Harlem's Street Corner the University of the Common Man
Harlem's Street Corner Orators the University of the Common Man Black history, it was Harlem's street corner orators who were the neighborhood's "living" history, political chronicles. and University of the Streets. From the 1920s through the 1960s, the intersection of 125th Street and 7th Avenue (now Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd) was known as the "University of the Common Man." On these corners, orators would stand on wooden ladders or soapboxes to mobilize the masses. The "Step-Ladder" Orators The "step-ladder" tradition wasn't just about shouting into the wind; it was a sophisticated form of grassroots media. In an era where Black voices were excluded from mainstream newspapers and radio, the street corner was the only place for unfiltered news and radical education. Political Mobilization: Orators used the streets to organize boycotts (like the "Don't Buy Where You Can't Work" campaign) and lab...