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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
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Thu, 19 Apr 2001 09:31:47 -0400
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*                  Today in Black History - April 19                  *

1775 - With the assistance of African American soldiers, Minutemen
        defeat the British at Concord Bridge in the initial battle of
        the Revolutionary War.

1837 - Cheyney University is founded as the first historically Black
        institution of higher learning in America.  It is also the first
        college in the United States to receive official state
        certification as an institution of higher academic education for
        African Americans.  Cheyney will begin its existence in
        Philadelphia as the Institute for Colored Youth. The Institute
        for Colored Youth successfully will provide a free classical
        education for qualified young people. In 1902, the school will
        be moved to George Cheyney's farm, 24 miles west of Philadelphia.
        In 1913 the name will be changed to Cheyney Training School for
        Teachers; in 1921 to the Normal School at Cheyney; in 1951
        Cheyney State Teachers College; and in 1959, Cheyney State
        College.  In 1983, Cheyney joined the State System of Higher
        Education (SSHE) as Cheyney University of Pennsylvania.

1866 - The African American citizens of Washington DC celebrate the
        abolition of slavery. 4,000 to 5,000 people assemble at the
        White House and are addressed by President Andrew Johnson.  Led
        by two African American regiments, the spectators and the
        procession proceed up the Pennsylvania Avenue to Franklin Square
        for religious services and speeches by prominent politicians.
        The sign on top of the platform reads: "We have received our
        civil rights.  Give us the right of suffrage and the work is
        done."

1942 - Atlanta University's first exhibition of African American art is
        held.  Organized by Hale Woodruff, artist and former professor
        at the university, it will be popularly known as the Atlanta
        Annual.  Winners in the first show will be Charles Alston and
        Lois Mailou Jones.

1960 - Maj. General Frederic E. Davidson assumes command of the Eighth
        Infantry Division in Germany and becomes the first African
        American to lead an army division.

1960 - A National Education Association study reveals that African
        Americans had lost thirty thousand teaching jobs since 1954 in
        seventeen Southern and Border states because of discrimination
        and desegregation.

1960 - The home of Z. Alexander Looby, counsel for 153 students arrested
        in sit-in demonstrations, is destroyed by a dynamite bomb.  More
        than two thousand students march on the Nashville City Hall in
        protest.

1971 - Walter Fauntroy takes office as the first elected Congressional
        representative from the District of Columbia since Reconstruction.

1975 - James B. Parsons becomes the first African American chief judge
        of a federal court, the U.S. District Court in Chicago.   In
        1961, Parsons became the first African American district court
        judge.

1982 - Astronaut Guion S. Bluford Jr. becomes the first African American
        to be selected for U.S. space missions.  He will not, however be
        the first person of African descent in space.  That honor belongs
        to Cuban cosmonaut, Arnaldo Tamayo-Mendez, who went into space on
        a Russian mission September 18, 1980 (Soyuz 38).

1994 - A Los Angeles jury awards $3.8 million to African American motorist
        Rodney King in compensation/damages for the beating he received at
        the hands of four Los Angeles policemen.

1999 - Joseph Chebet of Kenya wins the Boston Marathon, in 2:9:52; Fatuma
        Roba of Ethiopia wins the women's race in 2:23:25.

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