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PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE start some of these entries. Don't be shy!!! This page like any on Wikipedia, is open to additions and improvements by all. ✔️ indicates a page has been established on the subject. Please help expand and improve!
- Horace Sudduth, businessman in Cincinnati, Ohio
- Henry Lawrence McCrorey / Henry L. McCrorey / Henry McCrorey, spelled McCrore sometimes? college president. Journal founder.
- Harlem, Florida History? Naming?
- Marjorie Parham / Marjorie Ann Parham / Marjorie Bowser Parham / Marjorie B. Parham February 12, 1918 -2021 newspaper publisher in Cincinnati[1][2][3]
- Juliet E. K. Walker / Juliet Walker historian of Black businesses in the U.S.
- Vera Moore (businesswoman) actress and cosmetics business[4][5][6][7]
- Rose Meta Morgan very prominent businesswoman and bank founder
- Charles H. Crandon public official in Florida. Crandon Park named for him. Papers.[8]
- Richard J. Arena / Richard Joseph Arens / Richard Arens, Haitian filmmaker
- Bob Lemoine / Robert V. Lemoine (1942 - 2015) Haitian journalist, radio personality, filmmaker[9][10]
- Antonio Vieux, Haitian lawyer, politician, cultural leader, and writer. Apparently he was tortured and murdered.
- Marion B. Lucas / Marion Lucas emeritus professor historian who has written about the history of African Americans in Kentucky.[11]
- John A. Prall / John Prall / John Andrew Prall a lawyer and state legislator in Kentucky who was involved in the development of the Pralltown neighborhood
- Urban Street, a Chicago show hosted by Ty Wansley. Interviewed notables?
- Let Us Break Bread Together (film), New York Board of education film.
- John W. Jacks / James Jacks / James W. Jacks , newspaperman in Missouri[12]
- Mabel Reinecke, woman who was internal revenue appointee of Warren G. Harding. Short documentary films Aunt Mabel was lade about her.
- Howe Institute (Louisiana) (Draft:Howe Institute (Louisiana)) African-American school in New Iberia, Louisiana; in operation from 1890 to 1933; has historical plaque; disambiguation needed from Howe Institute, Howe Institute (Tennessee).
- Jamaica Training School / Jamaica State Normal School (Draft:Jamaica Training School) in Queens, New York City. Had a streetcar stop? Now the site of Hillcrest High School (map image)[13]
- Charles Sumner Smith, a New England legislator has the same name around the same time????
- Mary Ann Webster Loughborough / Mary Webster Loughborough / Mary W. Loughborough[14] (has image in WikiCommons) wife of James M. Loughborough and author of "My Cave Life in Vicksburg"[15] (son James Fairfax Loughborough / J. F. Loughborough)[16] lawyer[17] daughter Mrs. Jean Loughborough Douglass[18][19][20][21] Arkansas Ladies' Journal[22] He husband was Frank Middleton Douglass
- National Theater of Egypt (Draft:National Theater of Egypt) (formerly the Egyptian National Theatre Troupe in Cairo), operated by the Ministry of Culture; this was tied to the early history of cinema in the country of Egypt.[23]
- 1967 Newark Black Power Conference; check for notability, in the documentary film Still a Brother
- William Wallace Derrick (Draft:William Wallace Derrick), early Black physician and medical professor in Knoxville; check for notability
- Theodore Roosevelt visit to Buganda[24] part of the Smithsonian–Roosevelt African Expedition. African Game Trails is book he wrote about the trip. Roosevelt in Africa is a documentary film made about the trip and filmed during it.
- W. M. Webb, William Menzie Webb,[25] minister who founded a historic church and school in Jamaica.[26] Only mentioned in Westwood High School, Jamaica. Wife[27]
- McAllister Fund, or the James McAllister Christmas Fund / McAllister Christmas Fund, a trust funding the Black residents of Fayetteville, Arkansas (formerly Cross Creek Township)[28]
- Independent Florida State Negro League, Bradenton Aces / Bradenton Nine Devils, Zulu Giants (Miami team), Lakeland Tigers[29] Tampa Bay Rockets
- Florida Emancipation Day, celebrating May 20, 1865 the Emancipation Day for slaves in Florida following the American Civil War[30]
- Draft:List of Colored Citizens Protective Leagues