Black-Firefighter Museum Planned for Chicago

"People don't know that a black man [Capt. David B. Kenyon] invented the sliding pole," Morris Davis, founder of the Chicago African-American Firefighter Museum, told DNAinfo.ย  Suggested Reading The Root 100 – 2021 The Root 100 – 2022 The Root 100 – 2023 Video will return here when scrolled back into view Stefon Diggs and…

"People don't know that a black man [Capt. David B. Kenyon] invented the sliding pole," Morris Davis, founder of the Chicago African-American Firefighter Museum, told DNAinfo.ย 

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

Davis, 81, who retired from the Chicago Fire Department in 1992 after 37 years of service, told the site that people don't seem to know that black firefighters, like their white compatriots, have also saved lives and given up their own lives for their work.

Now Davis is working to ensure that blacks are properly recognized for their service. The museum will be housed in a vacant firehouse in the historic black community of Bronzeville on Chicago's South Side.ย Mayor Rahm Emanuel introduced an ordinanceย at last week's City Council meeting allowing the museum to develop the property with a 10-year, $1 lease.

The museum, the site says, will celebrate the contributions of black firefighters such as Kenyon, who was chief of the city's all-black fire brigade during the Great Chicago Fire. Historian Timuel Black says that Kenyon got the idea to create a permanent pole after he watched a fellow firefighter slide down a wooden pole.ย 

Read more atย DNAinfo.

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