Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Heroes who deserved attention during Black History Month
Heroes who deserved attention during Black History Month
May 13, 2026 4:03 AM

The history of black Americans abounds with extraordinary characters worthy of emulation—even during Black History Month.

Read More…

Another Black History Month e and gone, and the country has heard, once again, a great deal about the likes of Rosa Parks, Harriet Tubman, and Martin Luther King Jr. These American heroes are rightfully celebrated, but there are many stories that have gone un- or under-told, stories of courageous Americans of color who overcame tremendous barriers to plish extraordinary things. Three in particular stand out—a surgeon, a pilot, and a general—remarkable individuals who exemplify the best of American character and whose stories deserve to be told anew, and for many, for the very first time.

Mildred Fay Jefferson was born in 1926 to a Methodist minister and a schoolteacher in Texas. The young Mildred grew up following the local doctor on his house calls, marveling at his skills and beginning to take an interest in medicine that would follow her the rest of her life. pleting her bachelor’s degree at Texas College, Jefferson began to reach for the stars. She went on to earn a master’s in biology before graduating from Harvard Medical School. Jefferson was the first black woman to graduate from that school, as well as the first woman plete a surgical internship at Boston City Hospital. She served as a general surgeon at Boston University’s medical center, even as a professor at the university’s school of medicine.

Throughout Jefferson’s prolific medical career, she maintained a firm, principled opposition to abortion. Citing her loyalty to the Hippocratic oath, Jefferson made massive strides in the pro-life movement, helping found Massachusetts Citizens for Life in 1970 and serving as president of the National Right to Life Committee from 1975 to 1978. Her strident opposition to abortion would change many minds, most notable among them Ronald Reagan’s. In fact, the president expressed to her in a 1972 letter that “you made it irrefutably clear that an abortion is the taking of human life,” and that he was “grateful” for Jefferson’s dedicated activism. The two would go on to correspond regularly. Jefferson’s background as both a black woman and a surgeon gave her tremendous credibility when describing the abortion industry as “a class war against the poor and genocide against blacks.” After a successful career as a surgeon, and decades of tireless pro-life advocacy, Jefferson died in 2010, leaving a truly admirable legacy of professionalism and lived-out principles.

Benjamin O. Davis Jr. was born in 1912 in Washington D.C. At 13 he went on a flight that launched the young Davis into a lifelong love of aviation. His journey to stardom, however, was not without its obstacles. While in the U.S. Military Academy, Davis was isolated by white classmates for four long years, often eating by himself. He never had a roommate, and his white peers hoped that the isolation would pressure him to leave the Academy. Davis never gave up, though, graduating in 1936 and earning the respect of many classmates, who described him as possessing “courage, tenacity, and intelligence.”

Davis applied to the Army Air Corps but was denied entrance because of his race, eventually being assigned to teach military tactics at a small town in Alabama called Tuskegee. Once again, Davis’ love of flying guided his career, and the young professor earned his wings in 1942 as America was entering the Second World War. He would soon ship off to war, leading the Tuskegee Airmen in North Africa and Sicily and eventually ing a general in the Air Force. Davis earned a Silver Star and Distinguished Flying Cross for his valor during the war. In his 1991 memoir, he wrote that “the privileges of being an American belong to those brave enough to fight for them.” Davis went on to a well-deserved retirement before passing away from Alzheimer’s in 2002.

Perhaps the most extraordinary story of the three is that of Robert Smalls, born in 1839 to Lydia Polite, a slave in South Carolina. Although a slave himself, the young Robert was favored by his master, Henry McKee, who took him around town and allowed him to play with white children. Despite these atypical favors, Robert grew to abhor slavery, moving to Charleston in 1912 and working for his master on the waterfront on various ships. Smalls eventually learned how to perform captain’s duties on the ship he was assigned to, the Planter. The clever Smalls was preparing for escape and in 1862 put his plan into action. Smalls, along with other enslaved men and their families on the Planter, waited on the ship until the white supervisors turned in for the night. Then the crew steered the Planter out of Charleston Harbor, past the Confederate batteries, and surrendered the ship to the Union forces blockading Fort Sumter. Smalls would go on to gain fame, holding audience with Abraham Lincoln and recruiting 5,000 African Americans to fight valiantly for the Union for the remainder of the war.

As the Civil War came to an end, Smalls emerged a hero and embarked on a political career. As Reconstruction gained traction, he fought for an improved public school system in South Carolina and greater civil rights in the South generally. Despite efforts by South Carolina Democrats to force him from government, Smalls prevailed, serving five terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. After politics, Smalls went on to a happy retirement, dying of natural causes in 1915. A monument to his memory in nearby Tabernacle Baptist Church preserves one of his most famous quotes: “My race needs no special defense, for the past history of them in this country proves them to be the equal of any people, anywhere. All they need is an equal chance in the battle of life.”

From a young girl dreaming of being a doctor, to a young boy looking up at the skies, to a young slave chasing a desire for freedom, the history of black Americans is awash with unsung heroes. These hidden stories of grit, determination, and perseverance are well worth telling and remembering, and not just during Black History Month (although that would be nice).

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Heroes who deserved attention during Black History Month
The history of black Americans abounds with extraordinary characters worthy of emulation—even during Black History Month. Read More… Another Black History Month e and gone, and the country has heard, once again, a great deal about the likes of Rosa Parks, Harriet Tubman, and Martin Luther King Jr. These American heroes are rightfully celebrated, but there are many stories that have gone un- or under-told, stories of courageous Americans of color who overcame tremendous barriers to plish extraordinary things. Three...
When Catholic social teaching and neoclassical economics collide
A new book on a “just economy” from a Catholic perspective has more to say about injustices wrought by neoliberalism than it does about crony capitalism and the fraught history of the statist solutions it mends. Read More… Anyone looking for an engaging overview of what modern Catholic social teaching (CST) has to say about economic matters will find it in Anthony Annett’s book Cathonomics: How Catholic Tradition Can Create a More Just Economy. Yet Cathonomics is much more than...
Put the State of the Union address out of its misery
It’s time to state the obvious: The State of the Union address is doing more harm than good, making promises it can’t keep and further eroding citizens’ opinion of government. Who’ll be the first brave POTUS to end the SOTU? Read More… In the fable of “The Bell and the Cat,” a group of mice discuss how best to protect themselves from a rapacious, predatory cat who has been hunting them down. One mouse suggests they put a bell on...
The Batman is a modern noir mess
Warning: This review of the new blockbuster contains minor spoilers and major grievances. Read More… The story begins on Halloween, almost exactly 20 years after the murder of Thomas and Martha Wayne. A new killer—an internet sensation, as it turns out—is on the loose, violently ridding Gotham City of its excesses. The Batman, now two years into his mission, must not only solve the mysteries behind the killings but end the killings themselves. He has a great ally in a...
The Irish writer as chronicler of the human condition
On this St. Patrick’s Day, pick up a copy of O’Neill, Synge, or Joyce and retreat to a self-contained world marked by human self-deception and tragic loss, and maybe a laugh or two. Read More… We may live in benighted times, but consider the world of just over a hundred years ago. Recurrent cultural or political shock, and often premature or violent death, was quite familiar to the generation emerging in the early years of the 20th century. It sometimes...
“Make it art first”: The freedom of the artist in cancel culture
A new book argues that the artist must be free from “relevance” while also adhering to some kind of authority. The question is, Whose authority? Read More… Among the rarest qualities of the late American filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich, who died in January at age 82, was his conviction, repeatedly stated and consistently in evidence in his work, that the art of film had its own set of rules and precedents. Close-ups, camera movements, and cuts weren’t meant to be used...
A Dark Knight of the soul
The Batman is more than just another reboot of the now-all-too-familiar tale of crime and punishment. The film asks deep questions that linger long after you leave the theater. Read More… The Batman plunges us straight into the middle of a crisis of faith. Gone is Bale’s confident and charismatic playboy. Robert Pattinson’s Batman hasn’t slept for a week. He journals, sulks, and obsesses over details. A Goth in Gotham—a concept that sounds like it shouldn’t work, but does. The...
Who’s writing Vladimir Putin’s Animal Farm?
The history of Russia in Ukraine is an old and terrible one. The 2019 film Mr. Jones tells the story of the Holodomor: “death by hunger.” Why would Stalin starve millions in a man-made famine? Why else? He needed the money. Read More… It’s 1934 and Gareth Jones (James Norton), journalist and foreign adviser to British prime minister Lloyd George, is trying to convince a room full of stuffed shirts with fancy government titles that Adolf Hitler is looking to...
What can we expect from Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson?
Potential appointments to the Supreme Court have taken on an outsized role in determining the fitness of presidential candidates in recent years. The scrutiny potential justices undergo has also e part inquisition, part circus. Nevertheless, their politics matter. Blame Marbury v. Madison. Read More… There is almost no institution in the past 100 years that has more profoundly shaped American public life than the Supreme Court. As a result, position of the Supreme Court has e one of the most...
Biden admin official Eric Lander victimized more than just staffers
Eric Lander, director of the Office of Science and Technology, resigned after it was disclosed he had disparaged and humiliated subordinates. To add insult to injury, he abused taxpayers, too. Read More… Allegations of abuse appear to be only the tip of the iceberg in the case of disgraced Biden administration official Eric Lander. According to Politico, the Office of Science and Technology Policy director faces scrutiny for failing to disclose financial interests in a major COVID-19 vaccine manufacturer while...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved