* Today in Black History - September 2 *
1766 - Abolitionist, inventor, and entrepreneur, James Forten is born in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1833 - Oberlin College, one of the first colleges to admit African Americans,
is founded in Oberlin, Ohio.
1864 - In series of battles around Chaffin's Farm in the suburbs of Richmond,
Virginia, African American troops capture entrenchments at New Market
Heights, make a gallant but unsuccessful assault on Fort Gilmer and
help repulse a Confederate counterattack on Fort Harrison. The
Thirty-Ninth U.S. Colored Troops will win a Congressional Medal of
Honor in the engagements.
1902 - "In Dahomey" premieres at the Old Globe Theater in Boston,
Massachusetts. With music by Will Marion Cook and lyrics by poet
Paul Laurence Dunbar, it is the most successful musical of its day.
1914 - Romare Bearden is born in Charlotte, North Carolina. A student at
New York University, the American Artists School, Columbia
University, and the Sorbonne, Bearden's depiction of the rituals and
social customs of African American life will be imbued with an
eloquence and power that will earn him accolades as one of the
finest artists of the 20th century and a master of collage. Among
his honors will be election to the American Academy of Arts and
Letters and the National Institute of Arts and Letters, and receiving
the President's National Medal of Arts in 1987.
1928 - Horace Ward Martin Tavares Silver is born in Norwalk, Connecticut. He
will become a jazz pianist, bandleader, and composer who will
initially lead the Jazz Messengers with drummer Art Blakey before
forming his own band in 1956. A pioneer of the hard bop style, he
will attract to his band the talents of Art Farmer, Donald Byrd, and
Blue Mitchell, among others.
1945 - The end of World War II (V-J Day). A total of 1,154,720 African
Americans have been inducted or drafted into the armed forces.
Official records list 7,768 African American commissioned officers on
August 31, 1945. At the height of the conflict, 3,902 African
American women (115 officers) were enrolled in the Women's Army
Auxiliary Corps (WACS) and 68 were in the Navy auxiliary, the WAVES.
The highest ranking African American women were Major Harriet M. West
and Major Charity E. Adams. Distinguished Unit Citations were awarded
to the 969th Field Artillery Battalion, the 614th Tank Destroyer
Battalion, and the 332nd Fighter Group (Tuskegee Airmen).
1956 - The Tennessee National Guard is sent to Clinton, Tennessee, to quell
white mobs demonstrating against school integration.
1960 - Eric Dickerson is born. He will become a professional football player
and will become NFC Rookie of the Year in 1983. He will also set a
NFL single-season rushing record of 2,105 yards in 1984.
1963 - Alabama Governor George Wallace blocks the integration of Tuskegee
High School in Tuskegee, Alabama.
1965 - Lennox Lewis, former WBC boxing champ, is born.
1966 - Frank Robinson is named Most Valuable Player of the American League.
1971 - Cheryl White becomes the first African American woman jockey to win a
sanctioned horse race.
1975 - Joseph W. Hatchett sworn in as first African American state supreme
court justice in the South (Florida) in the twentieth century.
1978 - Reggie Jackson is 19th player to hit 20 home runs in 11 straight
years.
1989 - Rev. Al Sharpton leads a civil rights march through the Bensonhurst
section of Brooklyn, New York.
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