Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at negro national anthem.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Negro National Anthem.
Examples
-
The moderate-conservative Republican commentator defends Rev. Joseph Lowery against conservative criticism: "The Rev. Joseph Lowery's inaugural benediction - which began with the words from 'Lift Every Voice And Sing,' often called the Negro National Anthem - underscores how far the nation has come.
Booker Rising 2009
-
Yet the failure of much of the media to recognize the words of the Negro National Anthem as the first words of Reverend Joseph Lowery's benediction at the inauguration was truly pitiful.
Jill Nelson: The Audacity of Whiteness: Framing Barack Obama 2009
-
Joseph Lowery, a civil rights icon and a pastor known to speak his mind to power, opened his benediction with the first words of the Negro National Anthem, Lift Every Voice and Sing
New comments post for the inauguration. Ann Althouse 2009
-
His somber voice didn't seem to follow Aretha Franklin's letting loose, and his tone turned Reverend Joseph Lowery's down-home benediction that opened with lyrics from the Negro National Anthem into a consolation.
What He Really Said Pinckney, Darryl 2009
-
And he started it with the third stanza of the Negro National Anthem.
-
For now, as part of the blessing of our nation and our new young, brilliant President who reflects the DNA of our nation and globe, the Negro National Anthem has become -- at long last -- part of the larger American hymn.
-
When you could hear the third stanza of the Negro National Anthem before the National Anthem was sung and it made sense.
-
The singer announced that the Negro National Anthem would be our "marching-out music," but nobody in the audience wanted to leave.
-
The thing I remember about that, I had never heard James Weldon Johnson's Negro National Anthem sung as beautifully as it was sung that day by a high school audience which was impressed by our presentation so much that the audience was virtually inspired.
-
Johnson's brother set it to music in 1905 and the NAACP adopted it as the Negro National Anthem in 1919.
Latest Articles 2009
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.