C. R. Gibbs author, educator, freelance writer, lecturer and exhibitor of historical artifacts. His many accomplishments include:
video scripts on Black History for the D.C. Public Schools Educational Media Center
television script for an historical program on WETA and several scripts for WHUR-FM
conducted research on Black Civil War units for the Sons of Union Veterans Organization,
served as assistant technical advisor to the Frances Thompson Company on a film entitled "American Years" consultant to the D.C. Public School System, Georgetown University, and the Smithsonian Institution
C.R. Gibbs is also a D.C. Community Humanities Council Scholar. He wrote, researched, and narrated
Sketches In Color, a 13 part companion series to the PBS series "The Civil War" for WHMMTV, Howard University TV station. Mr. Gibbs received the 1999 Middle States
Council Award from the Middle States Council for the Social Studies for long,distinguished,and inspiring work in enhancing the community's understanding of and appreciation for history as a tool of social
change,information,and empowerment.
His articles have appeared in newspapers across the nation.
Publications
Negro History Bulletin
American Visions
The Washington Post
The Washington Times
Dollars and Sense
The Baltimore Evening Sun
Sepia Magazine and several military publications. The Afro-American
Inventor
Books by C.R. Gibbs
Friends of Frederick Douglass, a children's book
Black Explorers
Black Inventors: from Africa to America
co-authored Black Georgetown Remembered, with Dr. Kathleen Lesko and Dr.
Valerie Babb
C.R. Gibbs' research is cited in the official history of the United States Department of Commerce,
From Lighthouse to Laserbeams.
Speaker and Lecturer
Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial
Library
Frederick Douglass Memorial Home
Howard University, Washington D.C.
Northern Virginia Community College
University of Maryland
Towson State University
Loyola University
American University John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
U.S. Merchant Marine Academy
Ft. Benjamin Harrison
National Archives and other public and private schools throughout the District of Columbia, Maryland
and Virginia
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