Michael H. Cottman, an award-winning journalist
and
author, is a Senior Correspondent for BlackAmericaWeb.com, a division
of REACH Media/Radio One, the nation's largest black-owned media
company.
Cottman, a former reporter for The Washington Post,
Newsday and The Miami Herald, is also a lecturer in the Department of
Journalism at Howard University in Washington, D.C.
Cottman is presently covering the 2008 Presidential
campaign and also offers political commentary and news analysis for several
national REACH/Radio One stations, which are owned by radio personality Tom
Joyner and businesswoman Cathy Hughes.
He was a 2007 recipient of a newly-created political
journalism fellowship sponsored by the Knight Foundation and The University of
Southern California's Annenberg School of Communication.
Cottman also serves on a special advisory board for the
National Geographic Society. He was featured in a 2008 National Geographic
documentary entitled "The Pirate Code," the story of a 300-year-old
shipwreck, The Whydah, and the life Black Sam Bellamy - a legend during the
Golden Age of Piracy and follows one mans quest to resurrect Black Sams ship
from its watery grave.
Cottman was also featured in a 2007 documentary by the
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) entitled "Moira Stuart: In Search
of Wilberforce," the story of the British involvement in trans-Atlantic
slave trade.
Cottman, the author of three books, has spent the past 27
years writing about politics, social trends, race, and America's expanding
multi-cultural society.He also presently writes a political blog for Politics In
Color, (www.politicsincolor.com)
a new interactive website that offers multi-cultural, multi-media coverage of
political issues starting with the 2008 presidential campaign while also
providing an engaging forum for national discussion.
Cottman has interviewed and written about some of the
world's most prominent news makers, including former South African President
Nelson Mandela, the late John F. Kennedy Jr., former New York Mayors Ed Koch,
David Dinkins and Rudolph Guliani, and former President Bill Clinton and 2008
presidential candidate Barack Obama.
For several weeks in 2006, Cottman traveled to New
Orleans to report a five-part series that examined the city's rebuilding
efforts and the housing crisis in the Lower Ninth Ward nearly a year after
Hurricane Katrina.
Cottman has worked for some of the nation's top
newspapers, including The Washington Post, Newsday, The Miami Herald and The
Atlanta Constitution. In addition to writing for newspapers, Cottman also
co-wrote a screenplay for Showtime Television Networks, and is presently
researching his next book project.
He has received numerous awards including journalism's
highest honor, the Pulitzer Prize , which he shared with a team of reporters at
Newsday in 1992.
Cottman also appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show in 2000
to discuss his book, "The Wreck of the Henrietta Marie." He has also
appeared on CNN; NPR; PBS; C-SPAN Booknotes; ABC News and CBS News affiliates,
The Learning Channel and The History Channel.
He frequently lectures about journalism, African-American
history, contemporary social issues, the politics of race, underwater
exploration and the African slave trade. Cottman also serves on a special
advisory board of The National Geographic Society.
His journalism travels have taken him across the United
States reporting on social conditions in communities from Miami to Los Angeles.
He has also reported from West Africa, South Africa, France, the U.K., Japan,
Malaysia, Central America, and The Caribbean. In 1998, Cottman traveled to
Dakar, Senegal to write about President Bill Clinton's historic trip to Africa,
the most extensive visit to Africa by a U.S. President.
Cottman's articles have also been published in The
Washington Post Sunday Magazine; Essence; Black Enterprise, Odyssey Couleur,
Emerge, Heart and Soul, and SkyWritings , Air Jamaica's in-flight magazine, as
well scuba diving and tourism trade publications. As a writer who enjoys
creative diversity, Cottman also wrote a three-part series in 2005 about life, culture and scuba diving in Malaysia.
In 2005, Cottman served as the keynote speaker for Great
Britain's annual Slavery Remembrance Day, held in Liverpool, England.
Some of Cottman's other presentations include: The
Smithsonian; National Geographic Society; The National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA); The Getty Foundation; the Dusable Museum of Chicago;
Wayne State University; The Junior League of Richmond; the National Association
of Black Genealogists; the Detroit African-American History Museum; The Daytona
Beach Museum of Arts and Science; the National Aquarium in Baltimore, The
Boston Aquarium; Howard University, Clark Atlanta University, The University of
North Carolina, Virginia Tech University, The Little Rock Museum of History,
the Augusta Museum of History, The Reginald F. Lewis Museum of African American
History and Culture; the National Museums Liverpool, Liverpool, England; The
Georgia Aquarium, the Mote Marine Research Laboratory, The National Underground
Railroad Freedom Center and The National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA).
Cottman is the author of three books, including The Wreck
of the Henrietta Marie , (Crown/Random House) the story of a sunken 17th
Century slave ship that sank off the coast of Key West, and the black scuba
divers who helped explore the 300-year-old vessel. Cottman spent four years
researching the origin of the slave ship and retracing the route of Henrietta
Marie, traveling to every port of call and scuba diving inlets where the ship
anchored.
Cottman traveled to three continents to reconstruct the
slaving voyages of the Henrietta Marie and, as a certified scuba diver, helped
explore the remains of the vessel which yielded 20,000 artifacts, including the
largest collection of slave-ship shackles ever found on one site. It is the
only sunken slave ship in the world to be scientifically documented. In 1972,
the Henrietta Marie was originally discovered by a group of treasure salvagers,
which included a black underwater treasure hunter.
In 1993, Cottman was part of a group of black scuba
divers that placed a one-ton monument on the site of the slave ship to
commemorate the African people who died aboard the Henrietta Marie and those
lost during the Middle Passage. Today, the monument is the only underwater
memorial of its kind in the nation.
A bronze plaque is embedded on the concrete monument. The
inscription
reads: "Henrietta Marie: In memory and recognition
of the courage, pain and suffering of enslaved African people. Speak her name
and gently touch the souls of our ancestors."
Cottman, who has logged dozens of dives on the slave-ship
site, co-sponsors annual trips to the wreck of the Henrietta Marie for
certified divers. The site is protected by several federal marine agencies. In
June 2005, Cottman joined several NABS members in taking a group of public
school students to the Henrietta Marie site, marking the first time black
students had visited the wreck.
Cottman belongs to a number of professional
associations, including The Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society, and the National
Association of Black Scuba Divers. Cottman was certified as an Advanced Open
Water scuba diver in 1991 by the Professional Association of Diving Instructors
(PADI).