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Black History Month ~ Stolen Legacy of the African Jewish Founding Father of California

by Khubaka, Michael Harris
The legacy of the African Jewish Founding Father of California will be highlighted during the 60th Anniversary of Israel. Preservation of the official source documentation of the "Golden Legacy of William Alexander Leidedorff, Jr." will become a national effort worthy of his contribution. For many his Danish Jewish name is too difficult to pronounce to even consider his contribution. His African Cuban history is far too challenging to even consider worth restoring at the actual site of his early U.S. Agribusiness excellence. In May 1848 a Leidesdorff died and in May 1948 a Leidesdorf helped establish Israel, today we embrace change and seek assistance to restore dignity and respect for the contributions of our early California Pioneers. May 2008 we will have a grand memorial celebration of the Honorable William Alexander Leidesdorff, Jr.
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Sacramento, CA ~ One of the saddest aspects of the enslavement of human beings in the United States of America is the fact that many African Mexicans who led the long fight difficult battle to end Spanish rule in 1821, lost their freedom after helping to establish U.S. military rule in 1846 and California U.S. statehood in 1850.

Colonel Jonathan D. Stevenson of New York City, a member of the New York Legislature was selected by President Polk to raise a regiment of New York volunteers for service in California. The New York Volunteers left Governors Island with a specific duty to settle in California as conquers or colonizers. The specially selected Army unit was given a Bible and a rifle to use as necessary during special unit training. successful.

5 years earlier William Alexander Leidesdorff, Jr. left New York Harbor as a successful maritime pioneer with strong connections to wealth and influence that yielded results of simply amazing proportions.

The first official U.S. State Department representative of African Jewish ancestry, Honorable William Alexander Leidesdorff, Jr. died May 1848 under mysterious circumstances and he is buried inside the Mission Delores San Francisco. The Leidesdorff extended family was unable to retain the vast wealth of his estate because of systemic institutional racism through carefully crafted policy and procedures of the leading politicians of the day.

Breckenridge Democrats supported expansion of chattel slavery into the Golden State and would not allow a Black woman to own the largest and wealthiest estate in the State of California. Many governmental officials became very wealthy by sharing the spoils from the Stolen Legacy: Black Land Loss in the Land of Queen Califia.

Just two years after the untimely death of Leidesdorff, the first California Governor proposed to export every person of African ancestry out of the State in his inaugural address. Peter Burnett barely lost that vote, however he later as California Supreme Court Justice helped enact laws that completely disenfranchised residents based upon race, ethnicity and religion, many whom were no longer able to vote, testify in court, homestead land or send children to school.

U.S. Chief Supreme Court Justice Taney, in his 1857 Dred Scott decision, effectively made chattel slavery a nationwide law of the land, leading our nation toward Civil War and at great human sacrifice subsequent changes to our U.S. Constitution expands our path ‘toward a more perfect union’, we remain unable to learn from the past to embrace a future of higher ideals for all Americans.

Today, most U.S. citizens remain unaware of the “Golden Legacy of William Alexander Leidesdorff, Jr.” and the significant contributions by people of African ancestry to the American River Parkway (1840 – 1865) to the delight of many vocal residents.

Our once leading California public education system was first established by Honorable William Alexander Leidesdorff, Jr.; he served as President of the first public school board and opened the first public school in San Francisco, California. Yet today, several public officials use the poor excuse of an inability to try and pronounce a Danish Jewish surname to exclude unique historical contributions in favor of political nepotism.

Black landowners were good stewards of well over one million square miles of land in Alta California territory, the Louisiana territory, and Florida territory. In these areas of our modern United States of America, there were many Black nations that lived for centuries in harmony and often together with Indian Country.

In the rotunda of the California State Capitol is a statue of Christopher Columbus on bended knee handing the world to Queen Isabella of Spain. Beginning in the 16th century legal enslavement of African human beings and genocide destruction of aboriginal populations in the way began with a Papal Edict giving Christian nations of Europe the go-ahead to enslave all “non-Europeans” in a partitioned western hemisphere.

The facts cannot be denied, however truth and justice is an ongoing battle to remove the notion of white supremacy from the former Goethe Park. Many seem comfortable to bury the past and away from reality toward a future without a solid foundation of honesty.

U.S. government recently returned about 68,000 square acres of land to the Washitaw Nation of Louisiana, one of the prehistoric Black nations prior to U.S. acquisition. This historic Black contribution is evidence by sustainable land stewardship of Black civilizations before English, Danish, Dutch, Spanish and French colonization of North America. Many U.S. citizens’ livings today are descendent from the pre-Columbian Black nations as modern DNA easily proves the genetic code.

Now is the time for inclusion of this timely issue during our 10th National Black Land Loss Summit, Tillery, NC. The systemic taking of Black owned land in North America was part of the ‘manifest destiny’ by U.S. President Polk, a North Carolina slave owner. He and Thomas Larkin, a resident of Wilmington, North Carolina prior to arriving as U.S. Consul, Mexican California, completed his assignment with the ratification of the 1848 Peace Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the text of the 1850 California Constitution.

The French, Russian, Danish, English and Spanish retain primary source documentation of early contact with descendants of pre-Columbus African sea farers who settled in the western hemisphere thousands of years Before Christ. They were boat builders, builders of earthen pyramid mounds, seafarers and practiced traditional agriculture.

Along the American River Parkway in Sacramento County, earthen pyramid mounds were ‘discovered’ along the southern and northern banks of the American River documenting early contact by fur trappers of Spanish, Mexican, English, Russian and American influence, thus the final name.

The 1844 Mexican land grant of Rancho Rio De Los Americanos, specifically spoke of not disturbing the remaining aboriginal settlements several miles from the Leidesdorff Adobe Ranch Complex. He established a cattle and wheat 35,000 acre agribusiness operation that was a central catalyst to stabilize the Sacramento Valley, feeding, clothing and housing many early California pioneers.

Sacramento County, California rescinded the naming of C.M. Goethe Park, original Leidesdorff Ranch; our proposal would change the current tone of an ongoing discussion from how much assessment or additional taxes current residents along the American River Parkway must pay, toward a conversation of how to showcase and utilize the ongoing significant contributions of a prestigious African-Cuban, Danish Jewish family legacy of excellence and means by embracing the original name.

Together, we can highlight a deserving National Historical Landmark as a major asset forever preserving our “crown jewel” for future generations. In 2008, we finally may be able to highlight actual historical preservation and environmental standards that showcases our world class cultural tourist destination, historic Leidesdorff Ranch; it remains a long and difficult journey toward freedom for African Jewish contributions along the entire American River Basin.
§African Cuban Danish Jewish
by Khubaka, Michael Harris
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