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Obama Wouldn't Be First Black President
By Aysha Hussain
February 16, 2007
You've seen the
headlines: "Are Americans Ready for a Black President?" "Is Obama Black Enough?"
"Obama: America's First Black
President?"
Ever since the
nation first met Illinois Sen. Barack Obama in 2004, his race has been called
into question more times than Michael Jackson's. Obama is clearly a black man,
but is this really a breakthrough? Some blacks say Obama isn't "black enough,"
which seems ironic because for many blacks, former President Bill Clinton was
"black enough." In 2001, Clinton was honored as the
nation's "first black president" at the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Annual
Awards Dinner in Washington,
D.C.
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Were there other
"black" presidents? Some historians have reason to believe people don't really understand the
genealogy of past U.S. Presidents.
Research shows at least five U.S. presidents had
black ancestors and Thomas Jefferson, the nation's third president, was
considered the first black president, according to historian Leroy Vaughn,
author of Black People and Their Place in
World History.
Vaughn's research
shows Jefferson was not the only
former black U.S. president. Who were
the others? Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge.
But why was this unknown? How were they elected president? All five of these
presidents never acknowledged their black ancestry.
Jefferson, who
served two terms between 1801 and 1809, was described as the "son of a
half-breed Indian squaw and a Virginia mulatto father," as
stated in Vaughn's findings. Jefferson also was said to
have destroyed all documentation attached to his mother, even going to extremes
to seize letters written by his mother to other people.
President Andrew
Jackson, the nation's seventh president, was in office between 1829 and 1837.
Vaughn cites an article written in The Virginia Magazine of History that
Jackson was the son of an
Irish woman who married a black man. The magazine also stated that
Jackson's oldest brother
had been sold as a slave.
Lincoln,
the nation's 16th president, served between 1861
and 1865. Lincoln was said to have
been the illegitimate son of an African man, according to Leroy's findings.
Lincoln had very dark skin
and coarse hair and his mother allegedly came from an Ethiopian tribe. His
heritage fueled so much controversy that Lincoln was nicknamed
"Abraham Africanus the First" by his opponents.
President Warren
Harding, the 29th president, in office
between 1921
and 1923, apparently never denied his ancestry. According to Vaughn,
William
Chancellor, a professor of economics and politics at
Wooster
College in
Ohio, wrote a book on
the Harding family genealogy. Evidently, Harding had black ancestors between
both sets of parents. Chancellor also said that Harding attended
Iberia
College, a school founded
to educate fugitive slaves.
Coolidge, the nation's
30th president,
served
between 1923 and 1929 and supposedly was proud of his heritage. He claimed his
mother was dark because of mixed Indian ancestry. Coolidge's mother's maiden
name was "Moor" and in Europe the name "Moor" was given to all blacks just as
"Negro" was used in America. It later was concluded that Coolidge was part
black.
The only difference
between Obama and these former presidents is that none of their family histories
were fully acknowledged by others. Even though Obama
is half-white, he strongly resembles his Kenyan father. And not only is Obama
open about his ancestry, most people acknowledge him as a black man, which is
why people will identify Obama, if elected, as the first black president of the
United States.
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