entertainment.

I would think that geneaology is an important discipline for someone who describes themselves as a nerd?


Than dont read the thread cool
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Reply #32 posted 11/20/18 10:55am

Strawberrylova
123

OldFriends4Sale said:

Thanks 4 digging this information up



I love old photos, I get lost in them




Strawberrylova123 said:




Strawberrylova123 said:


princes great Aunt mittie maud Lena Gordon



















ittie Maud Lena Gordon (Nelson)


Birthdate:August 1884 (77)
Birthplace:Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States
Death:1961 (76)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Rev. Edward "Ed" Nelson and Emma Nelson
Wife of Robert Holt and William Gordon
Sister of Vieanna Nelson; Clarence Allen Nelson; Roberta Nelson; Cleveland Nelson; Edward Nelson and 4 others


Occupation:President of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia







About Mittie Maud Lena Gordon




Mittie Maud Lena Gordon, president of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia (PME), was born in Webster Parish, Louisiana. Her father, Edward Nelson, was the son of a wealthy white slave owner and a freed Cherokee slave. Her mother, Emma Hardy, was black. Denounced by his half-brothers for his marriage to a black woman, Nelson left Louisiana and traveled throughout Arkansas and Louisian as a minister for the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church. Young Mittie traveled with him from 1897 to 1913. At the age of nine she witness a lynching of a black man by a white mob.


Gordon married Robert Holt in 1903 and had two children. Holt died in 1906, and Gordon was married a second time, in 1920, to William Gordon of Chicago. Having been taught about the theories of Henry McNeal Turner and other earlier black nationalists by her father, Gordon was attracted to Garveyism and the UNIA. She became involved with the UNIA in Chicago and served as a delegate to the 1929 UNIA convention in Jamaica. She was disillusioned by the factionalization she witnessed in Jamaica and returned to Chicago with the desire to found an organization with a single issue that would avoid the over-diffusion she felt had been the downfall of the UNIA. The PME was founded in the back of her husband's Chicago restaurant in December 1932. Beginning with Gordon as president and twelve other members, the stated goal of the new organization was the repatration to Liberia of North America's black population by means of massive federal aid. Gordon's strategy was to circulate petitions among blacks asking for their endorsement of the cause and then to use these petitions for lobbying purposes. A petition with some four hundred thousand signatures was sent to President Roosevelt in 1933 but was, like all future correspondences from the PME, promptly channeled to the Department of State and, within it, to the Division of Western European Affairs, which replied that interference by the United States with European holdings in Africa for the purpose of acquiring land for black colonization was not pragmatic. All other efforts of PME delegates to meet with President Roosevelt were similarily rebuffed.


Failing on her own account to penetrate official circles, Gordon began to formulate alliances with influential white racists who shared her faith in repatriation as a solution to racial tension and as a permanent means for the prevention of amalgamation. Gordon contacted Earnest S. Cox in March 1934. He became the national representative of the PME (1936), and he and Gordon worked in tandem on a four-point program. With Cox as a spokesperson, they continued to try to contact the president, to reawaken the American Colonization Society's interest in colonization, and earn an endorsement for their plan from President Edwin Barclay of Liberia. They also approached the Virginia legislature to present a prorepatriation resolution to Congress.


They were successful with the Virginia General Assembly, where almost one million signatures gathered by the PME, UNIA, and other black organizations were presented to the legislators, who responded by passing the desired memorial in March 1936. This success was followed by an encouraging letter from Barclay's aide-de-camp welcoming African-American immigrants to Liberia. Two members of the PME, David Logan and Joseph Rockmore, went to Liberia as emissaries in 1938. Their passage was paid by PME members who had raised the money through the collectio and sale of rags and bottles. State Department officials reported "that President Barclay does not take seriously the expressed hopes of the PME that financial support will be received from the United States," and thus placed monetary restrictios (proof of at least $1000 in assets for each immigrant) on his "welcome" to potential colonizers. Logan and Rockmore remained in Liberia for one month, spending much of their time in the company of T.J.R. Faulkner, a Marcus Garvey sympathizer and proponent of mass migration.


By 1939 the PME had collected over two million names on its petition. They had also found a new ally in Theodore Bilbo. Both Gordon and Cox were present in Washington D.C., when the Bilbo Greater Liberia Bill was introduced in the Senate on 24 April 1939. Despite Gordon's hopes and several efforts to have it reintroduced in future sessions of Congress, the bill was unsuccessful, dying with its senatorial advocate in 1947.


The third and final alliance forged by the PME in its search for federal backing was the Senator William Langer of North Dakota and the Universal African Nationalist Movement (UANM), an outgrowth of the UNIA in New York. The UANM was headed by Benjamin Gibbons (president general) and Benjamin Jones (executive secretary). The UANM had contacted Langer with its own version of a repatriation bill and Cox convinced Gordon to go against her misgivings and throw PME backing behind their efforts. The Langer bill was first introduced in 1949 and was continually reintroduced until Langer's death in 1959. It was never reported out of committee. Gordon herself died two years later, never having seen Liberia or any lasting effects from her thirty years of extensive lobbying







heres a photo of her



Image result for mittie maude lena gordon




Your welcome ❤ it's a hobby of mine
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Reply #33 posted 11/20/18 10:56am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Strawberrylova123 said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Thanks 4 digging this information up

I love old photos, I get lost in them

Your welcome ❤ it's a hobby of mine

yes have you ever watched Geneology Roadshow or Finding Your Roots?
I LOVE those shows.

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Reply #34 posted 11/20/18 10:59am

Strawberrylova
123

OldFriends4Sale said:



Strawberrylova123 said:


OldFriends4Sale said:

Thanks 4 digging this information up



I love old photos, I get lost in them





Your welcome ❤ it's a hobby of mine


yes have you ever watched Geneology Roadshow or Finding Your Roots?
I LOVE those shows.


Yes! My favorite shows on TV, i thought the episode with Questlove was mind blowing
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Reply #35 posted 11/20/18 11:01am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Strawberrylova123 said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

yes have you ever watched Geneology Roadshow or Finding Your Roots?
I LOVE those shows.

Yes! My favorite shows on TV, i thought the episode with Questlove was mind blowing

Would be cool if Tyka & Omar went on. A special Prince Rogers Nelson and family episode

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Reply #36 posted 11/20/18 11:07am

Strawberrylova
123

OldFriends4Sale said:



Strawberrylova123 said:


OldFriends4Sale said:



yes have you ever watched Geneology Roadshow or Finding Your Roots?
I LOVE those shows.



Yes! My favorite shows on TV, i thought the episode with Questlove was mind blowing


Would be cool if Tyka & Omar went on. A special Prince Rogers Nelson and family episode


Yes! That would be cool
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Reply #37 posted 11/20/18 11:14am

OldFriends4Sal
e

Strawberrylova123 said:

Strawberrylova123 said:

this post has been viral all over the internet

3 miles from my house. In this cemetery lies Dinah Jenkins, the daughter of slaves, raised among the plantations surrounding Bayou Rapides. Her offspring fled Louisiana to Minnesota, during Jim Crow to avoid persecution. Two generations later, Mrs. Jenkins’ great-grandchild picked up a guitar. His name was PRINCE.

Prince: An Unsung History
October 28, 2017 ·
For whoever asked if any Native American ancestry exists in Prince's lineage, the answer is yes! Cherokee and Blackfoot blood in particular. One of his ancestors was the son of a slave master and freed Cherokee slave. However, his brothers disowned him when he married a Black woman. This would've likely left him out of receiving an inheritance from his parents.

Also, during the age of slavery it was not uncommon for Blacks and Native Americans to intermarry, the same also applied to Native Americans that married Scottish.

There is a lot of interestingly curious information about Native Americans and their interactions with people of Color and Europeans in America. Their dealings with Scottish & French are particular. Thanks again for this thread

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Reply #38 posted 11/20/18 11:14am

CatB

OldFriends4Sale said:

Would be cool if Tyka & Omar went on. A special Prince Rogers Nelson and family episode




To find out the family started in Orange County ... falloff



"Time is space spent with U"
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Reply #39 posted 11/20/18 11:18am

Strawberrylova
123

OldFriends4Sale said:



Strawberrylova123 said:




Strawberrylova123 said:


this post has been viral all over the internet






3 miles from my house. In this cemetery lies Dinah Jenkins, the daughter of slaves, raised among the plantations surrounding Bayou Rapides. Her offspring fled Louisiana to Minnesota, during Jim Crow to avoid persecution. Two generations later, Mrs. Jenkins’ great-grandchild picked up a guitar. His name was PRINCE.






Prince: An Unsung History
October 28, 2017 ·
For whoever asked if any Native American ancestry exists in Prince's lineage, the answer is yes! Cherokee and Blackfoot blood in particular. One of his ancestors was the son of a slave master and freed Cherokee slave. However, his brothers disowned him when he married a Black woman. This would've likely left him out of receiving an inheritance from his parents.

Also, during the age of slavery it was not uncommon for Blacks and Native Americans to intermarry, the same also applied to Native Americans that married Scottish.





There is a lot of interestingly curious information about Native Americans and their interactions with people of Color and Europeans in America. Their dealings with Scottish & French are particular. Thanks again for this thread





Your welcome 😎😎😎
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Reply #40 posted 11/20/18 11:19am

OldFriends4Sal
e

CatB said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Would be cool if Tyka & Omar went on. A special Prince Rogers Nelson and family episode




To find out the family started in Orange County ... falloff



That really would be funny and historically interesting

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Reply #41 posted 11/20/18 11:31am

OldFriends4Sal
e

I think in a past thread, we posted images of the towns/area they came from

Strawberrylova123 said:

Seahorsie said:

So, if I read this correctly, an ancestor was the son of a slave master as well as one being native American. Do you all interpret that to mean he had white blood in his ancestry as well? Maybe I am not understanding what the writer was trying to say. hmm

this is princes great grandfather. this is the Ancestor that they are talking about .

Edward Nelson

Also Known As: "Ed"
Birthdate: March 1862
Birthplace: Louisiana, United States
Death:
Immediate Family:

Son of John Nelson and NN NN
Husband of Emma Nelson
Father of Vieanna Nelson; Clarence Allen Nelson; Roberta Nelson; Mittie Maud Lena Gordon; Cleveland Nelson and 5 others
Brother of William Nelson

Occupation: Minister of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church, laborer (1880)

    • mother

About Rev. Edward "Ed" Nelson

Edward Nelson, was the son of a wealthy white slave owner and a freed Cherokee Slave. Denounced by his half-brothers for his marriage to a black woman, Nelson left Louisiana and traveled throughout Arkansas and Louisiana as a minister for the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church.


  • Ed Nelson
  • 1900 United States Federal Census
  • Birth: Mar 1862 - Louisiana, United States
  • Residence: 1900 - Ward 2, Webster, Louisiana, USA
  • Wife: Emma Nelson
  • Children: Clarence Nelson, Roberta Nelson, Mittie Nelson, Cleveland Nelson, Edward Nelson

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Reply #42 posted 11/20/18 11:33am

OldFriends4Sal
e

how about someone create a thread on Black White Mixed Red etc Identity in Politics & Religion

So Strawberrylova123 thread goes smooth as she intended

We won't take the conversation further

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Reply #43 posted 11/20/18 11:33am

purplefam99

Strawberrylova123 said:

OldFriends4Sale said:

Thanks 4 digging this information up



I love old photos, I get lost in them




Strawberrylova123 said:




Strawberrylova123 said:


princes great Aunt mittie maud Lena Gordon



















ittie Maud Lena Gordon (Nelson)


Birthdate:August 1884 (77)
Birthplace:Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States
Death:1961 (76)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Rev. Edward "Ed" Nelson and Emma Nelson
Wife of Robert Holt and William Gordon
Sister of Vieanna Nelson; Clarence Allen Nelson; Roberta Nelson; Cleveland Nelson; Edward Nelson and 4 others


Occupation:President of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia







About Mittie Maud Lena Gordon




Mittie Maud Lena Gordon, president of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia (PME), was born in Webster Parish, Louisiana. Her father, Edward Nelson, was the son of a wealthy white slave owner and a freed Cherokee slave. Her mother, Emma Hardy, was black. Denounced by his half-brothers for his marriage to a black woman, Nelson left Louisiana and traveled throughout Arkansas and Louisian as a minister for the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church. Young Mittie traveled with him from 1897 to 1913. At the age of nine she witness a lynching of a black man by a white mob.


Gordon married Robert Holt in 1903 and had two children. Holt died in 1906, and Gordon was married a second time, in 1920, to William Gordon of Chicago. Having been taught about the theories of Henry McNeal Turner and other earlier black nationalists by her father, Gordon was attracted to Garveyism and the UNIA. She became involved with the UNIA in Chicago and served as a delegate to the 1929 UNIA convention in Jamaica. She was disillusioned by the factionalization she witnessed in Jamaica and returned to Chicago with the desire to found an organization with a single issue that would avoid the over-diffusion she felt had been the downfall of the UNIA. The PME was founded in the back of her husband's Chicago restaurant in December 1932. Beginning with Gordon as president and twelve other members, the stated goal of the new organization was the repatration to Liberia of North America's black population by means of massive federal aid. Gordon's strategy was to circulate petitions among blacks asking for their endorsement of the cause and then to use these petitions for lobbying purposes. A petition with some four hundred thousand signatures was sent to President Roosevelt in 1933 but was, like all future correspondences from the PME, promptly channeled to the Department of State and, within it, to the Division of Western European Affairs, which replied that interference by the United States with European holdings in Africa for the purpose of acquiring land for black colonization was not pragmatic. All other efforts of PME delegates to meet with President Roosevelt were similarily rebuffed.


Failing on her own account to penetrate official circles, Gordon began to formulate alliances with influential white racists who shared her faith in repatriation as a solution to racial tension and as a permanent means for the prevention of amalgamation. Gordon contacted Earnest S. Cox in March 1934. He became the national representative of the PME (1936), and he and Gordon worked in tandem on a four-point program. With Cox as a spokesperson, they continued to try to contact the president, to reawaken the American Colonization Society's interest in colonization, and earn an endorsement for their plan from President Edwin Barclay of Liberia. They also approached the Virginia legislature to present a prorepatriation resolution to Congress.


They were successful with the Virginia General Assembly, where almost one million signatures gathered by the PME, UNIA, and other black organizations were presented to the legislators, who responded by passing the desired memorial in March 1936. This success was followed by an encouraging letter from Barclay's aide-de-camp welcoming African-American immigrants to Liberia. Two members of the PME, David Logan and Joseph Rockmore, went to Liberia as emissaries in 1938. Their passage was paid by PME members who had raised the money through the collectio and sale of rags and bottles. State Department officials reported "that President Barclay does not take seriously the expressed hopes of the PME that financial support will be received from the United States," and thus placed monetary restrictios (proof of at least $1000 in assets for each immigrant) on his "welcome" to potential colonizers. Logan and Rockmore remained in Liberia for one month, spending much of their time in the company of T.J.R. Faulkner, a Marcus Garvey sympathizer and proponent of mass migration.


By 1939 the PME had collected over two million names on its petition. They had also found a new ally in Theodore Bilbo. Both Gordon and Cox were present in Washington D.C., when the Bilbo Greater Liberia Bill was introduced in the Senate on 24 April 1939. Despite Gordon's hopes and several efforts to have it reintroduced in future sessions of Congress, the bill was unsuccessful, dying with its senatorial advocate in 1947.


The third and final alliance forged by the PME in its search for federal backing was the Senator William Langer of North Dakota and the Universal African Nationalist Movement (UANM), an outgrowth of the UNIA in New York. The UANM was headed by Benjamin Gibbons (president general) and Benjamin Jones (executive secretary). The UANM had contacted Langer with its own version of a repatriation bill and Cox convinced Gordon to go against her misgivings and throw PME backing behind their efforts. The Langer bill was first introduced in 1949 and was continually reintroduced until Langer's death in 1959. It was never reported out of committee. Gordon herself died two years later, never having seen Liberia or any lasting effects from her thirty years of extensive lobbying







heres a photo of her



Image result for mittie maude lena gordon




Your welcome ❤ it's a hobby of mine



Have you had your dna tested, absolutely fascinating.
I want to do recent ancestry, but went for the one that showed where my
Ancestorie roots originated. I don’t show any Native American. Males get a better
Panel because they have the X and Y to test. So so intereting!!
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Reply #44 posted 11/20/18 11:45am

OldFriends4Sal
e

one of the others with more question should start a thread about identify the fluidity of it what it means etc Go for it onlyforaminute

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Reply #45 posted 11/20/18 12:16pm

PennyPurple

avatar

OldFriends4Sale said:

one of the others with more question should start a thread about identify the fluidity of it what it means etc Go for it onlyforaminute

lol They'd rather complain about everyone else's threads. confused

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Reply #46 posted 11/20/18 12:21pm

OldFriends4Sal
e

THIS IS INFO THAT WILL BE/CAN BE TRANSFERED TO THE TOPIC ABOUT RACIAL/MIXED IDENTITY

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Reply #47 posted 11/21/18 11:58am

onlyforaminute

avatar

https://www.huffingtonpos...38616.html

A link from the thread that babynoz originally posted.


snip - of4$ let's keep on topic and no further attempts to flame the thread




Time keeps on slipping into the future...


This moment is all there is...
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Reply #48 posted 11/21/18 1:44pm

Strawberrylova
123

purplefam99 said:

Strawberrylova123 said:


Your welcome ❤ it's a hobby of mine



Have you had your dna tested, absolutely fascinating.
I want to do recent ancestry, but went for the one that showed where my
Ancestorie roots originated. I don’t show any Native American. Males get a better
Panel because they have the X and Y to test. So so intereting!!

Yes! My brother did his ancestry last year
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Reply #49 posted 11/21/18 2:50pm

Lovejunky

Strawberrylova123 said:

Strawberrylova123 said:

princes great Aunt mittie maud Lena Gordon

ittie Maud Lena Gordon (Nelson)

Birthdate: August 1884 (77)
Birthplace: Webster Parish, Louisiana, United States
Death: 1961 (76)
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Rev. Edward "Ed" Nelson and Emma Nelson
Wife of Robert Holt and William Gordon
Sister of Vieanna Nelson; Clarence Allen Nelson; Roberta Nelson; Cleveland Nelson; Edward Nelson and 4 others

Occupation: President of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia

About Mittie Maud Lena Gordon

Mittie Maud Lena Gordon, president of the Peace Movement of Ethiopia (PME), was born in Webster Parish, Louisiana. Her father, Edward Nelson, was the son of a wealthy white slave owner and a freed Cherokee slave. Her mother, Emma Hardy, was black. Denounced by his half-brothers for his marriage to a black woman, Nelson left Louisiana and traveled throughout Arkansas and Louisian as a minister for the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church. Young Mittie traveled with him from 1897 to 1913. At the age of nine she witness a lynching of a black man by a white mob.

Gordon married Robert Holt in 1903 and had two children. Holt died in 1906, and Gordon was married a second time, in 1920, to William Gordon of Chicago. Having been taught about the theories of Henry McNeal Turner and other earlier black nationalists by her father, Gordon was attracted to Garveyism and the UNIA. She became involved with the UNIA in Chicago and served as a delegate to the 1929 UNIA convention in Jamaica. She was disillusioned by the factionalization she witnessed in Jamaica and returned to Chicago with the desire to found an organization with a single issue that would avoid the over-diffusion she felt had been the downfall of the UNIA. The PME was founded in the back of her husband's Chicago restaurant in December 1932. Beginning with Gordon as president and twelve other members, the stated goal of the new organization was the repatration to Liberia of North America's black population by means of massive federal aid. Gordon's strategy was to circulate petitions among blacks asking for their endorsement of the cause and then to use these petitions for lobbying purposes. A petition with some four hundred thousand signatures was sent to President Roosevelt in 1933 but was, like all future correspondences from the PME, promptly channeled to the Department of State and, within it, to the Division of Western European Affairs, which replied that interference by the United States with European holdings in Africa for the purpose of acquiring land for black colonization was not pragmatic. All other efforts of PME delegates to meet with President Roosevelt were similarily rebuffed.

Failing on her own account to penetrate official circles, Gordon began to formulate alliances with influential white racists who shared her faith in repatriation as a solution to racial tension and as a permanent means for the prevention of amalgamation. Gordon contacted Earnest S. Cox in March 1934. He became the national representative of the PME (1936), and he and Gordon worked in tandem on a four-point program. With Cox as a spokesperson, they continued to try to contact the president, to reawaken the American Colonization Society's interest in colonization, and earn an endorsement for their plan from President Edwin Barclay of Liberia. They also approached the Virginia legislature to present a prorepatriation resolution to Congress.

They were successful with the Virginia General Assembly, where almost one million signatures gathered by the PME, UNIA, and other black organizations were presented to the legislators, who responded by passing the desired memorial in March 1936. This success was followed by an encouraging letter from Barclay's aide-de-camp welcoming African-American immigrants to Liberia. Two members of the PME, David Logan and Joseph Rockmore, went to Liberia as emissaries in 1938. Their passage was paid by PME members who had raised the money through the collectio and sale of rags and bottles. State Department officials reported "that President Barclay does not take seriously the expressed hopes of the PME that financial support will be received from the United States," and thus placed monetary restrictios (proof of at least $1000 in assets for each immigrant) on his "welcome" to potential colonizers. Logan and Rockmore remained in Liberia for one month, spending much of their time in the company of T.J.R. Faulkner, a Marcus Garvey sympathizer and proponent of mass migration.

By 1939 the PME had collected over two million names on its petition. They had also found a new ally in Theodore Bilbo. Both Gordon and Cox were present in Washington D.C., when the Bilbo Greater Liberia Bill was introduced in the Senate on 24 April 1939. Despite Gordon's hopes and several efforts to have it reintroduced in future sessions of Congress, the bill was unsuccessful, dying with its senatorial advocate in 1947.

The third and final alliance forged by the PME in its search for federal backing was the Senator William Langer of North Dakota and the Universal African Nationalist Movement (UANM), an outgrowth of the UNIA in New York. The UANM was headed by Benjamin Gibbons (president general) and Benjamin Jones (executive secretary). The UANM had contacted Langer with its own version of a repatriation bill and Cox convinced Gordon to go against her misgivings and throw PME backing behind their efforts. The Langer bill was first introduced in 1949 and was continually reintroduced until Langer's death in 1959. It was never reported out of committee. Gordon herself died two years later, never having seen Liberia or any lasting effects from her thirty years of extensive lobbying

heres a photo of her

Image result for mittie maude lena gordon

WOW....Mattie Gordon was quite a woman!

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Reply #50 posted 11/21/18 4:41pm

ABro

onlyforaminute said:

https://www.huffingtonpos...38616.html

A link from the thread that babynoz originally posted.

snip - of4$ let's keep on topic and no further attempts to flame the thread





SNIP - of4$ please all the op to continue to share without further attempts to flame the thread

"So much has been written about me, & people don't know what's right & what's wrong. I'd rather let them stay confused." ~ Prince.
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Reply #51 posted 11/21/18 7:32pm

Strawberrylova
123

And here's a bit of #BlackHistory from Prince's family tree. Freddie Mae Hill( second cousin, pictured below) was the first Black resident in Madison, WI to graduation from the University of Wisconsin. She later went on to teach Home Economics at the Tuskegee Institute in the late 1920s and early 1930s. In addition, she had a degree in science.

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Reply #52 posted 11/21/18 7:35pm

Strawberrylova
123

These are just some of the people that make up Prince's ancestry. More photos will be added as they are found and collected

Image may contain: 4 people

Prince's other second cousin. Irene Carmichael-Clark. Photo was taken in 1924. Much of her family lived in Georgia and Alabama in the 19th century and still does today. Irene also played piano years ago, music seems to run in Prince's family!Image may contain: 1 person


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Reply #53 posted 11/22/18 7:05am

PURPLEIZED3121

amazing thread.

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Reply #54 posted 11/22/18 8:44am

SBartist

avatar

Would you have any information on where John L. Nelson is buried? I know where Mattie Della Shaw Baker is buried.

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Reply #55 posted 11/22/18 9:35am

Strawberrylova
123

SBartist said:

Would you have any information on where John L. Nelson is buried? I know where Mattie Della Shaw Baker is buried.


Let me do research
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Reply #56 posted 11/22/18 9:51am

NorthC

Strawberrylova123 said:



Strawberrylova123 said:


this post has been viral all over the internet






3 miles from my house. In this cemetery lies Dinah Jenkins, the daughter of slaves, raised among the plantations surrounding Bayou Rapides. Her offspring fled Louisiana to Minnesota, during Jim Crow to avoid persecution. Two generations later, Mrs. Jenkins’ great-grandchild picked up a guitar. His name was PRINCE.






Prince: An Unsung History
October 28, 2017 ·
For whoever asked if any Native American ancestry exists in Prince's lineage, the answer is yes! Cherokee and Blackfoot blood in particular. One of his ancestors was the son of a slave master and freed Cherokee slave. However, his brothers disowned him when he married a Black woman. This would've likely left him out of receiving an inheritance from his parents.

Also, during the age of slavery it was not uncommon for Blacks and Native Americans to intermarry, the same also applied to Native Americans that married Scottish.


You explained the part about the Cherokee, but not the part about the Blackfoot. I'm curious about that.
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Reply #57 posted 11/22/18 10:15am

Strawberrylova
123

NorthC said:[quote]

Strawberrylova123 said:



Strawberrylova123 said:


this post has been viral all over the internet






3 miles from my house. In this cemetery lies Dinah Jenkins, the daughter of slaves, raised among the plantations surrounding Bayou Rapides. Her offspring fled Louisiana to Minnesota, during Jim Crow to avoid persecution. Two generations later, Mrs. Jenkins’ great-grandchild picked up a guitar. His name was PRINCE.






Prince: An Unsung History
October 28, 2017 ·
For whoever asked if any Native American ancestry exists in Prince's lineage, the answer is yes! Cherokee and Blackfoot blood in particular. One of his ancestors was the son of a slave master and freed Cherokee slave. However, his brothers disowned him when he married a Black woman. This would've likely left him out of receiving an inheritance from his parents.

Also, during the age of slavery it was not uncommon for Blacks and Native Americans to intermarry, the same also applied to Native Americans that married Scottish.


You explained the part about the Cherokee, but not the part about the Blackfoot. I'm curious about that.[/quote
You should ask that question to the prince:unsung history page on Facebook 😊 I'm just sharing post from that page
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Reply #58 posted 11/22/18 10:27am

Strawberrylova
123

SBartist said:

Would you have any information on where John L. Nelson is buried? I know where Mattie Della Shaw Baker is buried.

John Louis Nelson

John Louis Nelson

BIRTH 29 Jun 1915
Cotton Valley, Webster Parish, Louisiana, USA
DEATH 25 Aug 2001 (aged 86)
Chanhassen, Carver County, Minnesota, USA
BURIAL Unknown
MEMORIAL ID 49614901 · View Source
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Reply #59 posted 11/22/18 10:31am

Strawberrylova
123

Image may contain: 1 person, closeup

John 'Solomon' Smith. Son of a Confederate Soldier. John's family were likely slave owners according to census records. He is also the father of one of Prince's older second cousins, George 'Geo' Smith, whose mother, Ida was listed as a housekeeper under her job description in one census record. John had been married three times in his life, had 18 children in total. His 3rd wife, Mary Ellen was the mother to some of Prince's biracial/mulatto cousins!


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