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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Wed, 22 Nov 2006 08:56:39 -0500
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*             Today in Black History - November 22           *

 

1865 - The Mississippi legislature enacts "Black Codes" which 

            restrict the rights and freedom of movement of the 

            freedmen. The Black Codes enacted in Mississippi and 

            other Southern states virtually re-enslave the 

            freedmen.  In some states, any white person could 

            arrest any African American.  In other states, minor 

            officials could arrest African American "vagrants" and

            "refractory and rebellious Negroes" and force them to

            work on roads and levees without pay.  "Servants" in

            South Carolina were required to work from sunrise to 

            sunset, to be quiet and orderly and go to bed at 

            "reasonable hours."  It was a crime in Mississippi for 

            African Americans to own farm land. In South Carolina,

            African Americans have to get a special license to 

            work outside the domestic and farm laborer categories.

 

1871 - Louisiana Lt. Governor Oscar J. Dunn, joins the 

            ancestors suddenly in the midst of a bitter struggle 

            for control of the state government.  Dunn aides 

            charge that he was poisoned.

 

1884 - T. Thomas Fortune founds the "New York Freeman", which 

            later becomes the "New York Age."

 

1884 - The Philadelphia Tribune is founded by Christopher J. 

            Perry.

 

1893 - Alrutheus Ambush Taylor, teacher and historian, is 

            born in Washington, DC.  He will become Fisk 

            University's Dean. He and other local African American 

            historians will come under the influence of Dr. Carter

            G. Woodson, who spoke in Nashville on several occasions.  

            In 1941, Taylor will publish a Tennessee study from the 

            African American perspective. Taylor titled his study, 

            "The Negro in Tennessee, 1865-1880."  Taylor's book 

            will go beyond slavery and cover Reconstruction history 

            and various aspects of African American life, including 

            business and politics.  

 

1930 - The Nation of Islam is founded in Detroit. 

 

1942 - Guion S. Bluford, Jr. is born in Philadelphia, 

            Pennsylvania. He will become a Colonel in the United 

            States Air Force, an astronaut and the first African

            American to fly in space (four times - STS 8, STS 61A, 

            STS 39, STS 53). 

 

1957 - The Miles Davis Quintet debuts with a jazz concert at

        Carnegie Hall in New York.

 

1961 - Frank Robinson becomes the first baseball player to be 

            named "Most Valuable Player" in both major leagues.

 

1965 - Muhammad Ali defeats Floyd Patterson.  Ali, a recent 

            convert to the Muslim faith, taunts the former champ 

            and ends the fight in 12 rounds to win the world 

            heavyweight title. 

 

1968 - A portrait of Frederick Douglass appears on the cover 

            of Life magazine. The cover story, "Search for a Black 

            Past," will be the first in a four-part series of 

            stories in which the magazine examines African 

            Americans, a review of the last 50 years of struggle 

            and interviews with Jesse Jackson, Julian Bond, 

            Eldridge Cleaver, Dick Gregory, and others. 

 

1986 - 24 year-old George Branham wins the Brunswick Memorial 

            World Open.  It is the first time an African American 

            wins a Professional Bowlers Association title. 

 

1986 - Mike Tyson,  20 years, 4 months old, becomes the 

            youngest to wear the world heavyweight boxing crown 

            after knocking out Trevor Berbick in Las Vegas.

 

1988 - Bob Watson is named assistant general manager of the 

            Houston Astros, the team where he began his 

            professional career in 1965.  One of a select few 

            African American assistant general managers in the 

            sport, Watson's spikes hang in the Baseball Hall of 

            Fame for scoring baseball's 1,000,000th run in 1976.


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