Free America
The Girls Basketball Team Coached by Lew Perkins
Lew Perkins has achieved great success in the athletic departments for coaching both boys and girls. The team he has coached has always been successful and is able to win continuously in their area of athletics.
Universities Where He has Served as the Athletic Director:
He has been the director in the athletic department of the following Universities;
- University of Kansas (2003 – September 2010)
- Connecticut University (1990 – 2003)
- Maryland University (1987 – 1990)
- Wichita University (1983 – 1987)
- South – Carolina – Aiken (1969 – 1980)
He has taken his work seriously and his hard work has been shown in the athletic department of all the universities he has been part of. The teams he has coached have steadily improved the way in which they played, and had started to win continuously, while he had been coaching them. Under his coaching, various teams have won tournaments, and have achieved various prestigious awards and trophies.
Perkins Decision to come Out of his Retirement
Lew Perkins has retired from coaching and assisting any team on 7the September 2010, but he has recently decided to come out of his retirement and assist in coaching the Girls Basketball Team, along with Becky Bridson, the coach of the girls’ basketball team.
What the Athletic Director of Seabury got to say on Hiring Perkins?
The athletic director of Seabury is excited to hear the news that Coach Perkins has accepted their invitation of assisting the girl’s basketball team. He goes on to say that appointing Perkins, as the assistant coach was one of the easiest decision taken up by him. He also says that, Perkins has coached a lot of teams, and has experienced all kinds of competitions, so he can help Seabury better than any other coach.
Nelson also commented that Lew Perkins can help in the improvement of the Girls Basketball Team, and his invaluable advice and experience will help the school and other teams too.
He also stated that Perkins is a nice person, and has an individual personality, which makes him stand out in the crowd. He goes on to say that Perkins is an extremely genuine person, and his staff would be crazy, if they don’t ask his advice and learn from his experience.
According to the sources, we learn that the team has already met with Coach Perkins and are waiting for him to join the next season to coach them.
Discover Weeksville – A Pre-Civil War African American Community in Brooklyn, New York
It lay undisclosed, silent and surrounded by ever-growing urban development for the better part of the 20th Century. Weeksville, a pre-Civil War, “free and intentional 19th Century African American community in Brooklyn, New York is rising like the City of Atlantis nearly 200 years after its founding and is one of the few pre-civil war African American sites of historic preservation in the United States.
The Weeksville Heritage Center, on Bergen Street off Rochester Avenue boasts a visitor’s center, research lab and three of the original 19th Century frame houses that were built on a old winding Dutch winding merchant road, previously an Algonquin path for hundreds of years. Originally called Hunterfly Road in Colonial New York, the winding thoroughfare cut through the center of modern-day neighborhood of Crown Heights.
Creating Community in Post-Slavery New York
Formed in 1838 by James Weeks, a free African American, the community was a response to New York State’s abolition of slavery 11 years earlier and the growing desire of African Americans to be full members of society. In order to vote in New York, one needed to own property and James Weeks and others began buying land to build a community in Brooklyn. By the 1850′s Weeksville had its own school, orphanage, newspaper, benevolent society and old age home. It was home to the first female African American physician in New York State and the first African American police officer in New York City. Weeksville had doctors, dentists, ministers, teachers, plumbers and laundrymen, all the elements of a vibrant citizenry. The community blossomed through the turn on the century and then virtually disappeared into the Brooklyn “grid”.
Fast-forward: Preserving History
Rediscovered in 1968 by a historian and his students by flying a plane over an area mentioned in a historical text on Brooklyn and there it was, the winding Hunterfly Road with frame homes set for demolition and the land for redevelopment. Over the last 30 years, the historic community’s national preservation status was declared and the Weeksville Heritage Society was formed. Visitors may tour the original Hunterfly Road houses with a docent on weekdays or attend programs, and special events at the center. During spring and summer a weekly farmer’s market is hosted on the grounds and by the end of 2011 Weeksville will be home to a new multi- million dollar educational and cultural complex with multiple galleries, a theater, classrooms and open space for recreating the agricultural life of the historic community.
Easy to reach by subway, bus or car, Weeksville is calling. Step back in time to Victorian parlors of a “free and intentional African American community” in the heart of Brooklyn.