FISK JUBILEE SINGERS

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Welcome to "Forgotten Black History". On this channel we talk about special places, events and people in Black History, This page serves as an index to the prominent figures featured throughout the Black History society. Black history is the story of African Americans in the United States and elsewhere. We want to celebrate, remind, and pay respect to not only African Americans but Black people of all races and backgrounds. We hope you subscribe to join the family, so we can grow a small community to help people of all races know just how special black people actually are in the world. Thank you for taking the time out to visit our channel. We hope you subscribe, if you hadn't already. We wish you peace and love, and for you to stay safe out there.

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In 1866 the Fisk Free Colored School was established in Nashville, Tennessee by the American Missionary Association. Housed in abandoned Union hospital barracks, Fisk set out to educate former slaves with the support of donations from former abolitionists. As those donations declined over the next five years, Fisk fell on hard times.

To save the institution, Fisk’s treasurer, George Leonard White, decided to gamble on the extraordinary voices of the young black singers who had begun to share with him the songs of their ancestors. Over the objections of his colleagues and sponsors, White and his assistant, a frail young African American pianist named Ella Sheppard, led a choir of nine young former slaves (now called the Fisk Jubilee Singers) up from Nashville to perform for congregations in the North along the route of the Underground Railroad.

The Jubilee Singers struggled through a schizophrenic world of liberal ministers and adoring audiences, but also poor receipts, and segregated hotels, restaurants and trains. They made their way to New York, where they chose for their debut Steal Away, Swing Low, Sweet Chariot and Deep River, the secret hymns their ancestors sang in fields and cabins and brush arbor churches, the spirituals they were about to introduce into the universal canon of Christian worship.

Eventually they raised tens of thousands of dollars for their school, enough to turn Fisk into a full-fledged university. They sang in great halls, cathedrals and palaces, delighting such luminaries as Queen Victoria, Mark Twain, Longfellow, Ulysses S. Grant, the royal families of Germany and Holland, and the emperor of Japan.

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