History (2)

Joseph Robinson and his wife, Sylvia, co-founded Sugar Hill Records, which was based in Englewood.

Joseph Robinson and his wife, Sylvia, co-founded Sugar Hill Records, which was based in Englewood. - 

The spot on Englewood’s West Street where hip-hop history was made is marked by a “for sale” sign. A chain-link fence blocks the entrance to what is now an empty lot, and a few cars are parked inside.

That’s all that is left of the Sugar Hill recording studio, where the song that introduced rap music to a mainstream audience was recorded in 1979, sweeping Englewood — and the enigmatic members of the Robinson family who ran the company — into the center of a burgeoning music craze with the now-iconic riff, “hip-hop and ya don’t stop.”

- See more at: http://www.northjersey.com/arts_entertainment/music/Sugar_Hill_Records_tax_issues_latest_chapter_in_Englewood_hip-hop_familys_rock_history.html?c=y&page=1#sthash.JVGduJ2X.dpuf

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Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute

 
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Slavery in Connecticut 1640-1848

by
David L. Parsons

Contents of Curriculum Unit 80.06.09:

To Guide Entry


Teaching both Connecticut and Afro-American history to sixth-graders  I began to question the wisdom of teaching the two subjects separately. Students questions in class often revealed their attempts to relate the two main parts of their social studies work. The student who asked if Jonathan Trumbull was Black and the student who wanted to know where Connecticut's plantations had been were both searching for a way to understand one subject in the context of the other. It was impossible for them to do it with any accuracy because they had learned so little about Blacks in Connecticut.

The source of this story and to read more about the state of Connecticut and Afro-American history in ct 

click this link below 

http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1980/6/80.06.09.x.html

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