DREAM Little Compton

DREAM Little Compton We dream of a town, country, and world that actively works to defeat racism and its impacts.

And that dream is within reach: educating ourselves and our fellow residents, starting hard conversations, and speaking out against injustice. Goal:
We seek - not only for our members but also for the larger community - to face, to learn from, and ultimately to grow beyond systemic racism. Strategy:
Addressing racism may take many forms and actions, including readings, invitations to experts and/o

r legitimate voices to Sunday meetings, directed discussions, Letters-to-the-Editor, community-wide training sessions, meetings and collaborations with local institutions and organizations, Listening Circles, and non-violent protests. Values:
Anti-Racism over racism
Education over Ignorance
Inclusion over alienation
Calling in over calling out
Transformative over punitive justice
Collaborative over unilateral action
Friendship over enmity
Love over hate
Facts over Fantasy
Nuance over Certainty
Mindfulness over expediency
Beauty and Truth

Another Juneteenth event found through What's Up Newp - you can visit the exhibit at Little Compton Historical Society i...
06/15/2022

Another Juneteenth event found through What's Up Newp - you can visit the exhibit at Little Compton Historical Society in the morning of the 18th and head to Sankofa Community Connection's Newport event in the late afternoon & evening!

Written and submitted by Sankofa Community Connection JUNETEENTH is the national celebration commemorating the end of slavery in the United States. Our event in Newport, RI demonstrates our commitment to presenting the historical impact and progression of African American heritage and culture. Back....

Know the past, DREAM the future.
06/06/2022

Know the past, DREAM the future.

Hear about Juneteenth from a storyteller on Tuesday, then view our exhibition on Little Compton's history of slavery, indenture, and freedom on Saturday!

Brownell Library Pavilion, 6 PM on the 14th.

Quaker Meeting House, drop in 10 AM-4 PM on the 18th.

Save the Date ~ May 18 @ 7~ DREAM Community Meeting! More info coming soon!A safe place to learn and grow together!
05/06/2022

Save the Date ~ May 18 @ 7~
DREAM Community Meeting!
More info coming soon!

A safe place to learn and grow together!

04/24/2022
We are here!
04/24/2022

We are here!

In replace of our monthly community meeting, join us this weekend at the Art Cafe! Meet our members and learn about why ...
04/21/2022

In replace of our monthly community meeting, join us this weekend at the Art Cafe! Meet our members and learn about why our LFL focusing on social justice is so important to us!
Free coffee and light refreshments!

Did you know DREAM Little Compton has a Little Free Library focusing on social justice?!Join us Sunday, April 24, at 11 ...
04/13/2022

Did you know DREAM Little Compton has a Little Free Library focusing on social justice?!

Join us Sunday, April 24, at 11 to learn more and meet some of our Dream team members!

In honor of Black History Month, we would like to recognize US Army Sergeant William Harvey Carney of Norfolk City, Virg...
02/08/2022

In honor of Black History Month, we would like to recognize US Army Sergeant William Harvey Carney of Norfolk City, Virginia.
Born on February 29, 1840, William Carney was the first African-American soldier to be awarded the Medal of Honor. Sergeant Carney was a member of the 54th Massachusetts, assaulted Fort Wagner during the American Civil War. Despite being shot in the chest, arm, and legs, the soldier, who was born as a slave, held the American flag high, refusing to let it touch the ground and fall to the enemy.
The Oscar-winning film Glory depicts the heroism of Carney.
We honor his service! ❤🇺🇸🙏🌹

Biddy Bridget Mason (1815-1891) She was born into slavery and "given" as a wedding gift to a Mormon couple in Mississipp...
02/07/2022

Biddy Bridget Mason (1815-1891)

She was born into slavery and "given" as a wedding gift to a Mormon couple in Mississippi named Robert and Rebecca Smith. In 1847 at age 32, Biddy Mason was forced to walk from Mississippi to Utah tending to the cattle behind her master’s 300-wagon caravan. She "walked" from Mississippi to Utah. That's 1, 618.9 miles!

After four years in Salt Lake City, Smith took the group to a new Mormon settlement in San Bernardino, California in search of gold. Biddy Mason soon discovered that the California State Constitution made slavery illegal, and that her master's had a plan to move them all to Texas to avoid freeing them.

With the help of some freed Blacks she had befriended, she and the other Slaves attempted to run away to Los Angeles, but they were intercepted by Smith and brought back. However, when he tried to leave the state with his family and Slaves, a local posse prevented them from leaving.

Biddy had Robert Smith brought into court on a writ of habeas corpus. She, her daughters, and the ten other Slaves were held in jail for their own safety to protect them from an angry and violent pro-slavery mob until the Judge heard the case and granted their freedom.

Now free, Mason and her three daughters moved to Los Angeles where they worked and saved enough money to buy a house at 331 Spring Street in downtown Los Angeles. Biddy was employed as a Nurse, Midwife, and Domestic Servant. She was one of the first Black women to own land in the city of Los Angeles.

She had the intelligence and boldness to use part of her land as a temporary resting place for horses and carriages, and people visiting town paid money in exchange for the space. That particular area was considered the first "parking lot" in Los Angeles.

Knowing what it meant to be oppressed and friendless, Biddy Mason immediately began a philanthropic career by opening her home to the poor, hungry, and homeless. Through hard work, saving, and investing carefully, she was able to purchase large amounts of real estate including a commercial building, which provided her with enough income to help build schools, hospitals, and churches.

Her financial fortunes continued to increase until she accumulated a fortune of almost $300,000. In today's money, that would be $6M. Her most noted accomplishment is the founding of the First AME Church in California. In her tireless work she was known for saying "If you hold your hand closed, nothing good can come in. The open hand gives in abundance; even as it receives."

Biddy Bridget Mason died on January 15, 1891 at the age of 76. On March 27, 1988, ninety one years after her death, a special occasion event was given in her honor by members of the church she helped founded. Mayor Tom Bradley was among the dignitaries in attendance. Black women are legendary.
Black History is American History.

In 1957, Marlon Green, an Air Force pilot, applied to be a Continental Airlines pilot. Green had applied to other airlin...
02/06/2022

In 1957, Marlon Green, an Air Force pilot, applied to be a Continental Airlines pilot. Green had applied to other airlines but was rejected each time. When he filled out his application for Continental, he left the “race” box unchecked. Green made it to the final round of interviews but was not hired, even though he had more flight time than the other candidates who were white.

Green filed a complaint with the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Commission, a landmark case that ended up in the United States Supreme Court which ruled in Greens favor and helped dismantle racial discrimination in the American passenger airline industry.

While David Harris was the first Black pilot hired with a major airline, Marlon Green’s fight for the right to be in the flight deck cleared a path for generations of Black pilots to come. In 2010, Continental dedicated a 737 named for Captain Marlon Green. The aircraft, N77518, still flies for United today.

Thank you, Marlon Green for your contributions towards Black History and paving the way for many to follow 🧑🏾‍✈️✈️

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Little Compton, RI
02837

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