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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
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Sun, 31 Dec 2006 20:22:16 -0500
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*                Today in Black History - December 31                 *

 

***********************************************************************

* The Nguzo Saba - The seven principles of Kwanzaa - Principle for    *

* Day #6 -  Kuumba (koo-OOM-bah) Creativity: To do always as much as  *

* we can, in the way that we can, in order to leave our community     *

* more beautiful than when we inherited it.                           *

* http://www.endarkenment.com/kwanzaa/                                *

***********************************************************************

 

1775 - Alarmed by the impact of the British Dunmore proclamation, that

            would give freedom to slaves who would fight on their

            side, Gen. George Washington reverses himself and authorizes the


            enlistment of free Blacks.

 

1783 - The importation of African slaves is banned by all of the 

            northern states in the United States.

 

1862 - The Ebenezer African Methodist Episcopal Church holds a Watch 

            Night service in Suburban Maryland.  It begins a tradition when 

            African Americans pray and worship in anticipation of the next 

            day, New Year's Day 1863, when President Lincoln's Emancipation

            Proclamation is to take effect. 

 

1871 - Annie Holland is born.  She will become an educator and will 

            found the Parent Teachers Association (PTA) in North Carolina.

 

1900 - Sculptor and educator Selma Burke is born in Mooresville, North

            Carolina.  She will be commissioned to create a profile of 

            President Franklin D. Roosevelt after a national competition 

            sponsored by the Fine Arts Commission in Washington, DC.  The 

            completed project, a plaque, is unveiled and installed at the 

            Record of Deeds Building in Washington DC. 

 

1930 - Odetta Felious Gordon Holmes is born in Birmingham, Alabama.  She 

            will become a famous folksinger, known simply as "Odetta", who 

            will sing all over the world and at major peace and civil rights


            meetings, including the 1963 March on Washington.

 

1948 - Donna Summer is born in Boston, Massachusetts.  She will be the

            reigning "Queen of Disco" music in the 1970's, known for her

            renditions of "Bad Girls" and "Last Dance." 

 

1953 - Hulan Jack is inaugurated as Manhattan borough president, the 

            first African American to hold the post.

 

1953 - The NAACP's Spingarn Medal is presented to Paul R. Williams for 

            his achievements as an architect.

 

1962 - Katanga becomes part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. 

 

1964 - In a speech before a group of young people, Malcolm X urges them

            "to see for yourself and listen for yourself and think for

            yourself.  This generation, especially of our people, have a

            burden, more so than at any other time in history.  The most

            important thing we can learn to do today is think for

            ourselves."

 

1972 - Roberto Clemente, Pittsburgh Pirate slugger, joins the ancestors

            after a plane crash on his way to a humanitarian mission to 

            Central America.

 

1976 - Roland Hayes joins the ancestors in Boston, Massachusetts at the

            age of 89. He had been an acclaimed tenor whose pioneering 

            recitals of German lieder and other classical music opened the 

            concert stage for African American singers

 

1984 - The first nationally broadcast telethon for the United Negro

            College Fund raises $14.1 million.  The telethon will become an

            annual fundraising drive that will support more than 40

            historically African American institutions of higher learning 

            and draw widespread individual and corporate support.


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