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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
Thu, 9 Mar 2006 05:23:59 -0500
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*		Today in Black History - March 9		*

1841 - Sengbe Pieh, known as Joseph Cinque, and the surviving African 
	slaves who revolted on the ship Amistad are ordered freed by the 
	United States Supreme Court and return to Africa after successfully 
	appealing their mutiny conviction on grounds that they were 
	kidnapped by outlawed slave traders.  Their defense attorney is 
	John Quincy Adams, former President of the United States and a 
	Massachusetts senator. Before reaching the Supreme Court, U.S. 
	President Martin Van Buren appeals twice the decision of lower 
	courts to free the slaves.  View the original documents of the U.S. 
	Supreme Court at: 
http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/amistad/supreme-court-statement.ht
ml

1871 - Oscar De Priest is born in Florence, Alabama.  He will be the 
	first congressman elected from a northern state.  He will 
	represent Illinois and be an active advocate for pensions for 
	African American ex-slaves, lynching prevention, and civil rights 
	improvements.

1891 - The North Carolina Agricultural & Technical State University is 
	founded in Greensboro.

1892 - Three friends of Ida B. Wells-Barnett, prominent African American
	businessmen, are lynched in Memphis, Tennessee after an incident 
	that stemmed from their opening a grocery store across the street 
	from a white-owned grocery store.

1911 - White firemen of the Cincinnati, New Orleans and Texas Pacific 
	Railroad struck to protest the hiring of African American 
	firemen.  (For those who don't remember steam engines, firemen 
	worked in the engine stoking the fire, which kept the steam 
	generator going)

1914 - The "New" Southern University campus opens in Scotlandville, 
	Louisiana near Baton Rouge with nine teachers and 47 students.

1930 - Ornette Coleman is born in Fort Worth, Texas.  He will become a
	self-taught musician, beginning on alto saxophone when he is 
	fourteen and moving on to the tenor saxophone when he is sixteen.
	He will be influenced by Charlie Parker, Illinois Jacquet and Big
	Jay McNeely.  A born improvisionalist, he found it difficult to
	fit into his school band as well as the mainstream groups that 
	he will later join.  It wasn't until the late 1950's that he will
	be recognized for his jazz innovations.  He will name his musical
	method "harmolodics." Many musicians and critics and jazz 
	listeners will reject his new jazz as formless and abstract. 
	However, critics of his method will recognize his importance as a
	composer. Critics will praise his compositions, including "Peace," 
	"Lonely Woman," and "Beauty Is a Rare Thing." In 1967 he will win
	a Guggenheim fellowship, the first granted to a jazz musician. He
	will compose and perform film scores, including "Chappaqua" 
	(1965), "Box Office" (1981), and "Naked Lunch" (1991).  In 1997 
	the New York Philharmonic will perform his "Skies of America," a 
	large-scale work that was first recorded by the London Symphony 
	Orchestra in 1972.

1931 - Walter F. White is named NAACP executive secretary.

1933 - Lloyd Price is born.  He will become a successful Rhythm & Blues
	artist and will record "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" ('52 #1 R&B), "Oooh, 
	Oooh, Oooh" ('52 #4 R&B), "Ain't It A Shame" ('53 #4 R&B), "Just 
	Because" ('57 #3 R&B, #29 Pop), "Stagger Lee" ('58 #1 R&B, #1 
	Pop), "Where Were You (On Our Wedding Day)" ('59 #4 R&B, #23 
	Pop), Personality" ('59 #1 R&B, #2 Pop), and fifteen other hits.

1948 - Jeffrey Osborne is born.  He will become an accomplished rhythm
	and blues singer performing as lead singer for the group LTD. 
	He will later become a successful solo artist. 

1964 - Miriam Zenzi Makeba speaks before the United Nations about the 
	apartheid system in South Africa.

1965 - Three white Unitarian ministers, including the Rev. James J. Reeb,
	are attacked with clubs on the streets of Selma, Alabama, while 
	participating in a civil rights demonstration.  Reeb will later 
	die in a Birmingham, Alabama hospital. 

1966 - Andrew F. Brimmer becomes the first African American governor on
	the Federal Reserve Board.

1971 - Emmanuel Lewis is born in Brooklyn, New York.  He will become a
	child actor and will be best known for his television role as 
	"Webster."

1997 - The popular "gangsta rapper" Notorious B.I.G., whose real name is 
	Christopher Wallace, joins the ancestors after being killed in a 
	drive-by shooting in Los Angeles, California at the age of 24.

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