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cover of episode Introducing: Our Ancestors Were Messy

Introducing: Our Ancestors Were Messy

2025/3/21
logo of podcast Nobody Should Believe Me

Nobody Should Believe Me

AI Chapters Transcript
Chapters
The introduction to the podcast highlights the significance of Black newspapers in pre-civil rights America, presenting history through gossip and showcasing its vibrant storytelling.
  • Black newspapers thrived during the 'Golden Era,' with over ten thousand publications.
  • Ida B. Wells and other legends were key figures in Black journalism.
  • These newspapers offered a Black perspective on news and community affairs.

Shownotes Transcript

Our Ancestors Were Messy, is a show about the ancestors and all their drama. On each episode, host Nichole Hill and her guests unpack the ancestors’ historical schemes, feuds, and quests to examine how their relationships with one another shaped who we are today.

Before the 1960s nearly every major city in the nation had a newspaper written for, by, and about Black Americans. During their “Golden Era” between the 1930s-50s, there were over ten thousand newspapers with an estimated subscriber count of over 1 million.

The editors, reporters, and columnists for these papers included legends like Ida B. Wells, Frederick Douglass, Langston Hughes, W.E.B. DuBois, Mary McLeod Bethune, Zora Neale Hurston, and James Weldon Johnson. They reported on local, national, and international news from the Black perspective.

They also kept track of what everyone was up to in their segregated neighborhoods and spoiler alert: there was never a dull moment!


Listen to Our Ancestors Were Messy: https://thesecretadventuresofblackpeople.com/our-ancestors-were-messy

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