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  1. Cygnus Black III (1938–1992) was a pure-blood wizard and a member of the noble House of Black. He was the youngest son of Pollux Black and Irma Crabbe and the youngest brother of Walburga and Alphard, who was later blasted off the family tapestry. He married Druella Rosier, and the couple had...

  2. Feb 13, 2023 · Elizabeth Thorn Scott Flood was a 19th-century African American educator and activist in California, best known for being the first Black teacher in Sacramento. She moved to California in 1852 with her husband and young son during the Gold Rush and was soon widowed and forced to provide for her son solo while living in Sacramento.

  3. Template:HogwartsMysterySpoiler Template:Youmay Cygnus Black III (1938–1992) was a pure-blood wizard and a member of the noble House of Black. He was the youngest son of Pollux Black and Irma Crabbe and the youngest brother of Walburga and Alphard, who was later blasted off the family tapestry. He married Druella Rosier, and the couple had three daughters: Bellatrix, Andromeda, and Narcissa ...

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  5. Feb 8, 2024 · Angela Davis (1944-present) Angela Davis, a professor, activist, and author, has been a prominent figure in the fight against the oppression of the Black community. Her work in the realms of civil rights, feminism, and the anti-prison movement has had a profound impact on California's social justice landscape. Davis's advocacy for prison reform ...

  6. Cygnus Black (1928-1992) was a pure-blood wizard and member of the noble Black family. He was a student at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry and was Sorted into Slytherin. Cygnus was born in 1928, the youngest son of Pollux Black and Irma Crabbe and brother of Walburga and Alphard, who...

  7. Apr 28, 2022 · Marisa Agha. April 28, 2022. The only available photograph of America Newton, a formerly enslaved woman who ran a laundry business out of her cabin in Julian, California, dates to around 1910. San ...

  8. According to 2019 United States Census Bureau estimates, those identified solely as African American or black constituted 5.8% or 2,282,144 residents in California. Including an additional 1.2% who identified as having partial African ancestry, the figure was 7.0% (2.8 million residents).

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