Black Excellence

Discussion in 'In the Media' started by buglerroller, Dec 21, 2012.

  1. Ol'Skool Classic

    Ol'Skool Classic Well-Known Member

     
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  2. breanna03

    breanna03 Well-Known Member

    this is a picture I saw when I was scrolling. it's of an African American 12th Armored Division soldier with captured german prisoners in April of 1945. it hit really hard for me when I thought of the context at the time. Black soldiers fighting for a country that still had segregation back home, and still showed up and won. it doesn't get talked about enough. RDT_20260508_0943251519025736898889705~2.jpg
     
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  3. Ol'Skool Classic

    Ol'Skool Classic Well-Known Member

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  4. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    True! And when they were stationed in bases in the South, Nazi POW's were treated like human beings as compared to them. Plus, they sat in areas Blacks are forbidden to sit.
     
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  5. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    Those rare stories were mentioned in Black media back in the day.
     
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  6. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    The Black Muppet name was Roosevelt Franklin. I saw Sesame Street from the beginning.
     
  7. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    Absolutely!!
     
  8. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    A very few Black inventors made big money on their creations.
     
  9. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

  10. Ol'Skool Classic

    Ol'Skool Classic Well-Known Member

     
  11. Ol'Skool Classic

    Ol'Skool Classic Well-Known Member

     
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  12. orejon4

    orejon4 Well-Known Member

    This is a powerful story. Thank you for posting it.
     
  13. Ol'Skool Classic

    Ol'Skool Classic Well-Known Member

    George E. Johnson, founder of Johnson Products and creator of Afro Sheen, dies at 99

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    Visionary businessman and philanthropist George E. Johnson, who founded Johnson Products Co. (JPC), died peacefully at his Chicago home on July 6. He was 99.

    Johnson laid the foundation for a hair care empire when he founded JPC in 1954—creating some of the most prominent products in Black households, including Ultra Wave, Ultra Sheen and Afro Sheen. The company became the first Black-owned business to go public on then-American Stock Exchange (AMEX) in 1969.

    Throughout his life, Johnson was steered by one central principle, the Golden Rule of doing unto others as you would have then do unto you.

    “When you adhere to the Golden Rule, you do things right. You help people. Then, when you help people, they help you,” said Johnson in an episode of the AFRO Chicken Boxx in 2025. “When people see how dedicated you are, they pay attention. That’s what worked for me.”

    Born to Priscilla Dean Johnson and Charles David Johnson on June 16, 1927, George E. Johnson was raised on a sharecropping plantation in Richton, Miss. When he was 2 years old, his mother left the Cotton State to escape racial violence and oppression in the Deep South, bringing Johnson and his brothers to Chicago.

    At 17, Johnson withdrew from high school and started working at Fuller Products, a Black-owned cosmetics and household goods company started by Samuel B. Fuller. Johnson looked to Fuller as a mentor and absorbed his philosophy of living by the Golden Rule. That philosophy would shape the opportunity that changed his life.

    While riding an elevator at Fuller Products, Johnson struck up a conversation with a barbershop owner who had been unable to meet with Fuller about improving a hair product. Johnson took the man’s business card and vowed to visit the shop himself.

    Months later, Johnson kept that promise. He took the product back to the laboratory, spending nine months refining the formula before creating a version he believed could succeed in the marketplace. Convinced he had found the foundation for his own business, Johnson pieced together $500 in startup capital—borrowing $250 from a friend and securing another $250 bank loan after telling the loan officer he planned to use the money to take his wife on vacation.

    The risk paid off. After founding JPC in 1954, Johnson transformed the business into one of the nation’s largest Black-owned enterprises. His first wife and high-school sweetheart, Joan Johnson, ran the business beside him, eventually leading the accounting department. The pair had four children together: Eric G. Johnson, John Johnson, George Johnson Jr. and Joan Marie Johnson.

    By the mid-1960s, Johnson’s success had attracted national attention. In 1966, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. toured JPC’s headquarters and remarked that it embodied the promise of Black Power.

    “When Dr. King visited us in 1966, Black Power was a phrase that described a new way of thinking about ourselves,” Johnson told AFRO writer Kevin MacNair in 2025. “But Dr. King used the phrase as a real compliment as he assessed our several floors that were jumping with activity—salesmen, chemists, secretaries—a mostly-Black group of employees who were finding their way into American’s middle class.”

    In 1971, he continued to expand JPC’s national reach by sponsoring the popular television program “Soul Train,” providing its initial financial backing to host and producer Don Cornelius. By 1975, JPC’s annual sales grew from $11.2 million to $37 million.

    Even as the company expanded, Johnson said his greatest accomplishment wasn’t its financial success but the workplace culture he created.

    “My feeling was that my employees spent more of their waking hours with me in the company working, and it ought to be as comfortable for them or even more comfortable for them in their workplace than at home,” said Johnson on the AFRO Chicken Boxx. “I wanted them to feel like they were at home in my company.”

    That sentiment extended beyond words. Beginning in 1960, Johnson instituted a profit-sharing program that distributed 15 percent of the company’s pre-tax profits to employees.

    After decades of building JPC, Johnson’s later years were marked by both loss and an unexpected new chapter in his personal life. In 2019, his wife Joan Johnson died, sending him into a period of depression. Wanting to see him happy again, his granddaughters encouraged him to connect with art curator Madeline Murphy Rabb, the great-granddaughter of AFRO founder John H. Murphy and sister of civil rights attorney William “Billy” Murphy.

    Johnson had known Rabb for more than 50 years and immediately asked his granddaughters to help him find her phone number. Eager to reconnect, he began searching for her contact information himself. After tracking down her number online, Johnson called Rabb and invited her to dinner in November 2021.

    The couple married on March 30, 2022, and Johnson became the stepfather of her two sons: Maurice Rabb and Christopher Rabb, who recently won a highly contested race to represent Pennsylvania’s 3rd Congressional District.

    “My sweet George died this morning. Some of the happiest four years of our lives were spent with each other,” Rabb told AFRO publisher Frances Toni Draper. “He always said that we were divinely ordained to be together.”

    Rabb later helped Johnson chronicle his life and career in his memoir: “Afro Sheen: How I Revolutionized an Industry with the Golden Rule, from Soul Train to Wall Street,” which was published in 2025.

    Throughout his nearly century-long life, Johnson maintained that lasting success and fulfillment were rooted not in wealth, but in faith, character and the Golden Rule that guided him.

    “My best advice is get close to the Lord and stay as close as you can,” said Johnson on the AFRO Chicken Boxx. “He will take you places you never believed you could go.”




     

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