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Sun, 29 Oct 2006 08:45:01 -0500
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*              Today in Black History - October 29           *

 

1902 - The Dinwiddle Quartet from Virginia is the first 

            African American singing group on record when they 

            record six single sided discs, including "Down at the 

            Old Camp Ground," on the Victory Talking Machine 

            Company's Monarch label. 

 

1923 - Runnin' Wild opens at the Colonial Theater, Broadway.

            Miller and Lyles Productions introduced the Charleston 

            to New York and the world.

 

1924 - Dixie to Broadway, "the first real revue by Negroes," 

            opens at the Broadhurst Theater, New York City, with 

            Florence Mills in the starring role.

 

1929 - The collapse of the stock market and the beginning of 

            the Great Depression.  By 1937, 26 per cent of African 

            American males will be unemployed.

 

1945 - Beatrice Moore is born in New York, New York.  She will 

            become an actress and singer better known as Melba 

            Moore. Her big break will come when she joins the cast 

            of the Broadway musical "Hair." She will eventually win 

            the lead role. It will be the first time that an African 

            American actress replaces a white actress (Diane Keaton)

            for a lead role on Broadway. That engagement will be 

            followed with another Broadway hit, "Purlie," which 

            earns her a Tony Award and rave reviews.  This success 

            will be followed by appearances in film and television.

            In addition to her success in acting, she will have a 

            fruitful recording career.

 

1947 - The President's Committee on Civil Rights condemns racial

            injustices in America in a formal report, "To Secure 

            These Rights." 

 

1947 - Texas Southern University is established. 

 

1947 - The NAACP Spingarn Medal is awarded to Dr. Percy L. Julian 

            for his achievements as a scientist.

 

1949 - Alonzo G. Moron, from the Virgin Islands, becomes the 

            first person of African descent to become president of 

            Hampton Institute (now University) in Hampton, Virginia. 

 

1960 - Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) boxes in his first professional

            fight, beating Tunney Hunsaker in 6 rounds.

 

1961 - Randy Jackson is born in Gary, Indiana. He will become a 

            member of the famed family group, "The Jackson Five."

 

1969 - Johnson Products Company of Chicago, Illinois, the largest 

            African American hair-care products manufacturer, is 

            incorporated.  Founded by George Johnson in 1954, in 1971,

            it will become the first African American owned company 

            listed on the American Stock Exchange. 

 

1969 - The U.S. Supreme Court states that school systems must end

            segregation "at once" and "operate now and hereafter only 

            unitary schools." In the Mississippi case, Alexander v. 

            Holmes, the Court abandons the principle of "all 

            deliberate speed."

 

1974 - Muhammad Ali defeats George Foreman in Zaire to regain his 

            heavyweight crown in a fight billed as "The Rumble in the 

            Jungle."  In addition to the fight being the first 

            heavyweight title fight held in Africa, it is the 14th 

            Anniversary of Ali's professional boxing debut. 

 

1981 - William Otis Walker, publisher of the "Cleveland Call & 

            Post," joins the ancestors at the age of 85.  He was the 

            first African American to hold a post in the Ohio Cabinet 

            in 1963, and was national chairman for "Black Republicans 

            for Reagan and Bush" in 1980.

 

1987 - Thomas Hearns wins an unprecedented 4th boxing title in 

            different weight classes.


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