[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 32 (Monday, February 29, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1080-S1081]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MORNING BUSINESS
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BLACK HISTORY MONTH AND THE PULLMAN PORTERS
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, this year marks the 90th anniversary of
historian and scholar Dr. Carter G. Woodson's launch of Negro History
Week--and is the 40th anniversary of the inaugural Black History Month.
This year, as Black History Month is coming to a close, I want to
celebrate by paying tribute to a Chicago neighborhood that has played a
significant part in our country's African-American and labor history--
the Pullman Historical District.
One year ago this month, President Obama designated the South Side
Chicago's Pullman Historic District as the Nation's 406th national
park. The Pullman National Historical Park has a special place in our
Nation's history. It has been the site of some major historical events.
The men and women of the Pullman community--the birthplace of the
Nation's first Black labor union--the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters--helped shape our country as we know it today. By fighting for
fair labor conditions in the 19th century, the Pullman workers advanced
America's civil rights movement.
In the 1890s, the Pullman community was the catalyst for the first
industrywide strike during one of the worst economic depressions our
Nation ever faced--and led to the creation of Labor Day as a national
holiday. These railroad workers aren't always mentioned in the history
books or picked to join the parades during Black History Month--but
they made history and deserve to be honored. One hundred and one years
ago, fearing that the history of African Americans was fading into
obscurity, Dr. Carter G. Woodson founded the Association for the Study
of Afro-American Life and History. His goal was to raise awareness of
African Americans' contributions to civilization. He believed that
truth could not be denied--and realized that past contributions by
African Americans needed to be documented and taught. He once said,
``if a race had no recorded history, its achievements would be
forgotten and, in time, claimed by other groups.'' I agree with Dr.
Woodson--and so does the A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum in
Chicago.
Earlier this month, with the help of DePaul University, the A. Philip
Randolph Pullman Porter Museum launched a new online registry that
gives voice to the stories of Black railroad workers. By capturing
stories from scholars and the relatives of these workers, we will
preserve oral histories that otherwise might be lost to history. If you
listen to the oral histories, you will hear stories from people like
Theodore Berrien, who worked as a Pullman porter from 1940 to 1969.
Berrien worked on President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's funeral train
from Georgia to Washington, DC. On the registry, Berrien's grandson
says: ``He spoke of how kind Mrs. Roosevelt was and thanked him for his
services during the trip.''
Or take Blaine McKinley Fitzgerald, who worked as a Pullman porter on
the Illinois Central and Louisville and Nashville railroads from 1920
to 1946--his relatives wrote: ``Blaine's major route was from
Birmingham to New York. He also worked the Rose Bowl trips to
California when Alabama was a major contingent.'' You will hear how
Blaine raised a family of six children on his salary as a Pullman
porter--all college educated--who became teachers, lawyers, and
engineers. Blaine's story is just one of many examples of how the
Pullman porters helped build the African-American middle class in
Chicago.
But even as the African-American middle class expanded in Chicago and
across the country, the struggle for justice, equality, and equal
opportunities for African Americans in this country has continued.
And the State of Illinois has played a significant role in that
struggle. Springfield, IL native President Abraham Lincoln led our
Nation through a war to save the Union, abolished slavery, and began
the work we continue today to end discrimination. In 1909, the
centennial of Lincoln's birth, 2,000 people gathered at a dazzling gala
to honor the centennial of Lincoln's birth. Even though this was an
event celebrating the centennial of the President that helped abolish
slavery--like most in America at that time, it was segregated.
The Chicago Tribune reported, that it ``is to be a lily white affair
from start to finish.'' But across town, the Black community organized
its own Lincoln centennial at the African
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Methodist Episcopal Church. The Reverend L.H. Magee spoke at that
gathering and noted the widespread feeling of hurt over the exclusion
of people of color from the main Lincoln banquet. Reverend Magee made a
prediction about the bicentennial of Lincoln's birth in 2009--100 years
in the future: ``prejudice shall have been banished as a myth and
relegated to the dark days of Salem witchcraft.''
In many ways, his prediction was correct. We have come a long way to
banish discrimination in our communities--our legal system recognizes
that all men and women are created equal and should be free from
discrimination in schools, housing, and employment. And in 2009,
President Barack Obama, a former Illinois Senator, was sworn in as the
first African-American President of the United States of America.
Pastor Magee had a vision of a new America, but he may not have
imagined that bricks laid by the hands of slaves would make a home in
our White House for a family of color. But, while progress has been
made, we cannot ignore that we still have more to do. When one in three
African-American men will go to prison in their lifetime, we have more
to do. When the unemployment rate for African Americans are more than
double the rate for Whites, we have more to do. And when efforts exist
across the country to make it harder to vote, rather than easier, we
have more to do. But it is when the climb is the steepest that we can
come together as Americans, to take the mountaintop once and for all.
This month, let's celebrate these achievements and honor Dr. Carter
G. Woodson's legacy by remembering all the contributions of the
extraordinary men and women of the civil rights movement--including the
Pullman porters. We have come a long way, but we still have work to do
to fulfill the promise to make our Nation fairer and more equal and to
do what Lincoln called on us to do: ``nobly save . . . the last best
hope of earth.''
(At the request of Mr. Reid, the following statement was ordered to
be printed in the Record.)
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