(CNN) – Generations of Americans have grown up intimately acquainted with stereotypes of African-Americans, from “mammies” serving Aunt Jemima pancakes, to “Little Black Sambo” at evening story time.
On the C-SPAN Networks: David Pilgrim is an Author with two videos in the C-SPAN Video Library; the first appearance was a 2020 Vignette as a Founder and Director for the Jim Crow Museum of Racist ...
ROCK FALLS, Ill. (KWQC) - Rock Falls Police Chief David Pilgrim announced his retirement Tuesday. In a statement shared at a Rock Falls City Council meeting, Pilgrim said after 24 years of service ...
It all started for David Pilgrim with the "mammy" saltshaker. It was toward the end of the Civil Rights era in the early 1970s. Pilgrim, now a 45-year-old sociology professor at Ferris State ...
KALAMAZOO—The creator of an innovative museum containing a large collection of racist artifacts will address teaching tolerance in a visit this week to Western Michigan University. Dr. David Pilgrim, ...
David Pilgrim, Chris Michel, and members of the Race/Related team on Wednesday, Dec. 14, held an hourlong live conversation about The New York Times’s recent project on the Jim Crow Museum of Racist ...
BIG RAPIDS, Mich. - The Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia is expanding their one-of-a-kind collection with more than 100 photographs from David Levinthal’s series ‘Blackface.’ Dr. David Pilgrim, ...
An educator who has collected racist memorabilia for three decades wants to teach his audiences tolerance and promote social justice. David Pilgrim, vice president of diversity and inclusion at Ferris ...
David Pilgrim says the first racist object he acquired, at 12 years old, was a salt shaker shaped like a dark-skinned woman in maid’s clothes. It was the late 1960s, in Mobile, Ala., a few years after ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook David Pilgrim, founder and curator of the Jim Crow Museum at Ferris State University spoke at the ...
(CNN) – Generations of Americans have grown up intimately acquainted with stereotypes of African-Americans, from “mammies” serving Aunt Jemima pancakes, to “Little Black Sambo” at evening story time.
David Pilgrim: Our collection is probably about 9,000 items – and maybe half of that is being displayed. I’ll give you some general categories – the biggest is anti-black caricature objects. And then ...