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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Sat, 11 Mar 2006 20:45:46 -0500
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*                  Today in Black History - March 11		     *

1861 - The Confederate Congress, meeting in Montgomery, Alabama, adopts a 
	constitution which declares that the passage of any "law denying 
	or impairing the right of property in Negro slaves is prohibited."

1870 - Moshweshwe, King of Basutoland (Lesotho) joins the ancestors.  
	Moshweshwe was the founder of Lesotho in the 1820's.  Lesotho was 
	landlocked by the Cape Colony (now South Africa).  He was able to 
	develop a strong tribal organization from his mix of peoples.  He 
	appeased the Zulu and Ndebele, led cattle raids on surrounding 
	people, defeated the British in 1852 and conducted frequent wars 
	with the Orange Free State.  Because of repeated attacks by the Cape

	Colony, Moshweshwe asked the British for protection and Lesotho will

	become a protectorate in 1868.  Upon his death, the country was 
	annexed to Cape Colony, but was returned to the status of British 
	protectorate in 1884.  When the Union of South Africa was formed in 
	1910, the British honored the desire of Lesotho ("Basutoland") to 
	remain independent.  A protectorate continued until 1968, protecting
	Lesotho from incursions from South Africa.

1874 - Frederick Douglass is named president of the failing Freedmen's 
	Bank.  

1884 - William Edouard Scott is born in Indianapolis, Indiana. He will
	study with Henry O. Tanner at the Art Institute of Chicago.  He 
	later will go to Paris, France and study at the Julien and Colarossi
	academies.  He will also study under Tanner again in Paris (Tanner 
	had emigrated there) and become best known for his portrait studies 
	of Haitians, rural life, and landscapes.  Many of his murals are
	on the walls of public buildings in Indiana, Illinois, West
Virginia, 
	and New York (135th Street YMCA).

1919 - Mercer Ellington is born in Washington, DC, the only child of
	Edward "Duke" Ellington and his wife, Edna.  He will become
	"the keeper of the flame," the charge his father will give him
	and one he will readily accept.  In doing so, he will lead the 
	Duke Ellington Orchestra for over twenty years after replacing 
	his father. 

1926 - Ralph David Abernathy is born in Linden, Alabama.  He will become
	a famed minister, civil rights advocate, and confidant of Martin 
	L. King, Jr.  After King's assassination, he will become the 
	president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and 
	write an autobiography that will attract widespread criticism for
	his comments on King's alleged womanizing.

1935 - "The Conjure Man Dies," a play by Rudolph Fisher, premieres on 
	Broadway at the Lafayette Theatre.  Fisher, who had joined the 
	ancestors over a year before the play's premiere, had adapted 
	the play from his 1932 short story "The Conjure-Man Dies: A 
	Mystery Tale of Dark Harlem," considered the first detective 
	fiction by an African American.

1948 - Reginald Weir becomes the first African American to play in the 
	U.S. Indoor Lawn Tennis Association Championship.  He will win
	his first match, but will be eliminated on March 13.

1950 - Robert "Bobby" McFerrin is born in New York City.  He will be 
	known for his versatile and innovative a cappella jazz vocals 
	and for his hit song "Don't Worry Be Happy," which will sell 
	over ten million copies and earn him three Grammy awards in 
	1989 in addition to a Grammy for best jazz vocalist.

1956 - A manifesto denouncing the Supreme Court ruling on segregation 
	in public schools, is issued by one hundred southern senators 
	and representatives.

1959 - "A Raisin in the Sun" becomes the first play written by an 
	African American woman, Lorraine Hansberry, to open on Broadway.  
	The play will run for 19 months at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, 
	and be named "Best Play" by the New York Drama Critics Circle, 
	and bring Lloyd Richards to Broadway as the first African 
	American director in modern times.

1965 - During civil rights demonstrations in Selma, Alabama, the Reverend 
	James J. Reeb, a white minister from Boston, dies after being 
	beaten by whites. 

1968 - Otis Redding posthumously receives a gold record for the single
	"(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay."

1971 - Whitney M. Young, Jr., executive director of the National Urban 
	League, joins the ancestors after drowning while swimming during
	a visit to Lagos, Nigeria.

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