Standing on the Shoulders of Many
At the 30th anniversary of Jubilee,
Festival of Heritage August 21, the Historic Columbia Foundation (HCF) honored the 30 most significant African Americans in Columbia and Richland County. Gloria James, HCF board member, chaired the event at the Columbia Convention Center. Mayor Bob Coble presented a City of Columbia proclamation recognizing the Festival of Heritage Week. Charles Ashe gave the invocation, and Tiaa Rutherford introduced members of the nominating committee.
Kwame Dawes, USC Poet in Residence, stole the show by reading poems he had written about each honoree, samples of which are included in italics.
• Beryle Dakers (director of cultural
programming for SCETV) - Her
calling is to shatter the silence with
words.
• Celia Dial Saxon (1857- 1935, Booker T. Washington High School history
teacher for 57 years) - A black
woman redeeming the lost time with
books….
• Celia Mann (1799- 1867, freed slave who became nurse and business
leader) - See those hands; those hands
don't know idling…
• Charles F. Bolden Jr. (1946- ,
Astronaut Hall of Fame) - You have
always looked to the sky to find the
genius that will teach us how to fly.
• C.A. Johnson (1882- 1970, first principal of B.T. Washington High School, first supervisor of Negro
Schools in Columbia) - … a man who
spun Latin declensions and hard lessons for the youth…
• E.W. Cromartie II (1945- , Columbia City Councilman) - … lawyer- man, you learned to talk
away the cages, learned to fight with
language for doors to open.
• Edmund Perry Palmer Jr. (1935- , Columbia's first licensed
African- American mortician) - Yes, you
have buried our cherished ones, but in
your art is the grace of a heart filled
with the hope of our race.
• Edwin Robert Russell (1913- 1996, chemist with Manhattan Project which produced first atomic
bomb) - A mind with the imagination
to split atoms…
• Fannie Phelps Adams (1917- , Richland One teacher for 40 years) -
She won't let the children stay hidden in
the cave…
• Frederick Benjamin Schumpert (1893- 1974, owner of successful
Columbia lumber company) - … the sap
never stopped flowing, prosperity
always on tap.
• George A. Elmore (1905- 1959, successfully sued the SC Democratic
Party for the right to vote) - … he told
the old racist Democrats, "No more!"
• Grace Jordan McFadden (1943- 2004, former director of USC African- American Studies Program) -
Professor…who taught educators to fortify
their hearts with the art of freedom.
• Harold R. Boulware Sr. (1913- 1983, chief counsel for SC
NAACP) - … you taught this people that
its redemption lay in doing the right by
its own words, and they heard, good
barrister, we heard.
• Rev. Isaiah DeQuincey Newman (1911- 1985, first SC African- American senator since Reconstruction) - But with gentle dignity, you, Darlington
County man, whispered a prayer, then
declared it all spiritual this injustice
against the Negro…
• Isaac Samuel Leevy (1876- 1968, tailor, merchant, funeral home operator,
banker, politician) - … you grew
businesses, broadcasting good seeds all
over Columbia.
• I. S. Leevy Johnson (1942- , lawyer, legislator, businessman, recipient
of Order of the Palmetto) - You are
the kind of big- man attorney with a
taste for mercy, a man who turns words
into power.
• Isaac W. Williams (1945- 2008,
NAACP field director) - Seventeen times
locked- in, seventeen times, you stepped
out again, and you gathered around
you the army of freedom warriors.
• Jacob Stroyer (1849- 1908, emancipated slave, author, minister) - … a
man bought and sold who will always
remind those after me with eloquent
words, that God was no friend of
slavery.
• James E. Clyburn (1940- , congressman)
- … a man well- groomed to
carry the cries of ordinary people with
him to the highest levels of this nation.
• Rev. James Miles Hinton (1891- 1970, president of SC NAACP) -
… ah prophet, how you burned your
trail of defiance across this state…
• Kay Patterson (1931- , educator,
SCEA official, legislator) - Yes, firebrand,
giving fire for hot fire where fire
is needed…
• Larry F. Lebby (1950- , artist) -
You have a heart that lives to restore
what was damaged in the tearing apart
of people by hate.
• Luther J. Battiste III (1949- , lawyer, Columbia City Councilman) … you became a servant of others, the
carrier of wisdom, a man of firsts,
pathfinder, always game to a new challenge.
• Matilda Arabelle Evans (1872- 1935, first African- American woman in SC to practice medicine) -
… you trained your hands to be gentle,
to heal, to heal the sins of ignorance and
neglect.
• Matthew J. Perry Jr. (1921- ,
lawyer, judge) - … you studied hard and
nursed that good dream deep in your
heart.
• Modjeska Monteith Simkins (1899- 1992, civil rights activist, banker,
teacher) - … you took all the abuse and
spit from cross- burners, the canker of
this city of Klansmen, this terrible place
where black folks had to fight for their
right, and how you stood your ground
and fought the good fight.
• Nathaniel Jerome Frederick (1875- 1938, principal of Howard School, lawyer, newspaper publisher) -
Stern jaw, straight back, proud black
man…
• Richard Samuel Roberts
(1880- 1936, photographer) - … everyday
black people captured on those
glass plates in their moment of elegant
dignity…
• Sarah Mae Flemming (1933- 1993, successfully sued SCE&G to end segregated seating on buses) -
She ignored the illogic of the color line
on that bus, and took an empty seat up
front…
• William Manigault (1883- 1940, undertaker, casket maker, funeral home
operator) - …t he promises of glory up
above could sustain us in this life, before
the ground swallowed us…you,
Manigault,…understood this truth…











