-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Archives
Categories
Tags
- 2005
- 2010
- 2011
- 2012
- 2013
- Abadania
- architecture
- Arizona
- august
- Brazil
- cactus
- children
- climate change
- copyright
- Coup d"etat
- CoVID-19
- december
- Democracy
- Democrats
- flower
- France
- garden
- GOP
- insect
- Les Phillips
- Minneapolis
- minnesota
- nature
- Paris
- photo
- photograph
- photojournalism
- politics
- portrait
- Racism
- Republicans
- Road
- Rule of Law
- Russia
- Saguaro National Forest
- Spain
- Traitor
- Trump
- Vote
- winter
Blogroll
- C-Span
- Center for Public Integrity
- Charity Navigator
- Edmund J. Safra Center for Ethics
- Human Rights Watch
- InsideClimateNews
- International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
- Migration Policy Institute
- Sojourners Magazine
- Southern Poverty Law Center
- The Atlantic
- The New Republic
- World Resources Institute
Tag Archives: Strange Fruit
Billie Holiday and the Tragic Song, Strange Fruit
On a cold March night in 1939, an unusual audience gathered at the club, Cafe Society, a new jazz club on West 4th Street in Greenwich Village, New York City. They came because Café Society was an unusual club. It … Continue reading →
Posted in Being American, History, Music, United States
|
Tagged Abel Meeropol, Barney Josephson, Billie Holiday, Cafe Society, Civil Rights Movement, Clarence Holiday, Federal Bureau of Narcotics, Great Migration, Harlem Renaissance, Harry Anslinger, Lynching, Racism, Strange Fruit, Violence
|
Comments Off on Billie Holiday and the Tragic Song, Strange Fruit