Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Blue Rhythmic Eagle - Magnetic Bat Moon of Purpose, Day 7







6 Men


Blue Rhythmic Eagle


Gentle Breezes
Float on Pine –
Which Alchemy to subtle
 Music does refine –

Thrumming Whispers humming
Make audible the Air –

 Nature’s Instrument the Tree
Exquisite String and Bow –
Singing up to Heaven
All Glory here below.


©Kleomichele Leeds




Ada Copeland King & Attorney


Ada Copeland was the common-law wife of the American geologist Clarence King, who was appointed as the first director of the United States Geological Survey. Copeland was presumed born a slave on or around December 23, 1860, in Georgia. As a young woman, she moved to New York in the mid-1880's and worked as a nursemaid. In about 1887, she became involved with Clarence King, an upper-class white man who presented himself to her as a light-skinned black Pullman porter under the name of James Todd. (Given the long history of slavery in the United States, many African Americans had European ancestry. Some passed or identified as white, given their majority white ancestry.)

They married in September 1888, with King living as Todd with her, but as Clarence King while working in the field. They had five children together, four of whom survived to adulthood. Their two daughters married white men; their two sons served classified as blacks during World War I. Before his death from tuberculosis in 1901, King wrote to Copeland confessing his true identity.

After King died, Copeland embarked on a thirty-year battle to gain control of the trust fund he had promised her. Her representatives included the notable lawyers Everett J. Waring, the first black lawyer to argue a case before the Supreme Court of the United States, and J. Douglas Wetmore, who contested segregation laws in Jacksonville, Florida.

Eventually, in 1933, the court determined that King had died penniless, and no money was forthcoming. John Hay, a friend of King's, provided Ada King with a monthly stipend and, after his death in 1905, Hay's daughter Helen Hay Whitney continued the support. The stipend eventually stopped, though Copeland until her death continued to live in the house John Hay had bought for her. She died on April 14, 1964, one of the last of the former American slaves.

Bibliography

Martha A. Sandweiss, Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception across the Color Line (2009).*





MEN



Kin 175: Blue Rhythmic Eagle


I organize in order to create
Balancing mind
I seal the output of vision
With the rhythmic tone of equality
I am guided by my own power doubled.


The fifth-dimensional higher self is always working to see if the third dimensional being will ever wake up.*



*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2017-2018.








The Sacred Tzolk'in 





Anahata Chakra (Silio Plasma)





No comments:

Post a Comment