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Honoring the life of Dulcina DeBerry Black History Month: Huntsville trailblazer who opened doors and turned pages for African Americans in the 1940s Black History Month: Honoring the life of Dulcina DeBerry By Kellie Miller | February 11, 2021 at 5:56 PM CST - Updated February 12 at 8:52 AM HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - In the 1900s, educational resources for African Americans were scarce. But Dulcina DeBerry, educator and librarian, worked hard to fight those inequities and eventually opened the first public library for African Americans in Madison County. âShe was a very compassionate person. She was a scholar, she loved to learnâ¦and she was a problem solver,â said Shalis Worthy, Archivist at the Huntsville-Madison County Public Library. ....
Tribune-Review Courtesy of Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall Diane Klinefelter has retired from her position as the Espy Post curator and social historian at the Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall.
TribLIVE s Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox. Diane Klinefelter is retiring from her position as Espy Post Curator and Social Historian at the Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall. Local archivist and historian Jon-Erik Gilot is poised to take her place. Klinefelter, a passionate student of history and a professional genealogist, has served as curator since 2006 when she became library director at the ACFL&MH. She retired from that role in 2015, but has remained active with the Espy Post, authoring two books on Civil War veterans. ....
Portland Quinnipiac student selected for Carnegie fellowship Press Staff FacebookTwitterEmail Quinnipiac University students Emily DiSalvo, left, and Jessica Simms, from Franklin, Mass., have been selected to participate in the prestigious Carnegie-Knight News21 Initiative.Contributed photo / Quinnipiac University HAMDEN Quinnipiac University senior student Emily DiSalvo of Portland have been selected to participate in the prestigious Carnegie-Knight News21 Initiative. Jessica Simms, from Franklin, Mass., was also accepted, according to the university. The national News21 Initiative is part of an effort by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation and Carnegie Corporation of New York to change the way journalism is taught in the U.S. and train a new generation of journalists capable of reshaping the news industry, according to a press release. ....