Thursday, July 15, 2010

Red Oak Cemetery / Aunt Jemima

Established in 1798, the picturesque church is situated among 200-year-old oak and sycamore trees. These days the church door, cinched with an old-time brass skeleton key, is only open for Sunday morning services. However, in the late 1700’s, this door was open year-round. Historical records mention Red Oak Presbyterian Church's involvement in the Underground Railroad movement and for over 100 years the church’s congregation has included whites as well as blacks.


As well, the church’s adjacent cemetery includes markers bearing the family names of those descending from formerly enslaved persons who settled around Red Oak. Rosa Washington Riles is buried there. For over 25 years, simple copper pipes marked her grave. A piece of metal dangled from the piping and adhesive letters formed the name “Aunt Jemima.” Using the meager profits from its annual pancake breakfast, the community purchased a brown marble headstone for Riles's grave. The unaffected piping remained until just recently.

Rosa Washington Riles, portrayed Aunt Jemima. Riles was born in 1901 in Red Oak, Ohio, a small farming community located 50 miles east of Cincinnati. In her mid-30s, Riles left Red Oak to work for the Quaker Oats Company. Quaker Oats hoped to bolster the public’s interest in their self-rising pancake mix by bringing their trademark to life. During the Depression, major newspapers carried Help Wanted Ads, seeking several dozen attractive black women to dress as Aunt Jemima and travel the nation, giving cooking demonstrations with Quaker Oats’ self-rising pancake mix.


Some of the women who portrayed the “real-life” Aunt Jemima gained national popularity; others, like Rosa Washington Riles, did not.





Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Gettysburg

The Battle of Gettysburg was a turning point in the Civil War, the Union victory in the summer of 1863 that ended General Robert E. Lee's second and most ambitious invasion of the North. Often referred to as the "High Water Mark of the Rebellion", it was the war's bloodiest battle with 51,000 casualties. It also provided President Abraham Lincoln with the setting for his most famous address.






Sunday, July 11, 2010

Harpers Ferry

Harpers Ferry National Historical Park is located at the confluence of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers in the states of West Virginia, Virginia, and Maryland. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Meriwether Lewis, John Brown, "Stonewall" Jackson, and Frederick Douglass are just a few of the prominent individuals who left their mark on this place.