Celebrating innovation - 2016 Aetna African American History
Transcription
Celebrating innovation - 2016 Aetna African American History
Celebrating 31 years of African American accomplishments 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar Leading the next generation of business Celebrating innovation Timeline Sources: 1. www.theroot.com/multimedia/work-live-earn-multiply 2. www.nndb.com/people/679/000121316/ 3. http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-2062 4. www.cogreatwomen.org/brown-clara.htm 5. http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_ archive/2002/07/22/326294/index.htm 6. http://inventors.about.com/od/mstartinventors/a/Garrett_ Morgan.htm 7. www.themsj.com/black-business-leaders-in-america1.2440240?pagereq=2 8. www.usatoday.com/money/top25-leaders.htm 9. www.biography.com/people/marcus-garvey-9307319 10. www.inventions.org/culture/african/matzeliger.html 11. www.blackenterprise.com/management/earl-graves/ 12. www.reginaldflewis.com/biography-3.php 13. www.chjamesco.com/leadership/leadership5.html 14. http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/people/ person.asp?personId=8420700&ticker=LMT:US 15. www.thegrio.com/money/made-in-america-blackowned-businesses-blaze-trails-on-our-soil.php 16. www.chrisgardnermedia.com/about/bio 17. www.blackpast.org/?q=1810-2 18. www.wisconsinhistory.org/libraryarchives/aanp/freedom/ 19. www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/douglass.html 20. www.promenadespeakers.com/page23.html 21. www.aaregistry.org/historic_events/view/elleanoreldridge-businesswoman-amid-oppression 22. www.riseandgrind.com/2010/11/25/henry-g-parks/ 23. www.rhboydpublishing.com/our_company/history/ index.php 24. http://fidelisdc.com/ 25. www.biography.com/people/tyra-banks16242328?page=2#reality-tv-and-other-work 26. www.thefreelibrary.com/Black+Enterprise+Issues+31st+ Annual+Report+on+America%27s+Leading...-a0101575797 Photography Locations: Introduction: George Washington Carver Library, Austin, Texas January: Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica, California February: Shima Seiki U.S.A. INC., Monroe Twp., New Jersey March: Chicago, Illinois April: Upper Marlboro, Maryland May: Bair Middle School, Sunrise, Florida June: Las Vegas, Nevada July: Carol’s Daughter,Inc., New York, New York August: Avis Ford, Southfield, Michigan September: California Sound Studios, Lake Forest, California October: West Chester, Ohio November: Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania December: New York, New York Special thanks to those whose effort and time helped create this calendar: Aetna African American Employee Resource Group Phil Barr, Strategic Initiative Mark Callahan, Design and Interactive Media Miguel Centeno, Community Relations, New York Jane Condron, Law Information Floyd Green, Head of Community Relations Chekesha Kidd, Head of Student Health William Kramer, Deputy Counsel, Law and Regulatory Affairs Will Thomas, Corporate Communications Amy Trimani, Corporate Communications Thomas Wynn, Print Production Credits: Produced by Aetna Inc. Hartford, Connecticut Peggy Garrity, Project Manager Photography Lou Jones Studio Boston, Massachusetts Lou Jones, Photographer Photography Assistants Mike DeStefano Matt Kalinowski Bruce Lithimane Leah Raymond Kenneth Smoot Printer Allied Printing, Manchester, Connecticut To Order Calendars Additional calendars are available for $4 each. To order please send a check, payable to Aetna, to: Aetna African American History Calendar Corporate Communications, RW3H 151 Farmington Avenue Hartford, CT 06156 Phone: 860-273-0509 Fax: 860-273-6675 The individuals profiled in this calendar are not agents or employees of Aetna. Aetna does not endorse any of the products of these individuals or any product displayed. Project Assistants Myrna Blum Sharon Valechko Creative Development The Pita Group Rocky Hill, Connecticut Emily Cretella, Writer Kim Pita, Writer Lisa Santoro, Creative Director and Designer Nicole Stavola, Researcher 00.00.924.1 B A Rich History In Business Throughout history, African American entrepreneurs have had a critical impact on the landscape of American business. This timeline will introduce you to some of the most groundbreaking and inspiring business achievements of the last 200+ years. 1809: Elleanor Eldridge went to live 1810: The African Insurance 1818: Thomas Day of North with her sister in Adams, Mass. While there, she and her siblings started a business of weaving, washing and soap boiling.21 Company of Philadelphia is the first black-owned insurance company in the United States.17 Carolina is considered the first widely known furniture and cabinetmaker in the United States.17 >> Believe It Is Possible Starting, running and growing a business, especially at a young age, takes passion, energy, drive, innovation and momentum. The 14 young entrepreneurs honored in the 31st annual edition of the Aetna African American History Calendar all believed it was possible to do something extraordinary with their lives. They were born with an entrepreneurial spirit. Many entered into business for themselves before the age of 10. They found ways to make money early on — selling items such as hand-painted rocks, lotions and perfumes, music lessons, clothing and jewelry; and doing yard work for neighbors. We traveled across the country to gain perspectives from young entrepreneurs who, despite humble beginnings, have already earned millions, sold and purchased businesses, formed foundations to support youth, authored books, and even had their faces pictured on credit cards. Aetna is pleased to present the 31st annual African American History Calendar, celebrating the remarkable ambition of young entrepreneurs who are working day and night to make a difference in the communities where they live and work. They are amazing and bright individuals who have leveraged the advancement of technology to further their dreams and advance their success. As leaders for the next generation of business, these young entrepreneurs are at the top of the pack among their peers. PASSION • ENERGY • DRIVE INNOVATION • MOMENTUM Ingenuity and Innovation Continue with Today’s Young Entrepreneurs By Juliet E.K. Walker, Ph.D. Documented African American history primarily focuses on the fight for racial equality by political activists and social reformers. Absent in historical records, however, are African Americans who forged and encouraged economic liberation through entrepreneurship and business enterprise. Throughout history, business ingenuity and innovation have driven and inspired black business development and expansion. This continues today with the abundance of young entrepreneurs bringing business ideas to reality, establishing new business categories, leveraging creative ingenuity and conquering unforeseen challenges. Black business history dates back to Colonial America. Until the Civil War, both slaves and free blacks worked as business owners in the preindustrial mainstream business community. The most successful black businesspeople were wholesale and retail merchants, as well as lumber and coal merchants. Some were commission brokers, as well as manufacturers. Blacks also owned steamships and railroad cars. Others invested in government, and commercial stocks and bonds. Several achieved wealth in excess of $100,000, particularly those who owned large real estate holdings and plantations. Blacks also were involved in international trade. In 1784, Paul Cuffe became the first black to sail as master of his own ship. By 1806, he had a fleet of five ships transporting commodities to and from the West Indies, Africa, England, Sweden and Russia. African American women also have a historic tradition in business dating back to Colonial times. They established domestic and personal service enterprises. The Remond sisters established a hair salon and wig factory in Massachusetts; as well as manufactured medicated hair tonics, which generated substantial mail order sales. Elizabeth Keckley, the dressmaker for Mary Todd Lincoln, owned a Washington, D.C., haute couture fashion house that employed many female black seamstresses. In New Orleans, in the 1850s, Madame Macarty owned a railroad depot worth more than $155,000. Since that time, much progress has been made by young black entrepreneurs. They are at the forefront of developing successful enterprises inside and outside the home. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com Many of them, some of whom are profiled in this calendar, have capitalized on the evolution of information technology to provide them with a global customer base. This millennial generation of entrepreneurs is well educated and well versed. They start young and maintain momentum until success is achieved. Many are millionaires before turning 20 years old. They are passionate pioneers — just as their ancestors who came before them — on a quest to make the world a better place. Dr. Juliet E.K. Walker is founder and director of the Center for Black Business History, Entrepreneurship and Technology at the University of Texas at Austin, where she also serves as a history professor. Hamet Watt Hamet Watt thrives on transforming innovative ideas into successful companies. His focus has always been on finding creative ways to solve big problems. Cofounder bLife, Inc. “I have always been drawn to the creativity and innovation opportunity associated with being an entrepreneur,” said 40-year-old Watt. “I also love building great teams that can work together to tackle major challenges.” Santa Monica, CA He spent many successful years working in the venture capital, media and entertainment industries. His most recent venture is bLife, a company developing the first personal well-being subscription service. 1827: Samuel Cornish and John B. Russwurm published Freedom’s Journal, the first African American-owned and operated newspaper.18 “bLife’s mission is to develop engaging and effective science-based tools that enable people to lead healthier and happier lives,” said Watt. “When we realized there were not a lot of elegant tools available to help people with their personal growth, we decided to get smart and build a service to help people thrive.” With its centralized platform, bLife tracks and manages life goals, provides personality assessments with other behavioral tools, and offers interaction among users. “This is one place where people can manage their well-being and store personal growth data,” said Watt. 1834: David Ruggles, abolitionist activist, opened the first African American bookstore in the nation, in New York City.17 1841: William Leidesdorf, who became America’s first millionaire of black descent, arrived in California. After arriving, he engaged in trade and real estate, built San Francisco’s first hotel and was the city’s first treasurer.1 Monday Tuesday As Watt continues his serial entrepreneurial journey, he plans to inspire young people. Some words of advice: “Find your passion, be fearless, work with great people and address real issues.” >> January 2012 “Find your passion, be fearless, work with great people and address real issues.” – Hamet Watt Sunday Watt advocates for the use of science in behavior change. “The last decade of research now provides clear data showing that improving psychological wellbeing not only benefits quality of life, it is strongly correlated with physiological health and wellness.” Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 2 3 4 5 6 1863: Abraham Lincoln issues Emancipation Proclamation. 1965: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. calls for nonviolent protests if Alabama blacks are not allowed to register and vote. 1624: William Tucker, first African child born in America. 1971: The Congressional Black Caucus organized. 1943: George Washington Carver, agricultural scientist and inventor, dies. 1831: The World Anti-Slavery Convention opens in London. Saturday 7 1837: Black journalist Phillip A. Bell established his first newspaper, the Weekly Advocate. New Year’s Day New Year’s Day Observed 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1811: Charles Deslondes leads slave revolt in Louisiana. 1866: Fisk University founded in Nashville, Tennessee. 1750: James Varick, first Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion (A.M.E.Z.) Church, born. 1940: Benjamin O. Davis Sr. becomes U.S. Army’s first black general. 1948: Supreme Court rules blacks have right to study law at state institutions. 1990: L. Douglas Wilder inaugurated as first African American governor (Virginia) since Reconstruction. 1975: William T. Coleman named secretary of Transportation. 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 1929: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a major voice for civil rights in the 20th century, born. 1978: NASA names African American astronauts Maj. Frederick D. Gregory, Maj. Guion S. Bluford Jr. and Dr. Ronald E. McNair. 1942: Three-time heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali (Cassius Clay), born. 1856: Dr. Daniel Hale Williams, pioneer heart surgeon, born. 1918: John H. Johnson, editor and publisher of Jet and Ebony magazines, born. 2009: Barack H. Obama sworn in as the 44th president of the United States of America, becoming the first African American to hold the office of U.S. commander-in-chief. 1870: Hiram Revels elected first black U.S. senator, replacing Jefferson Davis for the Mississippi seat. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Birthday Observed 22 23 24 25 26 27 2009: Susan Rice confirmed as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, becoming the first African American woman to represent the nation before the world in this capacity. 1891: Dr. Daniel Hale Williams founds Provident Hospital in Chicago, the first training hospital for black doctors and nurses in the U.S. 1865: Congress passes 13th Amendment, which, on ratification, abolishes slavery. 1851: Sojourner Truth addresses first Black Women’s Rights Convention, Akron, Ohio. 1977: Andrew Jackson Young Jr. becomes the first African American to serve as the United States Ambassador to the United Nations. 1961: Leontyne Price, world-renowned opera singer, makes her Metropolitan Opera debut. 29 30 31 1926: Violette Neatly Anderson becomes first black woman lawyer to argue a case before the Supreme Court. 1844: Richard Theodore Greener, first African American to graduate from Harvard, born. 2006: Coretta Scott King, widow of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who enshrined his legacy of human rights and equality, dies. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 28 1998: Sarah “Madam C.J.” Walker, first black female millionaire, honored on U.S. postage stamp. Natalia Allen Founder and CEO Design Futurist White Plains, NY Like most teenagers, Natalia Allen was very particular about the clothes she wore. With a unique sense of style, she knew exactly what she wanted but often could not find it in stores. “I did research and wrote letters,” Allen remembered. “The timing was right to grow an area of design that allowed for the intersection of sustainability and innovation.” “For my 15th birthday, my mother bought me a sewing machine, saying ‘since you know what you would like you should learn to make your own clothes,’” recalls Allen, now 29. Allen began to create her own fashions with the practical gift and before long was selling clothes to classmates. She got her break when an executive at DuPont hired her company, Design Futurist, to integrate conductive fibers into fashion. The result: clothing with electronics, lights and displays smart enough to monitor heart rates. She’s also designed eco-innovative clothing for brands such as DKNY®, Calvin Klein® and Quiksilver®. Her career as a fashion designer took flight in 2004 after graduating as the Parsons Designer of the Year. In addition to designing for multinational companies, Allen is now creating her own sustainable clothing 1847: Frederick Douglass established the abolitionist paper The North Star in Rochester, N.Y., and developed it into the most influential antislavery paper published during the antebellum era.19 1859: Clara Brown moved to Central City, Colo.; and established the first laundry, bought real estate, and invested in Colorado gold mines.1, 4 Monday Tuesday Allen advises entrepreneurs, “Get things done. Just get started. But be very thoughtful as you go along. I am constantly studying, planning and growing.” To restore herself, she runs, reads and surfs. “My faith keeps me grounded. It provides renewal and direction. I am able to come to the table with new, strong ideas.” >> February 2012 “The timing was right to grow an area of design that allowed for the intersection of sustainability and innovation.” – Natalia Allen Sunday 1869: Isaac Myers organized African American ship caulkers and longshoremen; and then used his experience to help found the first national African American labor union, the Colored National Labor Union.1 line. “We have built a culture around beautiful life-giving products,” said Allen. “We have moved beyond education to manufacturing.” Black History Month Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 2 3 1902: Langston Hughes, poet, born. 1915: Biologist Ernest E. Just receives Spingarn Medal for research in fertilization and cell division. 2009: Eric H. Holder Jr. sworn in as the nation’s first African American attorney general. Saturday 4 1913: Rosa Parks, civil rights pioneer who sparked 1955 Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott, born. 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1884: Willis Johnson patents eggbeater. 1993: Arthur Ashe Jr., tennis player, humanitarian and activist, dies. 1883: Ragtime pianist and composer Eubie Blake born. 1968: Three South Carolina State students killed during segregation protest in Orangeburg, South Carolina. 1995: Bernard Harris becomes first African American astronaut to walk in space. 1927: Leontyne Price, internationally acclaimed opera singer, born. 1990: Nelson Mandela of South Africa is released from prison after 27 years. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 1909: NAACP founded in New York City. 1970: Joseph L. Searles becomes first African American member of New York Stock Exchange. 1760: Richard Allen, founder of the African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, born. 1820: Susan B. Anthony, abolitionist and women’s rights advocate, born. 1874: Frederick Douglass elected president of Freedman’s Bank and Trust. 1938: Mary Frances Berry, first woman to serve as chancellor of a major research university (University of Colorado), born. Lincoln’s BIrthday 1931: Toni Morrison, winner of 1988 Pulitzer Prize for her novel Beloved, born. Valentine’s Day 19 20 21 22 23 24 2002: Vonetta Flowers becomes Winter Olympics’ first African American gold medalist. 1895: Frederick Douglass, leading voice in the Abolitionist Movement, dies. 1965: Malcolm X assassinated in New York. 2008: Johnnie Carr, major icon of the Civil Rights Movement, dies. 1868: W.E.B. DuBois, scholar, activist and author of The Souls of Black Folk, born. 1864: Rebecca Lee Crumpler becomes first black woman to receive a medical degree (New England Female Medical College). Presidents’ Day Observed Ash Wednesday Washington’s Birthday 26 27 28 29 1965: Civil rights activist Jimmie Lee Jackson dies after being shot by state police in Marion, Alabama. 1897: Marian Anderson, world-renowned opera singer and civil rights activist, born. 1984: Michael Jackson, musician and entertainer, wins eight Grammy Awards®. 1940: Hattie McDaniel becomes the first African American to win an Academy Award® for Best Supporting Actress for her role as “Mammy” in “Gone With the Wind.” 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 25 1853: First black YMCA organized in Washington, D.C. Ashton & Ryan Clark Owners Dynamik Duo, Inc. Twins Ashton and Ryan Clark remember a sign that hung in their parents’ home while growing up. It said: “Your tomorrow is determined by the choices you make today.” It became a motto to live by. “We learned from an early age that our brand can be tarnished by poor choices or strengthened by good decisions,” said Ashton, now 23 years old. “We’ve always made life decisions keeping our future in mind.” Flossmoor, IL The Clarks’ “brand management” started with their first business ventures. As children, they never 1883: Jan E. Matzeliger was granted a patent for his shoe-lasting machine that was able to turn out from 150 to 700 pairs of shoes a day.10 received allowances. Instead, they raked leaves, shoveled snow and sold lemonade to make money. “We realized that if we pleased our customers, word of our business would spread for us. It’s an approach we still take,” Ryan said. Today, the Clarks own multiple online businesses under their Dynamik Duo business venture. Their major websites include ludakicks.com, a custom sneaker company; 247mixtapes.com, a streaming music subscription site; and UticketIt.com, an online ticketing source for event organizers, small organizations and nonprofits. 1883: Charles H. James started the C.H. James Company as a bartering business that evolved into a wholesale fruit and produce distribution house serving independent grocers and restaurants.13 1888: Two of America’s first black-owned banks, the Savings Bank of the Grand Fountain United Order of the Reformers, in Richmond, Va., and Capital Savings Bank of Washington, D.C., opened their doors.17 Monday Tuesday “Sometimes it’s common sense,” adds Ashton. “It goes back to the basics. What does the customer want? What are others not providing? Innovation can simply be improving something so that it better impacts the lives of others and meets a need.” >> March 2012 “We realized that if we pleased our customers, word of our business would spread for us.” – Ryan Clark Sunday “Innovation is critical in online business,” said Ryan. “We start our businesses by looking at the market. If we see something we don’t like about a service, we build a better site by changing the things that need improving, and it becomes a unique offering.” Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 2 1914: Ralph W. Ellison, author and educator, born. 1867: Congress enacts charter to establish Howard University. Saturday 3 1865: Freedmen’s Bureau established by federal government to aid newly freed slaves. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1965: Bill Russell of the Boston Celtics honored as NBA’s most valuable player for fourth time in five years. 1770: Crispus Attucks becomes one of the first casualties of the American Revolution. 1857: Supreme Court issues Dred Scott decision. 2006: Photographer-filmmaker Gordon Parks, who captured the struggles and triumphs of black America, dies. 1945: Phyllis M. Daley becomes first black nurse sworn in as a Navy ensign. 1841: Amistad mutineers freed by Supreme Court. 1869: Robert Tanner Freeman becomes first African American to receive a degree in dentistry. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 1959: Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun opens at Barrymore Theater, New York; the first play by a black woman to premiere on Broadway. 1932: Andrew Young, former U.N. ambassador and former mayor of Atlanta, born. 1773: Jean Baptiste Pointe Du Sable, black pioneer and explorer, founded Chicago. 1956: Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott ends when municipal bus service is desegregated. 1947: John Lee, first black commissioned officer in the U.S. Navy, assigned to duty. 1827: Freedom’s Journal, the first U.S. black newspaper, is founded. 1890: Charles B. Brooks patents street sweeper. St. Patrick’s Day Daylight Saving Time Begins 18 19 20 21 22 23 1822: The Phoenix Society, a literary and educational group, founded by blacks in New York City. 1939: Langston Hughes founded The New Negro Theater in Los Angeles. 1883: Jan E. Matzeliger patents shoe-lasting machine. 1965: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. leads march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, for voting rights. 1898: J.W. Smith patents lawn sprinkler. 1873: Slavery abolished in Puerto Rico. 25 26 27 28 29 30 2009: John Hope Franklin, a prolific scholar of African American history who influenced thinking about slavery and Reconstruction, dies. 1831: Bishop Richard Allen, founder and first Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church, dies. 1924: Jazz singer Sarah Vaughan, “The Divine One,” born. 1870: Jonathan S. Wright becomes first black state Supreme Court justice in South Carolina. 1918: Pearl Bailey, singer and actor, born. 1870: Fifteenth Amendment ratified, guaranteeing voting rights to blacks. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 24 1907: Nurse and aviator Janet Harmon Bragg born. 31 1988: Toni Morrison wins Pulitzer Prize for Beloved. Gabrielle Jordan Williams Author, Public Speaker and CEO Jewelz of Jordan Upper Marlboro, MD Gabrielle Jordan Williams began her business, Jewelz of Jordan, to fill a void in the children’s jewelry market. The difference between Williams and other business innovators? She was only 9 years old when she broke through her market space. Williams got the idea of turning her hobby into a business from her parents. “I saw the passion she had for jewelry making,” said her mother, Marcella Mollon-Williams. “I knew that passion was what she needed to be successful.” “I noticed a lot of children’s jewelry was made with plastic beads and charms. I wanted to create something more upscale,” said Williams, now an 11-year-old fifth-grade student. “So I began to use glass beads, stones and silver to create elegant pieces that are high quality.” Williams began by selling jewelry to family and friends. She then expanded to vending at seminars and workshops. In June 2011, Williams launched JewelzofJordan.com, which includes an online store. 1898: Charles Clinton Spaulding, Aaron McDuffie Moore and John Merrick founded the first blackowned and managed insurance company, North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co.1 Williams spends her free time designing new pieces, especially for her Mommy & Me mother-daughter 1900: National Negro Business League founded by Booker T. Washington, one of the nation’s most visible, influential and controversial black leaders from the 1890s until his death in 1915.1 1903: Maggie Lena Walker pooled her community’s money to open the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank, making her the nation’s first woman to charter a U.S. bank, as well as serve as its president.1 “I noticed a lot of children’s jewelry was made with plastic beads and charms. I wanted to create something more upscale.” – Gabrielle Jordan WIlliams Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday jewelry line. She is a frequent public speaker, and she also has turned her experiences into a book, The Making of a Young Entrepreneur. “My book is about motivating children to follow their dreams,” she said. Williams herself has big dreams to follow. “I want to be an international motivational speaker, a jewelry designer to the stars, a philanthropist and a millionaire by 15 years old,” she said. She then adds: “I’d also like to play soccer.” >> April 2012 Thursday Friday 1 2 3 4 5 6 1950: Blood research pioneer Charles R. Drew dies. 1984: Georgetown coach John Thompson becomes first African American coach to win the NCAA® basketball tournament. 1826: Poet-orator James Madison Bell, author of the Emancipation Day poem “The Day and the War,” born. 1968: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. 1951: Washington, D.C., Municipal Court of Appeals outlaws segregation in restaurants. 1909: Matthew A. Henson reaches North Pole, 45 minutes before Robert E. Peary. Palm Sunday Saturday 7 1959: Lorraine Hansberry becomes first black playwright to win New York Drama Critics Circle Award (for A Raisin in the Sun). Good Friday Passover Begins (sundown) 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1974: Atlanta Braves slugger Hank Aaron hits 715th career home run, surpassing Babe Ruth as the game’s all-time home-run leader. 1816: African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church formed. 1816: Richard Allen consecrated first Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church. 1997: The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, the world’s largest museum of its kind, opens in Detroit. 1983: Harold Washington becomes first African American elected mayor of Chicago. 1997: Tiger Woods wins Masters Golf Tournament. 1775: First abolitionist society in U.S. founded in Philadelphia. 21 Easter 15 16 17 18 19 20 1964: Sidney Poitier becomes first black to win Academy Award® for Best Actor for Lilies of the Field. 1862: Slavery abolished in the District of Columbia. 1983: Alice Walker wins Pulitzer Prize for fiction for The Color Purple. 1995: Margo Jefferson receives Pulitzer Prize for criticism. 1972: Stationed in Germany, Maj. Gen. Frederic E. Davidson becomes first African American to lead an Army division. 2010: Dorothy Height, leading female voice of the 1960s civil rights movement, dies. 22 23 24 25 26 27 1922: Jazz bassist and composer Charles Mingus born. 1856: Granville T. Woods, inventor of the steam boiler and automobile air brakes, born. 1944: United Negro College Fund incorporated. 1918: Ella Fitzgerald, “First Lady of Song,” born. 1888: Sarah Boone patents ironing board. 1968: Dr. Vincent Porter becomes first black certified in plastic surgery. Administrative Professionals Day 29 30 1899: Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington, jazz musician and composer, born. 1952: Dr. Louis T. Wright honored by American Cancer Society for his contributions to cancer research. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 1966: Pfc. Milton L. Olive III awarded posthumously the Congressional Medal of Honor for valor in Vietnam. 28 2009: Sojourner Truth, former slave turned abolitionist, becomes first African American woman to have a memorial in the U.S. Capitol. James Taylor At an early age, James Taylor began his entrepreneurial path by cutting lawns and collecting cans from neighbors. CEO Taylored Athletes Sports, Inc. Today, at 28, he is running a successful youth sports development agency. Taylored Athletes Sports has positively changed the lives of more than 6,000 children. Boca Raton, FL Taylor thought of the company name while visiting an orphanage in Prussia. After playing professional basketball and working as a high school teacher in South Florida, he started the company; and quickly became a pioneer for the basketball training industry. 1905: Richard Henry Boyd began the Globe Publishing Company, the National Baptist Church Supply Company and the Union Transportation Company.23 “It started as a basketball concierge service. I wanted to take away pressure from parents who had to figure out how to teach their kids how to play the game,” said Taylor. Today, the company offers one-on-one basketball lessons, a basketball summer camp and basketball academies. “We take our students on a journey of self-discovery. We teach perseverance and patience,” said Taylor. “We help them to handle basketball wars they may come across. These could be problems with coaches, politics and hidden agendas. We teach them to never give up on their goals.” Taylored Athletes Sports teaches students lessons on and off the court. It provides a safe and positive youth sports environment. The company has a one-love philosophy — a universal love that is shared by everyone. Taylor has built a team of talented people to carry out his passion for child development. Along with balancing his family life, he is working on several books, including a basketball training guide and a CEO motivational guide. 1907: Madam C.J. Walker, America’s first black female millionaire, revolutionized the black hair-care business and started traveling throughout the United States selling her new line of hair-care products.1 1914: Garrett Morgan received a U.S. patent for his gas mask invention. Two years later, in 1916, Morgan used the gas mask to rescue 32 men trapped during an explosion in an underground tunnel.6 May 2012 “We take our students on a journey of self-discovery. We teach perseverance and patience.” – James Taylor Sunday Monday Tuesday >> Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 2 3 4 1867: First four students enter Howard University. 1995: Shirley Jackson assumes chairmanship of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. 1964: Frederick O’Neal becomes first black president of Actors’ Equity Association. 1961: Freedom Riders begin protesting segregation of interstate bus travel in the South. Saturday 5 1988: Eugene Antonio Marino installed as first U.S. African American Roman Catholic archbishop. 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1991: Smithsonian Institution approves creation of the National African American Museum. 1845: Mary Eliza Mahoney, America’s first black trained nurse, born. 1983: Lena Horne awarded Spingarn Medal for distinguished career in entertainment. 2010: Lena Horne, singer, actress and civil rights activist, dies. 1950: Boston Celtics select Chuck Cooper, first black player drafted to play in the NBA. 1895: Composer William Grant Still, first African American to conduct a major American symphony orchestra, born. 1862: Black slaves commandeer the Confederate ship “The Planter.” 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1872: Matilda Arabella Evans, first black woman to practice medicine in South Carolina, born. 1913: Clara Stanton Jones, first black president of the American Library Association, born. 1820: Congress declares foreign slave trade an act of piracy, punishable by death. 1927: Dr. William Harry Barnes becomes first African American certified by a surgical board. 1954: In Brown v. Board of Education, Supreme Court declares segregation in public schools unconstitutional. 1896: In Plessy v. Ferguson, Supreme Court upholds doctrine of “separate but equal” education and public accommodations. Mother’s Day 1993: University of Virginia professor Rita Dove appointed U.S. poet laureate. Armed Forces Day 20 21 22 23 24 25 1961: U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy dispatches U.S. marshals to Montgomery, Alabama, to restore order in the Freedom Rider crisis. 2006: Katherine Dunham, pioneering dancer and choreographer, author and civil rights activist, dies. 1921: Shuffle Along, a musical featuring a score by Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle, opens on Broadway. 1900: Sgt. William H. Carney becomes first African American awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. 1854: Lincoln University (Pa.), first African American college, founded. 1926: Jazz trumpeter Miles Dewey Davis born. 27 28 29 30 31 1942: Dorie Miller, a ship‘s steward, awarded Navy Cross for heroism during the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. 1948: National Party wins whites-only elections in South Africa and begins to institute policy of apartheid. 1901: Granville T. Woods patents overhead conducting system for the electric railway. 1965: Vivian Malone becomes first African American to graduate from the University of Alabama. 1870: Congress passes the first Enforcement Act, providing stiff penalties for those who deprive others of civil rights. Memorial Day Observed 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 26 1961: During Kennedy administration, Marvin Cook named ambassador to Niger Republic, the first black envoy named to an African nation. Dr. Farrah Gray Dr. Farrah Gray’s mother was always honest with her son about money. As a young boy, he understood how much it took to make ends meet. Founder and CEO Farrah Gray Foundation Six-year-old Gray sold treasures to neighbors to help out when money was tight, earning his first $50 selling hand-painted rocks, and then lotion created by combining different bottles found at home. While in the third grade, he started a business club with his friends, raising $15,000 by selling prepaid phone cards. Las Vegas, NV 1919: Marcus Garvey started the Negro Factories Corporation, a series of companies that manufactured marketable commodities in every big industrial center in the Western hemisphere and Africa. He also established the Black Star Steamship Line Corporation.9 “My grandmother always said ‘children are practicing adults,’” said Gray. With that in mind, the Farrah Gray Foundation teaches inner-city and high-risk youth how to become entrepreneurs. “We each have the freedom to control our own destiny,” said Gray. “The problem is analysis paralysis. Entrepreneurs tend to overthink. They need to believe they can do it. ” Gray believes dreams can come true if each day begins with passion, hustle and knowledge. Though still under 30, his accomplishments are vast. He opened an office on Wall Street, cohosted a Las Vegas radio show, has a lucrative speaking career, started and sold Farr-Out Foods for $1 million, became an international best-selling author, started a publishing house, and was pictured on a MasterCard® credit card. Gray continues to use his earnings to help others. “At the end of the day, I want to feel as if I have done something meaningful,” he said. “I want to plant that seed for someone else.” He urges kids to dedicate at least 10 percent of their energy to their goals. “Action has no season. It has to start today.” 1921: The Binga Bank, initially opened in 1908 by Jesse Binga, was reestablished in 1921 as the Binga State Bank.17 1921: Harry Pace formed Black Swan Phonograph Corporation, the first African American-owned record company in Harlem.17 June 2012 “The problem is analysis paralysis. Entrepreneurs tend to overthink. They need to believe they can do it.” –Dr. Farrah Gray Sunday Monday Tuesday >> Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 1968: Henry Lewis becomes first black musical director of an American symphony orchestra — New Jersey Symphony. 3 4 2008: Senator Barack Obama wins Democratic presidential nomination, becoming the first African American nominee of a major U.S. political party. Saturday 2 1971: Samuel L. Gravely Jr. becomes first African American admiral in the U.S. Navy. 5 6 7 8 9 1967: Bill Cosby receives an Emmy Award for his work in the television series I Spy. 1987: Dr. Mae C. Jemison becomes first African American woman astronaut. 1831: First annual People of Color convention held in Philadelphia. 1917: Poetess Gwendolyn Brooks, first African American to win the Pulitzer Prize (poetry, 1950), born. 2011: Clara Luper, Oklahoma civil rights icon who led sit-ins at drugstore lunch counters in Oklahoma in 1958, dies. 1995: Lincoln J. Ragsdale, pioneer fighter pilot of World War II, dies. 16 ® 10 11 12 13 14 15 1854: James Augustine Healy, first black Roman Catholic bishop, ordained a priest in Notre Dame Cathedral. 1964: Nelson Mandela sentenced to life imprisonment by South African government. 1963: Medgar W. Evers, civil rights leader, assassinated in Jackson, Mississippi. 1967: Thurgood Marshall nominated to Supreme Court by President Lyndon Johnson. 1864: Congress rules equal pay for all soldiers. Flag Day 1913: Dr. Effie O’Neal Ellis, first black woman to hold an executive position in the American Medical Association, born. 17 18 19 20 21 22 1775: Minuteman Peter Salem fights in the Battle of Bunker Hill. 1942: Harvard University medical student Bernard Whitfield Robinson commissioned as the Navy’s first black officer. 1865: Blacks in Texas are notified of Emancipation Proclamation, issued in 1863. 1953: Albert W. Dent of Dillard University elected president of the National Health Council. 1821: African Methodist Episcopal Zion (A.M.E.Z.) Church established. 1897: William Barry patents postmarking and cancelling machine. Father’s Day 1970: Kenneth A. Gibson elected mayor of Newark, New Jersey, first African American mayor of a major Eastern city. 23 1940: Sprinter Wilma Rudolph, winner of three gold medals at 1960 Summer Olympics, born. Juneteenth 24 25 26 27 28 29 1964: Carl T. Rowan appointed director of the United States Information Agency. 2009: Michael Jackson, musician and entertainer, dies. 1975: Dr. Samuel Blanton Rosser becomes first African American certified in pediatric surgery. 1991: Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall announces his retirement. 1911: Samuel J. Battle becomes first black policeman in New York City. 2006: Lloyd Richards, theater pioneer and Tony® Award winner for direction of Fences, dies on his 87th birthday. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 30 1917: Lena Horne, singer, actress and civil rights activist, born. Lisa Price Nearly 20 years ago, Lisa Price began mixing up fragrances and creams in her kitchen. Word caught fire and Carol’s Daughter was born. Founder Carol’s Daughter, Inc. Initially, she would have one-on-one discussions with clients at flea markets and in her living room when they inquired about getting more product. Today, she engages customers through social media. New York, NY “It’s very important to me to listen to what the customer wants and create things that she needs. I’ve always enjoyed having those conversations. 1923: A.G. Gaston founded his first business, the Booker T. Washington Burial Society, after seeing a need among poor blacks for more affordable funerals.3 Now, it may be through Twitter rather than at a flea market, but it’s still real and authentic,” said Price, 50. addition to HSN, touts Macy’s and Sephora among its retail partners. Carol’s Daughter maintains its popularity by being an innovator – from providing products made with natural ingredients to launching entertainer Mary J. Blige’s first fragrance “My Life” on television’s Home Shopping Network (HSN) and breaking that network’s fragrance record by selling 60,000 units in one day. The innovation continued with the launch of its performance hair care franchises Monoi and Chocolat in 2011. Price’s products are sold in more than half a dozen Carol’s Daughter stores; and in Even with such a great distribution strategy, the company stays ahead of the curve. “People are hungry for information,” Price said. “Customers research on Facebook, look up YouTube videos and read online reviews before even stepping into the store. Consumers are very savvy. In business, you have to continuously innovate the ways you operate and the ways you speak to your customers.” 1942: John H. Johnson turned $500 he borrowed against his mother’s furniture into the seed money that created Johnson Publishing Company, and he was placed on the Forbes 400 list of the nation’s wealthiest citizens.1 1951: Henry G. Parks started the Parks Sausage Company, which grew into a multimillion dollar operation with more than 240 employees and annual sales exceeding $14 million.22 July 2012 “It’s very important to me to listen to what the customer wants and create things that she needs. ” – Lisa Price Sunday Monday Tuesday >> Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 2 3 4 5 6 1889: Frederick Douglass named U.S. Minister to Haiti. 1872: Elijah McCoy patents first self-lubricating locomotive engine. The quality of his inventions helped coin the phrase “the real McCoy.” 1688: The Quakers in Germantown, Pennsylvania, make first formal protest against slavery. 1900: Traditional birthdate of Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong, jazz pioneer. 1991: Nelson Mandela elected president of the African National Congress. 1957: Althea Gibson wins women’s singles title at Wimbledon, first African American to win tennis’s most prestigious award. Saturday 7 1948: Cleveland Indians sign pitcher Leroy “Satchel” Paige. Independence Day 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 2000: Venus Williams wins women’s singles championship at Wimbledon. 1893: Dr. Daniel Hale Williams performs first successful open-heart operation. 1943: Arthur Ashe Jr., first African American to win the U.S. Open and men’s singles title at Wimbledon, born. 1905: W.E.B. DuBois and William Monroe Trotter organize the Niagara Movement, a forerunner of the NAACP. 1949: Frederick M. Jones patents cooling system for food transportation vehicles. 1965: Thurgood Marshall becomes first African American appointed U.S. solicitor general. 1951: George Washington Carver Monument, first national park honoring an African American, is dedicated in Joplin, Missouri. 21 15 16 17 18 19 20 1867: Maggie Lena Walker, first woman and first African American to become president of a bank, born. 1822: Violette A. Johnson, first black woman to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court, born. 2009: Ret. Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Charles F. Bolden Jr. becomes first African American administrator of NASA. 1998: African American Civil War Soldiers Memorial dedicated, Washington, D.C. 1925: Paris debut of Josephine Baker, entertainer, activist and humanitarian. 1950: Black troops (24th Regiment) win first U.S. victory in Korea. 22 23 24 25 26 27 1827: James Varick, first Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion (A.M.E.Z.) Church, dies. 1962: Jackie Robinson becomes first black baseball player in the major leagues inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame. 1807: Shakespearean actor Ira Aldridge born in New York City. 1916: Garrett Morgan, inventor of the gas mask, rescues six people from gas-filled tunnel in Cleveland, Ohio. 1948: President Harry S. Truman issues Executive Order 9981, ending segregation in armed forces. 1880: Alexander P. Ashbourne patents process for refining coconut oil. 29 30 31 1895: First National Conference of Colored Women Convention held in Boston. 1822: James Varick elected first bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion (A.M.E.Z.) Church. 1874: Rev. Patrick Francis Healy inaugurated president of Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 1896: Mary Church Terrell elected first president of National Association of Colored Women. 28 1868: 14th Amendment, granting African Americans full citizenship rights, becomes part of the Constitution. Kenneth L. Harris President and CEO Michigan Black Chamber of Commerce Detroit, MI Kenneth Harris knows how to get down to business. Harris is passionate about helping African Americans and other minorities succeed. As president and CEO of the Michigan Black Chamber of Commerce, he brings together entrepreneurs at all levels of success. His goal? To reinvigorate Michigan. “African Americans have excelled in so many arenas, yet we have not reached our economic potential and power,” said Harris, 38. “I’m motivated by the chance to serve underserved communities. I want to help 1959: Berry Gordy Jr. borrowed $800 from his family’s savings to create Motown Record Company, which attracted some of the many rhythm and blues performers emerging in Detroit at that time.17 business owners compete globally. Because if black businesses compete, Michigan benefits.” come together as a community and educate mainstream society,” he said. Harris has always been driven to help African Americans reach economic parity. In 2004, he founded the International Detroit Black Expo, Inc. The Expo provides an opportunity for African Americans to showcase their businesses. It quickly grew to one of the largest exhibitions in the country. Harris grew up in Detroit. He believes creativity, innovation and technology will help propel the black business community forward. “Michigan hosts more than 79,000 black businesses. It is also home to many of the top black businesses in the country. But no one knew. It was time for us to 1967: Albert William Johnson was the first African American awarded a dealership from a major automaker when he opened an Oldsmobile dealership in a predominately black neighborhood in Chicago.17 1971: Johnson Products, a hair-care company, became the first blackowned company to be listed on a major U.S. stock exchange (AMEX).17 “The economy is green. It is not black, not white, not pink and not yellow,” he said. “My goal is to help mobilize black businesses. I want to influence commerce in local economies. I want people to look at Michigan and say, ‘Wow, Michigan gets it now.’” >> August 2012 “My goal is to help mobilize black businesses. I want to influence commerce in local economies.” – Kenneth L. Harris National Black Business Month Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 2 3 1879: Mary Eliza Mahoney graduates from New England Hospital for Women and Children, becoming the first black professional nurse in America. 1924: James Baldwin, author of Go Tell It on the Mountain, The Fire Next Time and Another Country, born. 1800: Gabriel Prosser leads slave revolt in Richmond, Virginia. Saturday 4 1810: Abolitionist Robert Purvis born. 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1962: Nelson Mandela, South African freedom fighter, imprisoned. He was not released until 1990. 1965: President Lyndon B. Johnson signs Voting Rights Act, outlawing literacy test for voting eligibility in the South. 1907: Dr. Ralph J. Bunche, first African American Nobel Prize® winner, born. 2005: John H. Johnson, founder and publisher of Ebony and Jet magazines, dies. 1936: Jesse Owens wins fourth gold medal at Summer Olympics in Berlin. 1989: Gen. Colin Powell is nominated chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, the first African American to hold this post. 1872: Dr. Solomon Carter Fuller, acknowledged as first black psychiatrist, born. 18 12 13 14 15 16 17 1977: Steven Biko, leader of Black Consciousness Movement in South Africa, arrested. 1981: Reagan administration undertakes its review of 30 federal regulations, including rules on civil rights to prevent job discrimination. 1989: First National Black Theater Festival held in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. 2007: Max Roach, first jazz musician honored with a MacArthur Fellowship, dies. 1922: Author Louis E. Lomax born. 1849: Lawyer-activist Archibald Henry Grimké, who challenged the segregationist policies of President Woodrow Wilson, born. 19 20 21 22 23 24 1954: Dr. Ralph J. Bunche named undersecretary of United Nations. 1993: Dr. David Satcher named director of the Centers for Disease Control. 1904: Bandleader and composer William “Count” Basie born. 1880: Cartoonist George Herriman born. 1926: Carter Woodson, historian, author, inaugurates Negro History Week. 1950: Judge Edith Sampson named first black delegate to United Nations. 26 27 28 29 30 31 1946: Composer, singer and producer Valerie Simpson Ashford born. 1963: W.E.B. DuBois, scholar, civil rights activist and founding father of the NAACP, dies. 1963: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivers “I Have A Dream” speech during March on Washington, D.C. 1920: Saxophonist Charlie “Bird” Parker born. 1983: Lt. Col. Guion S. Bluford Jr. becomes the first African American astronaut in space. 1836: Henry Blair patents cotton planter. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 1859: Harriet Wilson’s Our Nig is first novel published by a black writer. 25 1925: A. Phillip Randolph founds Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Jermaine Griggs Founder Hear and Play Music Santa Ana, CA Jermaine Griggs got his start in music in the ’80s. It was on the piano his grandmother won on the TV game show “The Price is Right.” He learned to play by listening to music. He then joined a children’s church choir as the pianist and became well known. Griggs’ business experience began at age 7. He sold stationery and cards to neighbors, followed by Avon products years later. At 17, he merged his musical and business talents to provide paid music lessons to friends. He borrowed $70 from his mother to buy the domain HearandPlay.com, and built a million dollar online self-help education business. 1972: Earl G. Graves Sr. was named one of the 10 most outstanding minority businessmen in the country by the president of the U.S. and received the National Award of Excellence for achievements in minority business enterprise. Two years earlier, he launched Black Enterprise magazine.11 “Like most entrepreneurs, I started early. I had the desire to be something, to have something more,” Griggs said. He grew up in the low-income area of Long Beach, Calif. Hearandplay.com is primarily for adults 25 to 44 years old. Many of his customers played piano in their youth. “As adults, they rekindled their passion for music,” said Griggs. The company produces online training videos and DVDs in a Santa Ana music studio. “We stay true to our mission, but look for ways to expand upon it,” 1979: Robert Johnson, a trailblazer for minority entrepreneurs, founded cable’s Black Entertainment Television.8 “Like most entrepreneurs, I started early. I had the desire to be something, to have something more.” – Jermaine Griggs Sunday Monday Tuesday 1980: David L. Steward founded World Wide Technology, Inc.; a provider of technology products, services and supply chain solutions to public, private and nonprofit customers.1 he said. They recently created software to help people learn to sing. “The Internet has been amazing for our business. It has granted us a worldwide audience. I am so thankful to be in this era,” said Griggs. Griggs attributes his success to picking a niche and sticking with it. Online education offerings include various music genres; and instruments such as piano, guitar, sax and flute. >> September 2012 Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 1993: Condoleeza Rice named provost at Stanford University, becoming the youngest person and first African American to hold this position. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1958: Frederick M. Jones patents control device for internal combustion engine. 1979: Robert Maynard becomes first African American to head a major daily newspaper, Oakland Tribune in California. 1957: Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus calls out the National Guard to bar black students from entering a Little Rock high school. 1960: Leopold Sedar Senghor, poet and politician, elected president of Senegal. 1848: Frederick Douglass elected president of National Black Political Convention in Cleveland, Ohio. 1954: Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, Maryland, public schools integrated. 1981: Roy Wilkins, executive director of the NAACP, dies. 15 Labor Day 9 10 11 12 13 14 1968: Arthur Ashe, Jr. wins men‘s singles tennis championship at U.S. Open. 1855: John Mercer Langston elected township clerk of Brownhelm, Ohio, becoming first African American to hold elective office in the U.S. 1959: Edward Kennedy “Duke” Ellington wins Spingarn Medal for his achievements in music. 1992: Dr. Mae C. Jemison becomes first African American woman to travel in space. 1886: Literary critic Alain Lovke, first black Rhodes Scholar, born. 1921: Constance Baker Motley, first black woman appointed federal judge, born. 16 17 18 19 20 21 1923: First Catholic seminary for black priests dedicated in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. 1983: Vanessa Williams becomes first African American crowned Miss America. 1895: Booker T. Washington delivers famous Atlanta Exposition speech. 1893: Albert R. Robinson patents electric railway trolley. 1830: First National Convention of Free Men agrees to boycott slave-produced goods. 1998: Florence Griffith Joyner, Olympic track star, dies. 23 24 25 26 27 28 1863: Civil and women’s rights advocate Mary Church Terrell born. 1895: Three Baptist Conventions merged to form the National Baptist Convention. 1974: Barbara W. Hancock becomes first African American woman named a White House fellow. 1962: Sonny Liston knocks out Floyd Patterson to win heavyweight boxing championship. 1912: W.C. Handy publishes Memphis Blues. 1991: National Civil Rights Museum opens in Memphis, Tennessee. 1963: Four black girls killed in Birmingham, Alabama, church bombing. 22 1862: Emancipation Proclamation announced. Rosh Hashanah Begins (sundown) Yom Kippur Begins (sundown) 30 1962: James Meredith enrolls as first black student at University of Mississippi. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 29 1910: National Urban League established in New York City. Khary Cuffe Khary and Selena Cuffe always knew they would become entrepreneurs. The two successful marketers and business managers were just waiting for the right inspiration. Cofounder and CFO Heritage Link Brands, LLC “It was wonderful. There was a jazz band and dancing. There were booths showcasing wine produced by black South Africans. These people had been living on vineyards and working the land for generations, but they were not legally allowed to start businesses until 1994,” said Selena. “You need to have tremendous passion for a product or service you launch,” said Selena, 36. “Passion is what will carry you through the days when every door you try to open closes in your face.” Los Angeles, CA Selena Cuffe She was inspired by their stories and shocked to learn that their wines were not available in the United States. She brought an idea home to Khary. Selena discovered that passion unexpectedly on a business trip to South Africa in 2005. There, she attended a local wine festival held in an area usually avoided by tourists. President and CEO Heritage Link Brands, LLC Los Angeles, CA 1983: Eula Adams became the first African American partner at Touche, the accounting firm that has since become Deloitte & Touche.5 “I was skeptical,” said Khary, 33. “The wine market was extremely competitive and fragmented. What would be our unique value? But I was convinced to do a test market, and the rest is history.” 1984: Russell Simmons began his entrepreneurial ventures when he launched Def Jam Recordings, the label that spawned the careers of notable artists such as Run-DMC.7 1987: Reginald F. Lewis purchased the international division of Beatrice Foods and rebranded the corporation as TLC Beatrice International, which became the first black-owned company to have revenues of more than $1 billion, at $1.8 billion.12 Monday “We didn’t get into the business because of a love for wine,” said Selena. “We want to create brands of inspiration. Through the medium of wine, we want to transform the way the world perceives Africa.” >> October 2012 “You need to have tremendous passion for a product or service you launch.” – Selena Cuffe Sunday The couple founded Heritage Link Brands, LLC, which imports South African wines; and sells them internationally to licensed distributors, airlines, and cruise lines. The company continues to innovate and grow; working international trade routes, and forming partnerships in places such as Hong Kong and the Philippines. Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3 4 5 1996: Lt. Gen. Joe Ballard becomes first African American to head the Army Corps of Engineers. 2000: James Perkins Jr. sworn in as Selma, Alabama’s, first African American mayor. 1956: Nat “King” Cole becomes first black performer to host his own TV show. 1864: First black daily newspaper, The New Orleans Tribune, founded. 2011: Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, described by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as “the most courageous civil rights fighter in the South,” dies. 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 1993: Toni Morrison becomes the first African American to win the Nobel Prize® in literature. 1941: Rev. Jesse Jackson, political activist and civil rights leader, born. 2001: Dr. Ruth Simmons, first African American leader of an Ivy League institution, elected 18th president of Brown University. 2010: Solomon Burke, Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter, “King of Rock and Soul,” dies. 1887: Granville T. Woods patents telephone system and apparatus. 2005: C. Delores Tucker, civil rights activist and founder of the National Black Congress, dies. 1579: Martin de Porres, first black saint in the Roman Catholic church, born. 20 ® 6 1917: Political activist Fannie Lou Hamer born. Columbus Day Observed 14 15 16 17 18 19 1964: At age 35, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. becomes youngest man to win Nobel Peace Prize. 1991: Clarence Thomas confirmed as an associate justice of U.S. Supreme Court. 1984: Bishop Desmond Tutu wins Nobel Peace Prize. 1888: Capital Savings Bank of Washington, D.C., first bank for African Americans, organized. 1948: Playwright Ntozake Shange, author of For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Is Enuf, born. 1943: Paul Robeson opens in Othello at the Shubert Theater in New York City. 21 22 23 24 25 26 1917: Trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, pioneer of bebop, born. 1953: Dr. Clarence S. Green becomes first African American certified in neurological surgery. 1947: NAACP petitions United Nations on racial conditions in the U.S. 2005: Rosa Parks, civil rights pioneer who sparked 1955 Montgomery bus boycott, dies. 1992: Toronto Blue Jays manager Cito Gaston becomes first African American to manage a team to a World Series title. 1911: Mahalia Jackson, gospel singer, born. United Nations Day 28 29 30 31 1998: President Bill Clinton declares HIV/AIDS a health crisis in racial minority communities. 1949: Alonzo G. Moron becomes first black president of Hampton Institute, Virginia. 1979: Richard Arrington elected first African American mayor of Birmingham, Alabama. 1899: William F. Burr patents switching device for railways. Halloween 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 1898: The first African American-owned insurance company, North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co., founded. 27 1954: Benjamin O. Davis Jr. becomes first black general in U.S. Air Force. Tina Wells Tina Wells has discovered the fountain of youth – or at least, how to turn youth into a fountain of success. CEO and Founder Buzz Marketing Group As the CEO and founder of the marketing and research firm Buzz Marketing Group, Wells helps her clients build prosperous connections with the youth market. Her team gathers the interests, needs and desires of youth, then they use that knowledge to market to this important demographic. Philadelphia, PA “I’ve always been fascinated with popular culture. The youth market is usually what drives that culture,” Wells said. 1987: Christopher Gardner founded the brokerage firm Gardner Rich in Chicago from his home with just $10,000, which he evolved into Gardner Rich LLC, a FINRA-registered broker-dealer with offices in New York, Chicago and San Francisco.16 Wells unofficially started her company when she was 16 years old. She began writing product reviews for a publication called New Girls Times. She would send those reviews to the companies about which she wrote. Many of the companies started writing back – and sending her more products to review. “I never thought it would turn into a career,” said Wells, now 31. “While I always thought about business, I never viewed myself as an entrepreneur. It was a natural progression.” Now Wells views herself as a “serial entrepreneur.” In addition to her marketing firm, she is the author 1997: Founded after a merger, Baldwin Richardson Foods Co. is one of America’s largest black-owned food companies in the U.S.15 “I think it’s important to continuously reinvent yourself and your business.” – Tina Wells Sunday Monday Tuesday 2002: CAMAC, a global energy firm founded by Nigerian-born Kase Lawal in 1986, became the second black American company with more than $1 billion in revenues. Houston, Texas-based CAMAC has offices in Johannesburg, Cape Town, London, Grand Cayman, Lagos and Abuja.26 of the tween fiction series Mackenzie Blue, published by HarperCollins Children’s Books. She’s working on developing that series into a mega brand. Wells also has written a youth marketing handbook, Chasing Youth Culture And Getting It Right; she is a blogger for The Huffington Post; and she is working on developing an ecommerce project. “I like the idea of starting projects based on consumer needs and behaviors,” she said. “I think it’s important to continuously reinvent yourself and your business.” >> November 2012 Wednesday Thursday Friday 1 2 1945: John H. Johnson publishes first issue of Ebony. 1983: President Ronald Reagan designates Martin Luther King Jr. Day a national holiday. Saturday 3 1981: Thirman L. Milner elected mayor of Hartford, Connecticut, becoming first African American mayor in New England. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 2008: Senator Barack Obama elected 44th president of the U.S., becoming first African American to be elected chief executive in the 232-year history of the country. 1968: Shirley Chisholm of Brooklyn, New York, becomes first black woman elected to Congress. 1900: James Weldon Johnson and J. Rosamond Johnson compose “Lift Every Voice and Sing.” 2011: Joe “Smokin’ Joe” Frazier, former heavyweight world boxing champion, dies. 1938: Crystal Bird Fauset elected state representative in Pennsylvania, becoming first black woman to serve in a state legislature. 1731: Mathematician, urban planner and inventor Benjamin Banneker born. 2006: Benny Andrews, painter and teacher whose work drew on memories of his childhood in the segregated South, dies. 17 Election Day Daylight Saving Time Ends 11 12 13 14 15 16 1989: Civil Rights Memorial dedicated in Montgomery, Alabama. 1941: Mary Cardwell Dawson and Madame Lillian Evanti establish the National Negro Opera Company. 1940: The U.S. Supreme Court rules in Hansberry v. Lee that African Americans cannot be barred from white neighborhoods. 1915: Booker T. Washington, educator and writer, dies. 1881: Payton Johnson patents swinging chair. 1981: Pam Johnson named publisher of the Ithaca Journal in New York, becoming first African American woman to head a daily newspaper. Veterans Day 1980: Howard University airs WHHM, first African American-operated public radio station. Veterans Day Observed 18 19 20 21 22 23 1797: Sojourner Truth, abolitionist and Civil War nurse, born. 1953: Roy Campanella named Most Valuable Player in National Baseball League for the second time. 1923: Garrett A. Morgan patents traffic light signal. 1893: Granville T. Woods patents electric railway conduit. 1930: Elijah Muhammed establishes the Nation of Islam. 1897: A.J. Beard patents the Jenny Coupler, used to connect railroad cars. Thanksgiving Day 25 26 27 28 29 30 1955: The Interstate Commerce Commission bans segregation in interstate travel. 1883: Sojourner Truth, abolitionist and Civil War nurse, dies. 1990: Charles Johnson awarded National Book Award for fiction for Middle Passage. 1961: Ernie Davis becomes first African American to win the Heisman Trophy®. 1908: Adam Clayton Powell Jr., politician and civil rights activist, born. 1912: Gordon Parks, writer, filmmaker and photographer, born. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com 24 1868: Pianist Scott Joplin, the “Father of Ragtime,” born. Amos Winbush, III Founder and CEO CyberSynchs New York, NY Amos Winbush knows what consumers want. He began his company, CyberSynchs, because of his concern for data loss on mobile devices. “I lost all of my information when my iPhone® crashed. So I developed an application out of necessity and sheer frustration,” Winbush, age 28, said. His idea: Allow consumers to synch data across operating systems and devices. This would allow them to back up and own their information. The idea was groundbreaking. But as a musician, he didn’t have the technology skills to make it a reality. 2003: Tyra Banks ventured into the world of reality TV when she created, produced and hosted the UPN show “America’s Next Top Model.” Two years later, in 2005, Banks expanded into daytime television with her own talk show, “The Tyra Show.”25 “I never launched a company before. So I found amazing software developers and great mentors who understood how to take technology to the next level,” said Winbush. “It was a challenging road to take.” Challenging, yet rewarding. Winbush started his company with $250. Over the first year, he invested $80,000 of his own money. Three years later, CyberSynchs is valued at more than $200 million. The company has major partnerships all over the world, including in Central and South America, and Africa. It serves 80 million customers. 2009: Richard Bennett, ex-marine, built the $8 million construction company Fidelis Design and Construction, which handles all aspects of construction management, consulting and building.24 “People are hungry for information. Innovation is key for growth and longevity.” – Amos Winbush, III Sunday Monday Tuesday 2011: Publisher, producer, television host, philanthropist and billionaire multimedia entrepreneur Oprah Winfrey launched the Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN) with partner Discovery Communications on January 1.1 “You need to have a product that finds customers. I don’t believe in the ‘build it and they will come’ philosophy,” Winbush said. “Today, everything is so accessible through the Web. People are hungry for information. Innovation is key for growth and longevity.” Winbush encourages other would-be entrepreneurs to build a strong team of employees and advisors. “You cannot operate on an island. You need a cluster of islands in order to make it work,” he said. >> December 2012 Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 1955: Rosa Parks arrested for refusing to give her seat to a white man, sparking the Montgomery, Alabama, bus boycott. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1884: Granville T. Woods patents telephone transmitter. 1847: Frederick Douglass publishes first issue of North Star. 1906: Alpha Phi Alpha, first black Greek letter fraternity, founded at Cornell University. 1955: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. organizes Birmingham, Alabama, bus boycott, marking beginning of the Civil Rights Movement. 1932: Richard B. Spikes patents automatic gearshift. 1942: Reginald F. Lewis, first African American to create a billion-dollar business empire through the leveraged buyout of Beatrice International Foods, born. 1925: Entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. born. 15 9 10 11 12 13 14 1872: P.B.S. Pinchback of Louisiana becomes first black governor. 1950: Dr. Ralph J. Bunche becomes first African American awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. 1926: Blues singer Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton born. 1995: Willie Brown defeats incumbent Frank Jordan to become the first African American mayor of San Francisco. 1944: First black servicewomen sworn in to the WAVES. 1829: John Mercer Langston, congressman and founder of Howard University Law Department, born. 16 17 18 19 20 21 1976: Andrew Young nominated by President Jimmy Carter to be U.S. ambassador to United Nations. 1802: Teacher and minister Henry Adams born. 1865: Congress passes 13th Amendment, abolishing slavery. 1875: Educator Carter G. Woodson, “Father of Black History,” born. 1860: South Carolina secedes from the Union, initiating the Civil War. 1911: Baseball legend Josh Gibson born. 23 24 25 26 27 28 1867: Sarah “Madam C.J.” Walker, businesswoman and first black female millionaire, born. 1832: Charter granted to Georgia Infirmary, the first black hospital. 1907: Cab Calloway, bandleader and first jazz singer to sell 1 million records, born. 2011: Sam Rivers, jazz legend, dies. 1862: African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church founded in New Bern, North Carolina. 1905: Earl “Fatha” Hines, “Father of Modern Jazz Piano,” born. Kwanzaa Begins Christmas 30 31 1892: Dr. Miles V. Lynk publishes first black medical journal for physicians, the Medical and Surgical Observer. 1930: Odetta, blues and folk singer, born. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com Hanukkah Begins (sundown) 1883: William A. Hinton, first African American on Harvard Medical School faculty, born. 22 1883: Arthur Wergs Mitchell, first black Democrat to be elected to Congress, born. 29 1924: Author, sportswriter A.S. “Doc” Young born. Biographies Natalia Allen Natalia Allen is a fashion designer and surfer who combines green and tech to create innovative styles using environmentally and socially responsible practices. Called the “Conscientious Fashionista,” Ms. Allen founded Design Futurist in 2005. She has developed textiles integrating conductive fibers for DuPont, rain gear free of petroleum-based chemicals for DKNY® and photoluminescent fabrics for athletic wear. Winner of the Young Scientist/ Entrepreneur Partnership Award from the IAP Global Network of Science Academies, she is developing, with scientist Stephen Miller, synthetic textiles from plants. Ms. Allen is educating business leaders and students both nationally and internationally on the future of fashion as well as manufacturing her own sustainable fashion line. In January 2012, Time Warner Cable interviewed Ms. Allen about her pioneering career path for the “Born to Shine” television series. Ms. Allen is a member of the Consumer Industry Agenda Council of the World Economic Forum and the Social Venture Network. She also holds the Generation Award from Women Inspiration & Enterprise. A graduate of Parsons The New School For Design, where she won the coveted Designer of the Year Award, Ms. Allen has shared her knowledge of green fashion at conferences in the U.S., China, Saudi Arabia and Davos. Ms. Allen is one of the World Economic Forum’s “Young Global Leaders,” one of Fast Company’s “100 Most Creative,” and one of Utne Reader’s “25 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World.” Ashton Lee and Ryan Anthony Clark Ashton Lee Clark and Ryan Anthony Clark have been serial entrepreneurs since high school. They have created several successful Internet businesses, including LudaKicks.com, 247Mixtapes.com and UTicketIt.com, receiving many honors for their entrepreneurial endeavors. In 2009, Ashton and Ryan were named “2 of 7 Next Generation: Emerging Leaders Under 40” by Diversity Executive magazine for their entrepreneurial success in college. Also in 2009, they were finalists in Entrepreneur magazine’s and mtvU’s business plan competitions with UTicketIt.com. In 2010, they competed in the Idea 2 Product regional competition for UTicketIt in St. Louis, which led them to the global competition as finalists. In 2011 Ashton and Ryan were listed as #2 on YFS (Young, Fabulous & Self-Employed ) magazine’s Top 20 Young Entrepreneurs of 2011. Ashton Clark is an information strategy consultant at Accenture, where he assists executives in identifying, improving and managing information from a strategic perspective. In his spare time, he plans events for the Chicago African American Special Interest Group to bring the Chicago Accenture black community together. Ashton is an alumnus of both the College of Business and College of Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he studied accountancy, with a minor in technology and management. He also is an alumnus of the Management Leadership for Tomorrow, MLT and The Institute for Responsible Citizenship programs. In college, Ashton was executive president of the National Black MBA Association (the first undergraduate chapter in the nation) and was awarded the NBMBA undergraduate scholarship. Ryan Clark works for an alternative investments firm, where he serves as the liaison between software development and client services. In his position, Ryan automates processes, and leads training and support for newly implemented technologies. Ryan graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign from both the College of Business and College of Engineering. He received a B.S. in accountancy, and a minor in Technology and Management. In college, Ryan served as president of the Multicultural Leadership Group (MLG). He was awarded the MLG Scholarship for academic, professional and community involvement, which placed him in the top 2 percent of MLG members. Ryan also was the proud recipient of the 2009 National Black Engineer Award for Student Leadership Award. In addition, Ryan was awarded the 2009 ICIC (Initiative for a Competitive Inner City) Growing Up CEO Award, which honors America’s top inner-city youth entrepreneurs. Follow Ashton and Ryan Clark on Twitter @ashtonlclark and @rclark88. Khary and Selena Cuffe Khary Cuffe is cofounder and CFO, and Selena Cuffe is president and CEO of Heritage Link Brands, LLC (www.heritagelinkbrands.com), an importer of wines from South Africa and her Diaspora. Khary Cuffe served as a marketer for the Procter & Gamble Company (P&G); where he was responsible for a global multifunctional marketing team for Pampers®, P&G’s largest brand, and for Old Spice®. He led commercial strategy and product initiative development, including claims, demos, TV advertising, digital and print copy development for all developing and emerging markets. Mr. Cuffe is a graduate of Wesleyan University, and holds master’s degrees from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Business and John F. Kennedy School of Government. He also serves as a board member for the Hamilton County School for Math and Science in Hamilton, Ohio. His mission is to share the gift of music with everyone and to change the way the world learns music, one person at a time. He believes music and the arts have the ability to heal, inspire, connect us, further movements, and touch the soul. Selena Cuffe served as a marketer for the Council on International Educational Exchange (CIEE) and the Procter & Gamble Company, where she was a manager on the Pringles® brand, one of P&G’s coveted billion dollar global brands. She managed CIEE’s $100 million marketing budget for North America; supported the commercialization of all Pringles flavors in the U.S., Canada, and Latin America; and developed marketing plans to reach African American and Hispanic customers. She also supported the launch of Tampax Pearl®, the first category innovation of P&G’s feminine care business unit in more than 20 years. Mr. Griggs enjoys traveling around the world as an invited speaker at seminars, workshops, and summits, where he teaches businesspeople and entrepreneurs how to imitate his success. He was named a “Top 10 Superstar Under 30” by Dun & Bradstreet and a “Top Entrepreneur Under 25” by Kiplinger and MSN Money. Mrs. Cuffe is a graduate of Stanford University and holds an MBA with honors from Harvard University. She also serves on the Bing Overseas Studies Advisory Council at Stanford University, the Alumni Board of the Harvard Business School and the Advisory Board of House of Mandela (South Africa). Both Mr. and Mrs. Cuffe recently have become weekly columnists for Inc. magazine. Having seen his company grow from a few hundred dollars a month into a million dollar business constantly reminds Mr. Griggs of his humble beginnings. He ‘gives back’ by sharing his story with entrepreneurs and young people all over the country. Mr. Griggs’ future plans include an inner-city speaking tour, where he’ll encourage young people to have big dreams just like he did. He also plans to expand the “HearandPlay” model to offline learning centers in metropolitan areas. A graduate of University of California, Irvine, Mr. Griggs is married to his high school sweetheart and has three children. He currently resides in Orange County, Calif. Dr. Farrah Gray Raised in the impoverished south side of Chicago, Dr. Farrah Gray defied the odds and became a self-made millionaire by the age of 14. In his rise from poverty to national and international prominence as an entrepreneurial icon and preeminent power speaker, Dr. Gray has inspired millions around the world. Now 27, Dr. Gray is a celebrity entrepreneur, philanthropist, best-selling author and syndicated columnist who has been placed #3 on MSN.com’s Young Tycoon list along with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Dr. Gray was motivated from a very young age to “do good by doing well.” At six years old, he began selling homemade body lotion and hand-painted rocks as bookends door-to-door. At age seven, he carried business cards reading “21st Century CEO.” At eight years old, he started UNEEC (Urban Neighborhood Economic Enterprise Club). Between the ages of 12 and 16, Dr. Gray founded and operated business ventures that included KIDZTEL prepaid phone cards and Farr-Out Foods, which generated orders exceeding $1.5 million. When Dr. Gray was 16, he acquired INNERCITY magazine from Inner City Broadcasting Corporation, the largest privately held radio broadcasting company in the U.S. reaching African Americans. Dr. Gray believes that action, as always, counts for more than mere words. He contributes his personal income from speaking engagements to the Farrah Gray Foundation, which provides quarterly grants to local afterschool and summer programs for inner-city youth; and literacy, tutoring, and mentoring programs for underperforming students. Dr. Gray launched FundingEntrepreneurs.com for seed-stage entrepreneurs to find mentors, advisors and angel investors via the Internet. He founded the University Of Business Futures (UBF), a virtual university in inner-city venues that helps at-risk youth become America’s future entrepreneurs. UBF helps its disadvantaged students gain the self-knowledge necessary to build successful businesses. Dr. Gray is CEO of Farrah Gray Publishing, a boutique book publishing house that is one of the largest African American-owned book publishing companies in the country. Dr. Gray was named one of the most influential black men in America by the National Urban League’s Urban Influence magazine and one of BET’s 12 Famous Black Entrepreneurs. Dr. Gray continues his philanthropic work as the spokesman for the National Coalition for the Homeless. In memory of his late sister, Greek Gray, who had acute myelogenous leukemia, he partnered with the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP) to launch a nationwide campaign to create awareness about the need for African American donors, and recruit African Americans to join NMDP’s national marrow donor registry. Kenneth L. Harris Kenneth L. Harris, founder of the International Detroit Black Expo, Inc., has worked to bridge the gap between minority-owned businesses throughout the region. He is a socially conscious individual, having always been passionate about helping African Americans and other minorities realize their dreams through economic empowerment. Born and raised in Detroit, Mr. Harris has been a pioneer in helping minorities attain economic equality. In 2009, Mr. Harris was elected to the Detroit Charter Commission in a highly contested citywide race featuring 54 candidates. Since his election, he has been an integral part of the nine-member commission that will revise the entire governing structure of the city of Detroit, one that has been revised only three times in the history of the city. Through his position, Mr. Harris is working to help Detroit rebuild its economic future. A former NCAA® Basketball Academic All-American point-guard for Clark Atlanta University, Mr. Harris was the first African American chief of staff and executive assistant to the mayor of Southfield, Mich.; first African American counseling psychologist for St. John Community Health and the first African American vice president of business development for the Michigan Minority Supplier Diversity Council, Inc. Additionally, Mr. Harris is the president and CEO of the Michigan Black Chamber of Commerce and serves on the U.S. Black Chamber of Commerce board of directors. Recently, Mr. Harris received the U.S. Small Business Administration 2007 Minority Business Advocate of the Year award and was inducted into Who’s Who in Black Detroit Most Influential. Mr. Harris was inducted into Crain’s Detroit Business “Class of 2007 40 under 40”; and also received the 2008 Excellence Award for Economic Empowerment by 100 Black Men of Greater Detroit, Inc. He received the 2010 Michigan Front Page “30 in their 30s” award and in September 2011 was chosen for the DBusiness magazine “30 in their 30s Most Influential.” Mr. Harris graduated with a B.A. in psychology and M.A. in counseling psychology from Clark Atlanta University, and an educational specialist degree from Wayne State University. He received a doctorate of humane letters from Detroit’s Lewis College of Business in 2008, and an educational specialist degree in educational leadership and policy studies from Wayne State University. Mr. Harris is a Ph.D. candidate in African American and African Studies at Michigan State University’s Eli Broad College of Business. Lisa Price From humble beginnings in her Brooklyn kitchen, Lisa Price, founder of Carol’s Daughter, Inc., transformed her beloved hobby of mixing up fragrances and creams at home into a multimillion dollar beauty empire. Jermaine Griggs In the early 1990s, Ms. Price began experimenting with making her own fragrances and perfume sprays when she wasn’t busy working on the legendary sitcom “The Cosby Show.” She added oils to unscented lotions, and began learning the aromatherapeutic and healing properties of the oils. Twenty-eight-year-old Jermaine Griggs is a minister, musician, entrepreneur and public speaker. Having grown up in the inner city of Long Beach, Calif., with his mom and sister, he always envisioned creating a better life through his own enterprise. At 16, he founded Hear and Play Music, an instructional music company specializing in teaching piano by ear. With only $70, he bought the name HearandPlay.com and launched the company that would not only change his life but hundreds of thousands of musicians around the world through his books, DVDs and training courses. When the show finished its remarkable run, Ms. Price used the end of one chapter of her life to embark on another. With $100 in cash, her own kitchen, and the simple notion that people should follow their hearts, Ms. Price started building the collection that would become a beauty revolution. She began by selling her homespun beauty products at flea markets, but then had to set up shop in her living room as demand increased. Favorable word-of-mouth spread like wildfire. Twelve years later, more than 2 million aspiring musicians download his online lessons every year, and over 300,000 loyal students receive his newsletters. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com Biographies In 1994, Ms. Price officially established Carol’s Daughter, Inc. (the company lovingly named after her mother). Initially starting out with a handful of steady customers, those numbers grew in leaps and bounds as women outside her neighborhood and circle of friends began to take notice. Almost overnight, celebrities such as Jada Pinkett-Smith, Erykah Badu, Rosie Perez and Halle Berry became loyal customers. Today, Carol’s Daughter sells millions of dollars worth of products, employs more than 80 staff members and boasts nine stores across the country, with a flagship store in Harlem. Ms. Price hopes to continue expanding Carol’s Daughter to other cities. Ms. Price is dedicated to giving back to the community through both her business and her personal life. She has taken a hands-on approach to involvement in fund-raising efforts for the Foundation for the Advancement of Women Now. Additionally, Ms. Price generously and frequently offers product donations to community organizations both large and small in an effort to help Carol’s Daughter’s extended friends and family with their own outreach and fund-raising efforts. Dr. Juliet E.K. Walker Gabrielle Jordan Williams A history professor and founder and director of the Center for Black Business History, Entrepreneurship and Technology at the University of Texas at Austin, Dr. Juliet E.K. Walker is the foremost scholar in black business history; with her publications providing the foundation as a subfield in African American history. In 2010, she was awarded the Carter G. Woodson Scholars Medallion by the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH). Gabrielle Jordan Williams became an entrepreneur and speaker at the age of 9, and author at the age of 11. She began creating jewelry at the age of 7 after watching an instructional video on YouTube. Since then, she has aggressively pursued her craft with the passion of a seasoned pro. Dr. Walker is author of The History of Black Business in America: Capitalism, Race, Entrepreneurship (1998, 2009), the first and only comprehensive study of African American business; editor of the Encyclopedia of African American Business History (1999); and author of more than 90 articles, essays, and encyclopedia entries. Dr. Walker’s research has been supported by fellowships from Princeton University, the Radcliff Institute, the Ford and Rockefeller foundations, National Endowment for the Humanities, and the American Historical Association. She also held a Senior Fulbright Teaching and Research Fellowship in South Africa. Most recently, Ms. Price has been appointed a member of the National Women’s Business Council, an independent source of advice and policy recommendations to the president, Congress, and the U.S. Small Business Administration on economic issues that face female business owners. A University of Chicago Ph.D. under Dr. John Hope Franklin, with postdoctoral work at Harvard University’s Du Bois Institute, Dr. Walker’s development of the black business history field began with her book Free Frank: A Black Pioneer on the Antebellum Frontier (1983). Ms. Price and her husband, Gordon, have two sons and a daughter, and live in Brooklyn, N.Y. When she can find the time (between managing her business and family), Ms. Price enjoys going to the beach, reading, crocheting, and watching movies. Dr. Walker is an Alpha Kappa Alpha soror and serves on the boards of the National Black Herstory Task Force; ASALH; The Empowerment Experiment; Minorities For Equality In Education, Liberty and Justice; and the Texas NAACP. She has two sons and three grandchildren, Zachary, Brianna, and Bryce. James Taylor Hamet Watt If you’re not successful at achieving the first Plan A, get another Plan A. Never settle for Plan B. Hamet Watt is an entrepreneur passionate about bringing groundbreaking ideas to market. He has launched several innovative companies, and frequently advises businesses on their marketing and media ventures. As a single father in high school, Mr. Taylor escaped poverty and beat the odds to earn an athletic scholarship to play college basketball at Lynn University in Boca Raton, Fla. Regarded as one of the top guards in the nation, he was a Division II All-American as a freshman, sophomore, junior and senior. Mr. Taylor serves as the founder and president of A Taylored Heart Foundation, a not-for-profit organization that emphasizes the three A’s – Attitude, Academics, and Athletics – to provide at-risk youth with vital leadership and character education. Mr. Taylor launched Urban Excellence, his first business, as a 19-year-old college sophomore. The business provided educational scholarship coaching and consulting to high school students to help ease the burden and stress of locating and applying for scholarships. Mr. Taylor traveled around the country conducting workshops and building successful college prep programs for organizations such as the YMCA, Boys and Girls Clubs, and the Urban League. In 2005, Mr. Taylor signed a professional basketball contract that landed him in Australia, Russia and the NBA Development League. When his Plan A, making the NBA, didn’t happen, he changed course; leaving the basketball court for the boardroom. Mr. Taylor launched Taylored Athletes Sports, Inc., and introduced South Florida to his Pro At Your Door™ Basketball Training Service in 2008. Taylored Athletes Sports now works with 3,000 youth annually, providing educational leadership training through its afterschool programs, AAU basketball clubs, 5 on 5 tournaments, school sports consulting, empowerment workshops, summer camps and programs in South Florida. The company has forged strategic partnerships with national organizations such as Sports Authority, Med Express, National Down Syndrome Society Buddy Walk, Lynn University, Florida Atlantic University and Garden of Life. Mr. Taylor was honored on November 17, 2011, at the White House as one of our country’s Top100 Entrepreneurs Aged 30 and Under. He also was named to the Empact100. Both the success of Taylored Athletes Sports, Inc. and the Empact100 list are testament to the impact young entrepreneurs have on the American economy. The 100 companies on the list are responsible for contributing over 2,500 jobs and over $374 million in revenue. Mr. Taylor holds a graduate degree in sports administration and marketing, and an undergraduate degree in business management from Lynn University. He has been featured in more than 50 state and local news publications on entrepreneurship, black issues in higher education, sports business, and the social effects of cultural diversity in education. Mr. Taylor has trained over 5,000 athletes and provided creative consulting to brands such as Nike® and Jordan®. Founded in 2009, Miss Williams’ Maryland-based jewelry company, Jewelz of Jordan, sells beautiful fashion jewelry for both women and girls with a focus on mother-daughter matching jewelry. Miss Williams’ pieces were primarily sold to friends and family until 2010 when she began vending at seminars and workshops. She launched her online store in June 2011. A motivational speaker and author of the book The Making of a Young Entrepreneur, Miss Williams loves promoting entrepreneurship and the importance of pursuing one’s dreams. She has spoken to hundreds of youth at Girl Scout events, youth entrepreneurship workshops, youth writers’ workshops, youth events and on radio shows. Miss Williams has been recognized by the Entrepreneur and Professional Network as the “2011 Rising Star Young Entrepreneur of the Year,” “One of the Most Influential Community Leaders” by Sharpermind Consultants and by Mayor Stephanie Rawling-Blake of the city of Baltimore, Md. Miss Williams also was the recipient of the first annual EPNET Young Entrepreneur Scholarship. Miss Williams is in the sixth grade, where she consistently maintains a 3.30 GPA or better. She is a member of the Future Business Leaders of America and is a peer mediator. Her favorite subject is science. Her career goals are to become a gemologist, international speaker, bestselling author and philanthropist. Amos Winbush, III Mr. Watt is a cofounder and co-CEO of bLife, Inc., a company that offers innovative technology-based mobile tools to help users realize their own potential. Committed to real science and technology, bLife’s team has formed an impressive Scientific Advisory Board and is collaborating with the Behavior Change Lab at Stanford University. Mr. Watt also is chairman of MoviePass, and was previously an entrepreneur-in-residence with True Ventures. Mr. Watt founded NextMedium – the first full-service platform for buying, selling and measuring product placement across entertainment content. Mr. Watt’s Embed® platform was adopted by NBC, MTV and BET; leading media agencies; and more than 100 brands. Business 2.0 called NextMedium, which was subsequently acquired by Brand Affinity Technologies, one of “the next disruptors.” Prior to founding NextMedium, Mr. Watt helped Nielsen Media Research develop its product placement measurement service. Mr. Watt also previously served as a general partner at Sloan Financial Group’s $120 million New Africa Opportunity Fund, the first U.S.-backed venture fund investing in post-apartheid South Africa. He has invested in a broad spectrum of companies operating in southern Africa. A leader in the Los Angeles entrepreneurial community, Mr. Watt sits on the board of the LA Venture Association and is active with other entrepreneurial organizations. He has frequently been noted in the national press for innovation in media and entrepreneurship; and has been featured in publications such as Entrepreneur, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, and Forbes. Mr. Watt studied business at Florida A&M. He lives in Los Angeles, Calif., with his wife, Joy, and his son, Zion. Tina Wells Tina Wells, CEO and founder of Buzz Marketing Group, earned her B.A. in Communication Arts graduating with honors from Hood College in 2002. Currently a Wharton School of Business student for marketing management, Ms. Wells continues to create innovative marketing strategies for numerous clients within the beauty, entertainment, fashion, financial and lifestyle sectors. Ms. Wells has worked with clients that include Maidenform, Inc.; Sony Music Entertainment; PBS; Procter & Gamble; Sesame Workshop; and American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. Ms. Wells’ long list of honors include Essence’s “40 Under 40,” Billboard’s “30 Under 30,” and Inc.’s “30 Under 30.” She is the author of the tween series Mackenzie Blue, published by HarperCollins Children’s Books; and the youth marketing handbook Chasing Youth Culture And Getting It Right, which was published by Wiley in April 2011. Ms. Wells is a celebrated blogger on The Huffington Post. She serves on the board of directors of the Philadelphia Orchestra Association, The Franklin Institute, Symphony in C and The Young Entrepreneur Council. She resides in Southern New Jersey. 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar www.aetnaafricanamericanhistorycalendar.com Amos Winbush, III is the CEO and mastermind behind CyberSynchs, the world’s leading universal data transfer and synchronization company. It all began when Mr. Winbush’s iPhone® crashed. Frustrated with no simple solution, he took charge of the problem and created a universal synchronization company with global reach. Mr. Winbush is one of the brightest CEOs under 30 in the tech industry. He views today’s world of technology as an ecosystem supporting innovation and valuing disruptors. Through his leadership and vision, Mr. Winbush quickly grew CyberSynchs into the multimillion dollar company it is today. Projecting vision and wisdom beyond his years, Mr. Winbush stands out from the tech industry’s sea of hoodies and jeans with signature-coordinated bow ties, argyle socks and pocket squares. His manicured attire recalls memories of a more formal business acumen. He continues to lead the CyberSynchs executive team on the path of high growth, revolutionizing the world of data synchronization for virtually any digital device. Mr. Winbush directs his passion, energy and intellect into everything he does, including his dedication to education and improving the social condition. Understanding and devoted to providing technical tools and education in both rural and urban areas, Mr. Winbush donates resources and technology to schools nationwide. He is involved with and speaks frequently to organizations that promote social change such as the New York Urban League and Project Enterprise, among others. Mr. Winbush also speaks frequently to various business groups, at technology and political events, and to youth organizations. His many speaking engagements have included the Black Enterprise Conference for three consecutive years; the 14th Annual Wall Street Conference, Project Enterprise Entrepreneur Week, the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s 41st Annual Legislative Conference, the Performance Conference, and the JAVAONE West Conference. His numerous awards and honors include The Network Journal’s 40-Under-40; New York Enterprise Report’s Game Changer; Most Influential CEOs Under 30; Under30CEO.com and the Project Enterprise Inspiration Award (all in 2011); Entrepreneur magazine’s 100 Brilliant Companies and Inc. magazine’s Black Enterprise’s Innovator of the Year (both in 2010). Celebrating 31 years of African American accomplishments 2012 Aetna African American History Calendar Leading the next generation of business Celebrating innovation Timeline Sources: 1. www.theroot.com/multimedia/work-live-earn-multiply 2. www.nndb.com/people/679/000121316/ 3. http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-2062 4. www.cogreatwomen.org/brown-clara.htm 5. http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_ archive/2002/07/22/326294/index.htm 6. http://inventors.about.com/od/mstartinventors/a/Garrett_ Morgan.htm 7. www.themsj.com/black-business-leaders-in-america1.2440240?pagereq=2 8. www.usatoday.com/money/top25-leaders.htm 9. www.biography.com/people/marcus-garvey-9307319 10. www.inventions.org/culture/african/matzeliger.html 11. www.blackenterprise.com/management/earl-graves/ 12. www.reginaldflewis.com/biography-3.php 13. www.chjamesco.com/leadership/leadership5.html 14. http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/people/ person.asp?personId=8420700&ticker=LMT:US 15. www.thegrio.com/money/made-in-america-blackowned-businesses-blaze-trails-on-our-soil.php 16. www.chrisgardnermedia.com/about/bio 17. www.blackpast.org/?q=1810-2 18. www.wisconsinhistory.org/libraryarchives/aanp/freedom/ 19. www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/douglass.html 20. www.promenadespeakers.com/page23.html 21. www.aaregistry.org/historic_events/view/elleanoreldridge-businesswoman-amid-oppression 22. www.riseandgrind.com/2010/11/25/henry-g-parks/ 23. www.rhboydpublishing.com/our_company/history/ index.php 24. http://fidelisdc.com/ 25. www.biography.com/people/tyra-banks16242328?page=2#reality-tv-and-other-work 26. www.thefreelibrary.com/Black+Enterprise+Issues+31st+ Annual+Report+on+America%27s+Leading...-a0101575797 Photography Locations: Introduction: George Washington Carver Library, Austin, Texas January: Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica, California February: Shima Seiki U.S.A. INC., Monroe Twp., New Jersey March: Chicago, Illinois April: Upper Marlboro, Maryland May: Bair Middle School, Sunrise, Florida June: Las Vegas, Nevada July: Carol’s Daughter,Inc., New York, New York August: Avis Ford, Southfield, Michigan September: California Sound Studios, Lake Forest, California October: West Chester, Ohio November: Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania December: New York, New York Photography Lou Jones Studio Boston, Massachusetts Special thanks to those whose effort and time helped create this calendar: Aetna African American Employee Resource Group Phil Barr, Strategic Initiative Mark Callahan, Design and Interactive Media Miguel Centeno, Community Relations, New York Jane Condron, Law Information Floyd Green, Head of Community Relations Chekesha Kidd, Head of Student Health William Kramer, Deputy Counsel, Law and Regulatory Affairs Will Thomas, Corporate Communications Amy Trimani, Corporate Communications Thomas Wynn, Print Production To Order Calendars Additional calendars are available for $4 each. To order please send a check, payable to Aetna, to: Aetna African American History Calendar Corporate Communications, RW3H 151 Farmington Avenue Hartford, CT 06156 Credits: Produced by Aetna Inc. Hartford, Connecticut Peggy Garrity, Project Manager Lou Jones, Photographer Photography Assistants Mike DeStefano Matt Kalinowski Bruce Lithimane Leah Raymond Kenneth Smoot Printer Allied Printing, Manchester, Connecticut Phone: 860-273-0509 Fax: 860-273-6675 The individuals profiled in this calendar are not agents or employees of Aetna. Aetna does not endorse any of the products of these individuals or any product displayed. Project Assistants Myrna Blum Sharon Valechko Creative Development The Pita Group Rocky Hill, Connecticut Emily Cretella, Writer Kim Pita, Writer Lisa Santoro, Creative Director and Designer Nicole Stavola, Researcher 00.00.924.1 B