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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 30 May 2008 10:18:13 -0400
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*		    Today in Black History - May 30		      *

1822 - Denmark Vesey's conspiracy to free the slaves of Charleston, South 
	Carolina, and surrounding areas is thwarted when a house slave 
	betrays the plot to whites.  Vesey's bold plan had attracted over 
	9,000 slaves and freemen of the area including Peter Poyas, a 
	ship's carpenter, Gullah Jack, Blind Phillip, Ned Bennett and 
	Mingo Harth.  Later it will be considered one of the most complex 
	and elaborate slave liberation plans ever undertaken.

1831 - James Walker Hood is born in Kennett Township, Chester County, 
	Pennsylvania. He will become a minister in New York City in the 
	A.M.E. Zion Church. He will become the first African American to
	publish a collection of sermons when he publishes "The Negro in 
	the Christian Pulpit." His other works will include "One Hundred 
	Years of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church," and "The 
	Plan of The Apocalypse." He will join the ancestors on October 
	30, 1918.

1854 - The Kansas-Nebraska Act repeals the Missouri Compromise and opens 
	the Northern territory to slavery.

1902 - Lincoln Theodore Monroe Andrew Perry is born in Key West, Florida.  
	He will become the first real African American film star known as 
	"Stepin Fetchit."  Many sources will cite 1892, 1896, or 1898 as 
	his birth date, but he will maintain his birth date as 1902.  He 
	will star in many films, among which are "Amazing Grace," "The 
	Sun Shines Bright," "Miracle in Harlem," and "Judge Priest."  His 
	humbling, ingratiating style of acting will appeal to the movie-
	going public of his day, but unfortunately becomes a stereotype 
	for African American actors in the early years of cinema. He will 
	join the ancestors in 1985.

1903 - Countee Cullen is born in Louisville, Kentucky.  Many sources will 
	state that his birthplace is New York City, but Cullen will be 
	reared in New York City by his paternal grandmother until 1918, 
	when he is adopted by the Reverend Frederick Asbury Cullen, 
	minister of Salem M.E. Church, one of the largest congregations 
	in Harlem. This will be a turning point in his life, for he will 
	be introduced into the very center of black activism and 
	achievement. He will win a citywide poetry contest as a schoolboy 
	and see his winning stanzas widely reprinted.  He will attend New
	York University (B.A., 1925), win the Witter Bynner Poetry Prize, 
	and be elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Major American literary 
	magazines will accept his poems regularly, and his first 
	collection of poems, "Color" (1925), will be published to critical
	acclaim before he finishes college.  His several volumes of poetry
	will include "Copper Sun" (1927); "The Black Christ" (1929); and 
	"On These I Stand" (published posthumously, 1947), his selection 
	of poems by which he wished to be remembered.  Cullen will also 
	write a novel dealing with life in Harlem, "One Way to Heaven" 
	(1931), and a children's book, "The Lost Zoo" (1940). He will join
	the ancestors on January 9, 1946.

1915 - Henry Aaron Hill is born in St. Joseph, North Carolina. He will 
	become a trained chemist and will receive his Ph.D. in Chemistry 
	from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1942. He will 
	become founder and president of the Riverside Research Laboratory 
	in 1961. In 1977, he will become the first African American 
	president of the American Chemical Society. He will join the 
	ancestors on March 17, 1979.

1943 - James Earl Chaney is born in Meridian, Mississippi. He will become 
	a civil rights activist and joins the Congress For Racial Equality.
	During Freedom Summer (1964 - when civil rights organizations 
	begin an extensive voter registration and desegregation campaign 
	in Mississippi), he will join the ancestors after being killed by 
	the Ku Klux Klan in Greenwood along with two white civil rights 
	activists.

1943 - Gale Sayers is born in Wichita, Kansas.  He will become an 
	outstanding running back and a first-round draft pick of the 
	Chicago Bears in 1965.  He will set the individual game record for 
	touchdowns scored (six). He will be elected to the Football Hall 
	of Fame in 1977, the youngest player ever to receive the honor.

1949 - Lydell Mitchell is born in Salem, New Jersey. He will become a 
	football player and All-American running back at Pennsylvania 
	State University in 1971. He will go on to play for the Baltimore
	Colts from 1972 to 1977. While at Baltimore, he will set the 
	Colts' record for rushing attempts (1391) and rushing yards 
	(5487).

1953 - Eric Arthur "Dooley" Wilson joins the ancestors in Los Angeles, 
	California at the age of 59. He was a popular jazz drummer in 
	Europe and America. He also worked as an actor, his most notable 
	part playing the pianist "Sam" in the movie "Casablanca." He also
	appeared in the movies "Stormy Monday" and "Night in New Orleans."
	
1956 - African Americans begin a bus boycott in Tallahassee, Florida with 
	the goal of desegregating bus seating.

1965 - Vivian Malone becomes the first African American to graduate from 
	the University of Alabama, a college that had been one of the last
	bastions of racial segregation in the South.

1967 - The state of Biafra secedes and declares its independence from 
	Nigeria. Biafra is inhabited primarily by Igbos(also spelled Ibos)
	who live in southeastern Nigeria.  Two months after independence, 
	Nigeria will attack Biafra and start a war that will last until 
	1970 with Biafra's surrender. Over a million people will die due 
	to war and famine.

1971 - Willie Mays scores his 1,950th run.

1993 - Herman "Sonny" Blount joins the ancestors in Birmingham, Alabama at 
	the age of 79. He had been a prominent jazz bandleader, arranger 
	and pianist. He was better known as "Sun Ra," and was the founder 
	of Saturn Records. Three documentaries produced about Sun Ra 
             were "The Cry of Jazz" (1959), "Space is the Place" (1971) and "Sun 
             Ra:A Joyful Noise" (1980).

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