* Today in Black History - September 15 *
1830 - The first National Negro Convention begins in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
1876 - White terrorists attack Republicans in Ellenton, South
Carolina. Two whites and thirty-nine African Americans are
killed.
1890 - Claude McKay is born in Sunnyville, Jamaica. Emigrating to
the United States in 1912, he will be come a poet and
winner of the 1928 Harmon Gold Medal Award for Literature.
Author of the influential poetry collection "Harlem
Shadows", he will also be famous for the poems "The
Lynching," "White Houses," and "If We Must Die," which
will be used by Winston Churchill as a rallying cry during
World War II. He willl join the ancestor on May 22, 1948.
1898 - The National Afro-American Council is founded in Rochester,
New York. Bishop Alexander Walters of the AME Zion Church
is elected president. The organization proposes a program
of assertion and protest.
1923 - The governor of Oklahoma declares that Oklahoma is in a
"state of virtual rebellion and insurrection" because of
Ku Klux Klan activities. Martial law is declared.
1924 - Robert "Bobby" Short is born in Danville, Illinois. He
will become a singer and pianist and will be a long-time
performer at the Carlisle Hotel in New York City.
1928 - Julian Edwin Adderly is born in Tampa, Florida. He will be
best known as "Cannonball" Adderly, a jazz saxophonist who
will play with Miles Davis as well as lead his own band
with brother Nat Adderly and musicians such as Yusef
Lateef and George Duke.
1943 - Actor and activist Paul Robeson acts in the 296th
performance of "Othello" at the Shubert Theatre in New
York City.
1963 - Four African American schoolgirls - Addie Collins, Denise
McNair, Carol Robertson and Cynthia Wesley - are killed
in a bombing at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in
Birmingham, Alabama. It is an act of violence that
galvanizes the civil rights movement.
1964 - Rev. K.L. Buford and Dr. Stanley Smith are elected to the
Tuskegee City Council and become the first African
American elected officials in Alabama in the twentieth
century.
1969 - Large-scale racially motivated disturbances are reported
in Hartford, Connecticut. Five hundred persons are
arrested and scores are injured.
1978 - Muhammad Ali wins the world heavyweight boxing championship
for a record third time by defeating Leon Spinks in New
Orleans, Louisiana.
1987 - Boxer, Thomas "Hit Man" Hearns, becomes the first African
American to win boxing titles in five different weight
classes.
1991 - San Diego State freshman, Marshall Faulk, sets the NCAA
single game rushing record of 386 yards.
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