Skip to main content

February 2023 | DC Beacon

Page 1

The I N

F O C U S

FREE

F O R

P E O P L E

O V E R

5 0

More than 200,000 readers throughout Greater Washington

VOL.35, NO.2

FEBRUARY 2023

Author made history as a baby PHOTO COURTESY OF AMY NATHAN

LEISURE & TRAVEL

St. Lucia’s dramatic peaks and white-sand beaches make for a perfect Caribbean adventure; plus, visiting Panama for stem cell treatment page 25

LOC/BERNARD GOTFRYD

By Margaret Foster When more than 250,000 Americans gathered to hear Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I have a dream” speech at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on Aug. 28, 1963, a family of three was quietly making history in Baltimore. Baltimore native Sharon Langley was only 11 months old when her parents, Charles and Marian Langley, brought her to Gwynn Oak Amusement Park. Like many places in America, including Glen Echo Park in this metro area, Gwynn Oak had barred Black people since it opened in 1893. After eight years of nonviolent protests and hundreds of arrests for trespassing, the park’s owners finally agreed to open its gates to Black families. The Langleys, who lived near the park, had hoped to go to the march in Washington, where King gave his speech, but they couldn’t find a babysitter for Sharon. Instead, they waited in line to enter Gwynn Oak, where Sharon, in a pink dress, became the first African American child to ride the merry-go-round. “Someone had to be willing to take that step and take that chance,” Langley said. “It was a part of our family’s expectation — the idea that you did not have to accept things the way they had always been.” Now an elementary school administrator in Los Angeles, Langley has published a children’s book about that historic day. A Ride to Remember: A Civil Rights Story, coauthored by historian Amy Nathan, was published in 2020 after almost a decade in the making. Langley, who has worked as a teacher and literacy coach, concedes that “it’s hard for [children today] to accept or understand that [segregation] is a part of Ameri-

I N S I D E …

ARTS & STYLE Amy Nathan and Sharon Langley stand in front of the carousel on the National Mall that was once a centerpiece of Gwynn Oak, a whites-only amusement park in Baltimore. The duo published a children’s book about the 1963 desegregation of Gwynn Oak by Langley, the first African American child to ride its carousel.

can history.” However, she pointed out, “It’s really important to talk about it because the people who experienced these things are still alive, so it hasn’t been very long ago.”

How the book began

Nathan, a Baltimore native who has published 11 books, became interested in See CAROUSEL, page 32

page 30

FITNESS & HEALTH 6 k Tips to tame inflammation k Is juice better for you than fruit? LIVING BOLDLY 18 k Newsletter for D.C. residents

Vibrant Senior Living in All Seasons

LAW & MONEY 20 k Ways to earn money in retirement k Find the right financial advisor

Get your FREE brochure!

ADVERTISER DIRECTORY 646881_SB

Call 1-877-575-0231 or visit DMVSeniorLiving.com.

A new biography of Jackie O; plus, books about the White House, and Bob Levey on spoiling grandchildren

39

PLUS CROSSWORD, BEACON BITS, CLASSIFIEDS & MORE


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
February 2023 | DC Beacon by The Beacon Newspapers - Issuu