• •• ^ %. . % •" v^* % • • ^o. %.^^ -^0^ r^Q^ 'bV w % ^%. . 0^ / «5^^ - ____ % Ay ^ • ■ -./ •^^•' ^^/ -'Mi'. "W' • 1^ v^\5akr."% • •• 3 yk V< A, AN APPEAL TO THE President and Congress of the United States AN APPKAL TO THE President and Congress of the United States RESOLUTION ON THE PROPOSED EXPOSITION COMMEMORATIVE OF THE Semi-Centennial of the Negroes' Freedom in America Passed by the IlIiiiol>< Conjcrciicv <>j flic A. M. A'. Chuirli. (if Springflchl. Ill/noix. Sci)tcutl>(r. I'Jld. <^^k.>19 By transfer The White House March 3rd, 1913 Izi-s^ VvVA. S. \\. JOXES, I'axtor St. Luke A. M. E. CJuircJi. Ka^i Si. L(nu.\, Illlnoii^, and Leader of the Delegation of the Illinois Conference to tJie General Conference at Kansas Citij. May, 1912, ivho offered the Resolution herein Mon- dail, Septenihrr the 10th. 1910. Hon. W. a. IvODKMiKRC, Congressman of ihe Twenty-second Disfricf of Illiniii.'<. n h' introduced the First Resolution touching the proponed Exposition, commemorative of the Semi-Centenitial of the Negroes' Freedom in America. Senate Bill No. 180 offered by Hon. W. O. Bradley of Ken- tucky, which was reported favorably to the Senate last February, 1912, calling for an appropriation of Ji>250,000 for the. holding of a Negro Exposition, finally passed the Senate Thursday, April 4, 1912. HISTORY OF MOVEMENT. President Taft in his December message to Congress, 1909, in accordance with a suggestion of Prof. Booker T. Washington and other prominent members of the Negro Race, recommended that a prehminary Commission be be appointed to consider the advisabihty of holding an exposition in the year of 1913 commemorative of the Semi- centennial of the Negroes' Freedom in America. In accordance with the President's recommendation, Congressman W. A. Rodenberg of»the Twenty- second Dis- trict of Illinois, chairman of the Committee on Industrial Arts and Expositions, immediately introduced a joint resolu- tion in Congress, providing for the appointment of such a Commission. The Resolution was called up for consideration on Sus- pension Day and failed of passage because of opposition of the Southern members of Congress. This opposition being sufficient to overcome the two-thirds majority necessary to pass the Resolution. But the failure to pass the Resolution did not neces- sarily mean the defeat of the Exposition. The Negroe:^ of Illinois were alive to the importance of such an event. Therefore, the Thirty-ninth Session of the Illinois Conference of the A. M. E. Church, which convened in Springfield September, 1910, in order to show its appre- ciation of the event and its gratitude to Congressman Roden- berg, unanimously passed the following Resolution : —4— RESOLUTION. Rev. S. R. Junks, pa.sior St. Luko A. .\1. E. (Jlmivli, East yt. Louis, Illinois, and leader of iJie delej^alion of the Illinois Conference to the (Jeneral Conference at l\.aii>as City, May. 1912, offered the followinsi; re.^ not reduced to cannibals? But instead, after two and a half centuries of involun- tary servitude, the Emancipation Proclamation found him possessed of mental and moral strength and creative ability, that is the marvel of the world. American slavery with all it- brutality, did not destroy the endowment* of the soul? shrouded in l)lack skin. The ])ossibilities and capabilities of the race were there: planted by the hand of God; waiting for the opportunity to come, when tlie race would be born into the unrestrained aid of freedom, and bv proper development triumph over evcrv foe and estaljlish itself among the progressive races of earth. This the Negro is doing step by step and day by day. Hi>* achievement'^ since Immortal Lincoln swung wide the door of hope, is an illustration of that Ril)lica1 truth. "God hath chosen the foolish things of this world to con- found the wise, and the weak things of this world to con- found the things which are mighty." When the Czar of Russia freed his serfs he gave t(» each, ten acres o land. But the American Negro innnerged into freedom homeless and pennilass. Today the greatest miracle since Christ rose from the dead, is the splendid achievements of the race, in its steady march through discrimination and proscription and injus- titce, that have ever been, and are yet prominent in these United States. In 1901 Rev. J. T. Jennifer, D. D.. published a pam- phlet "The Light of Africa," from which I quote a few statistics of the progress of the race. Dr. Jennifer says his progress is in evidence in $2,250,000,000 as the result of Negro thrift and industry. In the ten years previous to jhe publishing of his pamphlet he says Negroes produced 50,- 000,000.000 i)ounds of cotton on 40,000 square miles. The annual product of Negro industry in corn, wheat, oats, and icotton amounts to $431,320,000. The Negro occupies 1,500,000 farms and owns 270.000 of them and pays int(» the pul)lic treasury State and National taxes on $400,000,- 000. 5,000,000 attend church or are under some religious influence. The race owns $40,000,000 in churchs and con- tribute annually $18,000,000 for religious purposes. In 1909 the Negro Business League held in New York City, Aug. 17, 18, 19, represented^^^One Hundred dif- ferent business enterprises, besides^L>oce^^ Lawyers, Phar- macists, Architects, and Bank Presidents, of Avhich institu- tions the race has nineteen. The only absentees from this notable gathering were Railw-ay and Trust Presidents. The high standard of the race as we see it today in Religion, Education, the Professions, the Sciences, in Art, the Trades, in iVgriculture and in Business, are undeniable proofs, thae it has not betrayed the confidence of great and good Abraham Lincoln, or been recreant to the trust imposed by the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments nor ignorant (tf the meaning of Citizenshi]). If as many })eople believe the race question is Indus- trial and Educational, the proposed Exposition in 1913 Commemorative of the Semi-Centennial of the Negroes' —6— Fie;(liiiii in Aiiu'ricn. will ini(li.ulit(iiioii will have n()^H)litical sinnilicancc wliit('\cr, I.nl Kackt-d \,y ilic Federal (iovciiunent the intent and |)nr|»(».^ions, where the interest of the rac«' was concerned, have proven him to be a tried and true friend. IV. Resolved; That the Illinois Conference through the organs of the A. M. E. Church, appeal to members of the race, t(t address letters to the Congressional Rei)resentatives of their respective districts, requesting them to give their unfaltering support to the passage of this bill. V. Resolved ; That this Conference go on record strongly in favor of the holding of this Exposition, which will give to the race an oj»[)()rtunity to show to the world, what it has accomplished in Religion, Education, the Sciences, the Arts, the Professions, the Trades, in Business, in fact in all the peaceul industries, in less than a half century. 54 Hf ^\/ V^V \'^^\r 'v'^*/ ^■A-tS' *<>. *-':rr^*\/ %<^^ •* :%^ cP^^'m^^S , ^^" ^ "o . » • A ^^-^K V v^^^r^y^ .<^ ...