'Chief is My Belief': Black history being made by firefighters in Alameda County
Molly Williams, known as Volunteer 11, was the first known Black firefighter in the U.S., and a slave of a New York City merchant. Today, only 7% of firefighters are Black.
Another 7% are bi-racial and 4% are women, while 80% are white.
SEE ALSO: Honoring Black History Month
By sheer population, there should be twice as many Black firefighters and at least 12 times as many women.
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That's why Emeryville's Chief is My Belief has gone from one classroom of 30 students 12 years ago, to hundreds.
Chief is My Belief is all about inspiring belief in one's self.
"It really is looking at making sure that our youth knows how important [it is] to the future of this country and this community," said Alameda County Fire Department Chief Willie McDonald.
Alameda County Division Chief Randall West is glad to give back to the community as part of the Emeryville organization.
"I grew up in a neighborhood that wasn't so promising, and it's good to come back and give back to the community," West says. "So, one day, they might look at what firefighters [and] be like, 'I remember him or I remember her for what they did, for what they told me.'"
Famed artist Shomari Smith donates art to the program.
"I know that the kids, for sure, with Chief is My Belief, you see inspiration all around and these people were from the same communities and they've come from similar types of families," said Smith.
The message is surely getting through.
Menna Gadallah wants to be a veterinarian.
"To me, it's always been like a program that shows that it doesn't matter what skin color or what gender you are, you can still make accomplishments despite the fact that you're different from others," Gadallah
RELATED: Astrophysicist and artist Nia Imara breaks barriers
The kids understand that dreams require real work.
"I've learned that it's not as easy as you think. It's really hard. There's a lot of pressure on you when you're on duty," said 6th grader Anfie Herrera.
West is touched to see the impact of the program.
"I am very happy and very touched by how this program has motivated our youth just to be better at what they want to do," West said. "Not if they want to become firefighters, but be better individuals and leaders in their communities."
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Interview with Alameda County firefighters and community members.
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Miami Herald
7 hours ago
- Miami Herald
‘Our story is beautiful:' Miami's historic ‘Blacks-only' beach turns 80
N. Patrick Range II has heard his grandmother M. Athalie Range's stories about the history of Virginia Key Beach Park — the memories of taking the ferry to visit the island, hosting celebrations and churches holding sunrise services. But the conversations he remembers most are about the fight for preserving it: Hearing his grandmother — the first Black person to serve on the Miami city commission — trying to get people to understand that the beach was worth saving at a time when there was consideration given to selling off the beachfront to private developers. His grandmother, he said, understood the deeply held memories of a community who made Virginia Key Beach Park, Miami's Blacks-only beach, a sacred place and the significance it held. Read more: It started as a Blacks-only beach. A lot of Miami history has been made on Virginia Key 'She understood that, and understood the importance of the community, and understood the importance of our youth and those who hadn't even been born yet, being able to enjoy and appreciate the park, and not just Black people, but also the entirety of the Miami community, understanding what this was and what it meant for us,' Range said. Range, 48, said the restoration of the park is critical at a time when the preservation of Black history faces political headwinds across the state and nationwide. But as the park celebrates its 80th anniversary this year, he envisions more, including the promise of a long-planned Black history museum that would highlight the Black immigrant story in Miami. 'The idea was that because of the historical significance of Virginia Key in our history here in Miami, that this would be an ideal place to showcase a history museum dedicated to the Black immigrant experience, and also to give some a nod and recognition to those who were here before us, like the Native Americans who certainly have presence here and significance here in this land,' Range said. Athalie Edwards, who was named for Range's grandmother, is the chair of the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust, and says that the park is making progress on necessary upgrades to their amenities such as the train and carousel, holdovers from the park's early days during Jim Crow. 'We're working on it, however, we would like to present the information to the public all at one time,' she said, adding she wasn't at liberty to discuss the matter further. The plans for a museum do appear to be marching forward. At a May 13 Key Biscayne village council meeting, Edwards announced a groundbreaking ceremony for the museum scheduled for Aug. 1, but that has been delayed citing some 'important attendees' unable to make the ceremony. The museum would honor both the civil rights legacy and the environmental significance of the park, Edwards said at the time. Despite the delay, she said, there is so much more to celebrate when it comes to the park, which is commemorating its history with a three-day celebration that will include a Friday birthday celebration including complimentary cake, ice cream and free vehicle entry. On Saturday, the festivities continue with a community fun day, which includes treats, a waterslide for children, a beach clean up along with tours and collecting oral histories from people who've visited the beach in its earlier years. The celebration concludes Sunday with the Poetry Potluck spoken word series. 'Our story is beautiful. It came through some hard times, through segregation, the Jim Crow era. However, it's still a beautiful story that should be told,' Edwards said. RELATED: This museum would tell the story of Miami's segregated era. It has stalled for years Before Virginia Key Beach became known as the first beach for Black people in Miami-Dade County, civil rights activists with support from the local NAACP held a wade-in in May 1945 at the whites-only Haulover Beach. That prompted Dade County commissioners to establish Virginia Key's beach as a 'colored-only' beach only three months later, on Aug. 1, 1945. Before the causeway was completed in 1947, it was only accessible by boat or ferry. Known for family gatherings and 'splashdown' parties, the park became a sacred place for Black people to visit and make their own, including holding weddings and baptisms there. In 1979, the county transferred ownership to the city of Miami, and closed the park three years later citing maintenance costs. Following conversations about private development at the beach, a group of citizens organized the Virginia Key Beach Park Civil Rights Task Force. Shortly after, the city commission established the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust to oversee the development of the property. The park was closed for 26 years before it reopened in 2008, following restoration efforts. Range said in that time, the park had overgrown with exotic flora and fauna. 'During the years when the park was closed, many invasive species of plants overgrew in the park, things that were not native or natural to the land,' he said. One of the first things the trust did was remove the plants. They then added necessary amenities such as restrooms, power and water. Other fixtures of the park such as the minitrain and the carousel were also restored. The park's trust has had its fair share of controversies. In 2022, Miami commissioners voted to oust the board members, which included Patrick Range, and replaced them with city commission members. Councilwoman Christine King became the trust's board chair and the board appointed two Black attorneys to the board. Range criticized the decision to remove the trust's board members as politically-motivated. In a statement, King said the beach is 'a powerful reminder of the generations whose advocacy turned adversity into legacy' and is a 'testament to our community's strength, pride, and rightful place in the story of Miami.' She did not respond to a request for comment on the status of the museum, but has said in the past she is not in favor of large-scale development. Edwards came into her role in 2023, just as the dust was settling from the shake up, she said, adding much of her work has focused on providing the board with details and updates about the park and letting them know ways they can support it. 'When I got here, everybody was willing to participate and provide us our support, but they really wanted to know what we needed,' she said. Edwards said the trust has expanded its public outreach efforts, including having school field trips and working with senior citizens at Carrie Meek/Charles Hadley Senior Center to collect their oral stories related to the park. She also acknowledged the trust is working with a vendor to get the train back operating and that the carousel is undergoing repairs. For Edwards, the preservation of the park is just as personal to her as it is to Range. 'My stepdad's from Allapattah, and I talk about it in every interview that I do, that was the only beach that he could visit,' she said. 'Mind you, they were all the way inland and driving all the way down here. There's stories some people tell us, before even the causeway was here, that they had to come by boat and ferry. Their grandparents or their parents took them.' Edwards said the park's preservation and 80th celebration helps honor those such as Lawson Thomas who fought for Black people to even have a beach in Miami-Dade County. She noted that activists risked their lives so that Black people could enjoy recreation, and even then she pointed out that Black people were given the worst part of the beach. 'We made it the best part of the beach for us, the people,' she said. Despite his criticisms, Range said celebrating the park this weekend is a chance to 'bang the drum for Virginia Key Beach Park' and make people aware of it and its importance given the current political climate. 'This is an opportunity to counteract that, to let the local politicians know that our history is important to us and we're not just going to let it go away,' he said. 'We're going to celebrate it and we expect you to celebrate it with us and promote it.' If you go: WHAT: Historic Virginia Key Beach Park 80th Anniversary WHEN: Friday, Aug. 1 - Sunday, Aug. 3 WHERE: Virginia Key Beach Park COST: Free INFO:


Hamilton Spectator
11 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Emancipation Day talk to highlight Haldimand's Black history
Free on Friday? Heritage Haldimand invites the public to an Emancipation Day gathering that explores Haldimand County's ties to the Underground Railroad. Emancipation Day refers to the declaration of the end of slavery in the British Empire in 1834. In the United States, some African-Americans fleeing slavery took refuge in Canfield, a hamlet in Haldimand where Black and European settlers lived harmoniously, according to local historian Sylvia Weaver. 'Canfield was a special place,' Weaver told The Spectator in an earlier interview. She described how Black, Scottish and Irish inhabitants 'worked side by side' to clear the land. 'They lived together, went to school together, went to church together,' Weaver said. 'They were all equal and they got along.' The story of one of Ontario's oldest Black settlements is told in ' Canfield Roots, ' a documentary by Haldimand filmmaker Graeme Bachiu. Friday's free Emancipation Day event runs from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Canfield Community Hall at 50 Talbot Rd. The centrepiece of the program is a talk by historian Rochelle Bush, a descendant of Samuel Cooper, the first Black settler to make Haldimand his new home. Bush will tell stories of the Cooper and Street families, some of whom are buried in a historic cemetery in Canfield for Haldimand's earliest Black settlers. In an earlier interview, Bush said the African-Americans who came north to Canfield were authors of their own liberation and should be referred to as 'freedom seekers' rather than runaway or escaped slaves. 'They were self-emancipated (and) found their way to British soil, where they could find freedom,' Bush said. Haldimand's fourth annual Emancipation Day celebration 'serves as an opportunity to reflect on the history of slavery in Canada, acknowledge the contributions of Black Canadians and address ongoing systemic anti-Black racism,' the county said in a press release. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .


UPI
3 days ago
- UPI
On This Day, July 29: Italian King Umberto I assassinated
July 29 (UPI) -- On this date in history: In 1588, off the coast of Gravelines, France, Spain's "Invincible Armada" was defeated by an English naval force under the command of Charles Howard and Francis Drake. In 1794, the first African Methodist Episcopal Church, Mother Bethel, was dedicated in Philadelphia. The church was founded by Black members of St. George's Methodist Church who left the congregation due to racial segregation at the church. In 1848, at the height of the potato famine in Ireland, an abortive nationalist revolt against English rule was crushed by government police in Tipperary. In 1900, Italian King Umberto I was shot to death by Gaetano Bresci, an Italian-born anarchist who resided in the United States before returning to his homeland to kill the king. In 1958, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs into law the National Aeronautics and Space Act, which creates the National Aeronautics and Space Administration -- NASA. In 1967, a fire aboard the USS Forrestal killed 134 U.S. service members and injured another 161. The super carrier was in the Gulf of Tonkin launching aircraft in missions against targets in North Vietnam. File Photo courtesy of the U.S. Navy In 1976, David Berkowitz, the so-called "Son of Sam," fatally shot two people in the Bronx, the first in a series of shootings that would terrorize New York City for months. Berkowitz pleaded guilty to the murders and was sentenced to more than 300 years in prison. In 1981, British Prince Charles, son of the queen, married Diana Spencer at St. Paul's Cathedral in London. The royal couple divorced in 1996 after having two sons. In 1999, a federal judge in Little Rock, Ark., fined U.S. President Bill Clinton $89,000 for lying about his relationship with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky in his deposition in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case. In 2004, Democrats nominated Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts to oppose Republican incumbent George W. Bush in the November presidential election. File Photo by Roger L. Wollenberg/UPI In 2008, U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, was indicted by a federal grand jury on seven felony counts accusing him of failing to disclose gifts from an oil services company. Stevens died in a 2010 plane crash. In 2019, "Old Town Road" by Lil Nas X featuring Billy Ray Cyrus broke the record for longest-running Billboard Hot 100 No. 1. The previous record was set by Mariah Carey's "One Sweet Day." In 2024, a 17-year-old attacked young girls at a dance studio in Southport, England, killing three children and injuring 10 others. The perpetrator, Axel Rudakubana, pleaded guilty to murder charges and was sentenced to life in prison.