Close Menu
BmoreNews.com
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Editorial/Op-Ed
  • The Glover Report
  • Black Wall Street
  • Video
  • More
    • BEOs
    • HBCU
    • Africa/Caribbean
Trending
ERNI GRAHAM: Baltimore Pride  How a 6’8′ Guard Rose Above

ERNI GRAHAM: Baltimore Pride How a 6’8′ Guard Rose Above

Indigenous Series – The Great Reawakening: Our People Are Doing Their Own Research

Indigenous Series – The Great Reawakening: Our People Are Doing Their Own Research

Rickey Shackleford Interview #bmorenews

Rickey Shackleford Interview #bmorenews

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
BmoreNews.com
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Editorial/Op-Ed
  • The Glover Report
  • Black Wall Street
  • Video
  • More
    • BEOs
    • HBCU
    • Africa/Caribbean
Newsletter
BmoreNews.com
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Editorial/Op-Ed
  • The Glover Report
  • Black Wall Street
  • Video
Home » Editorial: Baltimore is Brimming with Black History
Editorial/Op-Ed

Editorial: Baltimore is Brimming with Black History

Staff ReporterBy Staff ReporterSeptember 6, 202235 ViewsNo Comments4 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
Editorial: Baltimore is Brimming with Black History
Victorine Q. Adams, the first Black on the Baltimore City Council

(BALTIMORE – September 5, 2022) – Baltimore is loaded with Black History, going back to the days when slavery was the law of the land. Despite the racist, horrific, and discriminatory practices of those times – some way, somehow Baltimore has also been a city where many Blacks have found and still find refuge. Some have even made huge strides for our race – right here in Baltimore, the birthplace of segregation.

‘A southern town with a northern mentality’ is how some describe “Charm City”. Maryland, of course, is just south of the Mason-Dixon line. Put differently, during the days of slavery, if a Black person escaped to Baltimore – they were just about free.

FACT: Prior to the Civil War, Baltimore had the largest population of free Blacks in the nation.

Isaac Myers
Public domain image

As students head back to school, let’s make sure they know about this rich Black History right here in our own city. Tell them about Isaac Myers, for example, the man who served as national president of the first Black labor union.

Here are some facts about him:

1855 Hired to supervise one of the largest shipyards in Baltimore’s harbor

1860 Begins work as a shipping clerk and chief porter for a wholesale grocery firm

1865 Returns to the shipyards and experiences a strike protesting black labor in the maritime industry and helps
form a union of “colored mechanics”

1866 Myers and 15 other well-known Afro-American men convene at the Sharp Street UM auxiliary hall; they work
together to form the Chesapeake Marine Railway and Dry Dock Company [CRDDC]

1869 Myers is one of nine black delegates to attend the National Labor Movement Convention Creates the Colored
National Labor Union and is elected as the first president

1870 Becomes the second Afro-American in Maryland’s history to receive a federal appointment as a messenger to the
customs service in Baltimore

  Available on Amazon

Tell our young people about Reginald F. Lewis, the man who led the historic takeover of TLC Beatrice, the man who went to Paul Laurence Dunbar High School and was captain of the football team.

Teach our young men and young women about a man who came out of East Baltimore and who sold newspapers – a man who outworked everyone around him and built a financial legacy the world and Baltimore, in particular, will never forget.

It is up to us adults to share this history. How can we be upset with our young people when we have not effectively engaged them such that they even care?

We have to do everything in our power to give them hope because right now, the world has to be looking crappy to them.

We live in a very superficial world which can easily make a weaker mind fall for the fake and phony as opposed to good, old-fashioned hard work blended with 21st-century technology.

As adults, we must at least try to reach them.

Source: YouTube

We must first know the history ourselves. It’s hard to teach what one doesn’t know. So, here’s a nugget: Little Willie Adams. He was a businessman who operated the street numbers. He also financed a lot of Black-owned businesses. And he supported Black politicians like Parren J. Mitchell, Maryland’s first Black Congressman.

His wife was Victorine Adams. Although Mr. Adams was legendary, his wife became the first Black on the Baltimore City Council in 1967.

Later in her career, she partnered with Baltimore Gas & Electric to form the Baltimore Fuel Fund, a resource that benefits Baltimoreans still today.

Judge Joseph C. Howard, Sr., a former Maryland Judge

Despite the negativity on the news every single day, Black people in Baltimore have so much history to be proud of. Although this world is constantly throwing bricks at us, may we be forever reminded that we come from tough stock – especially here in the City of Baltimore.

No matter what, Black people in Baltimore have consistently defied the odds and attained the highest of heights.

Consider Judge Joseph C. Howard, Sr., “the first African American to win an election as a judge for the Baltimore City Supreme Bench” and who was later “appointed by President Jimmy Carter to be a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, becoming the first African American to serve on that bench as well.”

Stay tuned as we will continue to share Baltimore Black History stories with you. You can then share them with a young person. Spread the word! Baltimore is full of Black History we all should know!

baltimore Editorial: Baltimore is Brimming with Black History Politics
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleBrickrose Exchange – BlackUSA.news Morning Show – 9-5-22
Next Article Gail Moody State Farm on the next Doni Glover Show, Streaming LIVE Tuesday, 9 am

Keep Reading

DC Mayor Muriel Bowser: Letter from the Mayor
November 14, 2025

DC Mayor Muriel Bowser: Letter from the Mayor

By Staff Reporter
Power Works When You Use It — Democrats, Take Notes
November 13, 2025

Power Works When You Use It — Democrats, Take Notes

By Staff Reporter
The DBE Rollback and Maryland’s Moral Obligation to Black Businesses
October 27, 2025

The DBE Rollback and Maryland’s Moral Obligation to Black Businesses

By Doni Glover
Speak Life
October 27, 2025

Speak Life

By Doni Glover
INDIGENOUS: Cognitive Dissonance, Family Memory, and the Stories We Inherit
October 12, 2025

INDIGENOUS: Cognitive Dissonance, Family Memory, and the Stories We Inherit

By Staff Reporter
Why Liberty Road Needs to Stand with Senator Ben Brooks
October 4, 2025

Why Liberty Road Needs to Stand with Senator Ben Brooks

By Doni Glover
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest News
Indigenous Series – The Great Reawakening: Our People Are Doing Their Own Research

Indigenous Series – The Great Reawakening: Our People Are Doing Their Own Research

Rickey Shackleford Interview #bmorenews

Rickey Shackleford Interview #bmorenews

From Addiction to Doctorate. Inspiring Life Transformation Story

From Addiction to Doctorate. Inspiring Life Transformation Story

Baltimore Proud: Saluting Jamal Bryant

Baltimore Proud: Saluting Jamal Bryant

Trending News
SEN. CORY MCCRAY: Driver’s Ed is Back  Securing Future Success!

SEN. CORY MCCRAY: Driver’s Ed is Back Securing Future Success!

November 30, 2025
Ernie Graham’s UNSEEN Stats, Records Shattered!  #bmorenews

Ernie Graham’s UNSEEN Stats, Records Shattered! #bmorenews

November 30, 2025
Indigenous: Truths Not Taught In Schools

Indigenous: Truths Not Taught In Schools

November 30, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Baltimore news and updates directly to your inbox.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube
2025 © BmoreNews.com. All Rights Reserved.
  • Doni Glover
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.