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The Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 29 Apr 2010 07:52:24 -0400
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*                   Today in Black History - April 29            *

1854 - Ashmun lnstitute, later Lincoln University, is founded in 
	Oxford, Pennsylvania.  It will be "the first institution 
	founded anywhere in the world to provide a higher 
	education in the arts and sciences for youth of African 
	descent." (This applies to the modern era).

1881 - Julian Francis Abele is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
	He will become an architect widely believed to have 
	designed Philadelphia's Museum of Art and the Free Library, 
	as well as major buildings on the Duke University campus.

1899 - Edward "Duke" Kennedy Ellington is born in Washington, DC.  
	He will form his first band in 1919, and move to New York 
	City in 1922. His five-year tenure at the famed Cotton 
	Club will garner him wide acclaim.  Scoring both his first
	musical and making his recording debut in 1924, Ellington 
	will be known as the first conventional jazz composer, 
	although he will also become renowned for his Sacred	
	Concerts in the mid-1960's.  His most notable works 
	include "Take the A Train," "Mood Indigo," "Sophisticated 
	Ladies," and "I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good." He will
	join the ancestors on May 24, 1974.

1915 - Donald Mills is born in Piqua, Ohio.  With his brothers, 
	Herbert, Harry and John, the Mills Brothers will begin 
	performing in 1922 in their hometown and over time will 
	sell an estimated 50 million records. The group will break 
	racial barriers in the era of Jim Crow and sing before 
	royalty in London. From the early 1930s onward, the Mills 
	Brothers will be a nationwide hit on radio and in record 
	sales. In 1931, the song "Tiger Rag" will sell 1 million 
	copies. Some of their other hit songs will include "You 
	Always Hurt the One You Love," "Glow Worm," "Yellow Bird," 
	and "Paper Doll." The brothers will also appear in several 
	movies, including "The Big Broadcast" in 1932, and "Twenty 
	Million Sweethearts" in 1934. Donald will be the last 
	surviving member of the group and will tour in his later 
	years with his youngest son, John, after his brothers 
	retire in 1982. He will accept a Grammy Award for Life
	Achievement for the Mills Brothers in 1998. He will join 
	the ancestors in 1999.

1922 - Parren James Mitchell is born in Baltimore, Maryland. In 
	1971, he will become the first African American elected to
	Congress from the State of Maryland.

1928 - Carl Edward Gardner is born in Tyler, Texas. He will become 
	a singer and a member of the 1960's Rhythm and Blues group,
	The Coasters.

1934 - Otis Rush is born in Philadelphia, Mississippi.  He will 
	become a blues musician and will help to shape Chicago's 
	West Side blues sound.

1948 - Willi Smith is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  A noted 
	designer, he will take his first job with Arnold Scaasi in 
	New York City and form his own fashion label, Willi Wear 
	Ltd., in 1976.  He will be a Coty Award winner in 1983 and 
	will lead his company until he joins the ancestors in 1987.

1967 - Mrs. Robert W. Clayton is elected president of the YWCA, the 
	first African American president of the organization.

1983 - Harold Washington is sworn in as the first African American 
	mayor of Chicago.

1992 - Rioting erupts in Los Angeles after a jury acquits four 
	white policemen of charges related to the videotaped 
	beating of African American motorist Rodney King.  The 
	National Guard and federal troops are mobilized to deal 
	with the civil disturbance, which will last several days 
	and cost the lives of 58 persons.  There are demonstrations
	and riots in other American cities.

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