* Today in Black History - May 26 *
1799 - Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin is born in Moscow, Russia. He will be
first published in the journal, "The Messenger of Europe" in 1814.
Pushkin today is regarded as the Father of Russian Literature.
1899 - Aaron Douglas is born in Topeka, Kansas. He will become a world-
renowned painter and muralist whose work will embrace the African
ancestral arts and express pride in the African American image at
a time when doing so was highly unpopular. His most famous works
will be "Aspects of Negro Life," "Let My People Go," "Judgment Day"
and "Building More Stately Mansions."
1907 - Elizabeth Keckley, seamstress and confidante to Mary Todd Lincoln,
joins the ancestors after succumbing to a paralytic stroke in
Washington, DC. Keckley was the author of "Behind the Scenes or
Thirty Years a Slave," and "Four Years in the White House" (1868),
one of the first insider accounts of a White House Presidency.
1926 - Miles (Dewey) Davis is born in Alton, Illinois. For over four decades,
he will be one of the most innovative and influential jazz trumpeters,
known for his hard bop and jazz and fusion accomplishments. Most
noted for the albums "Sketches of Spain," "Miles Smiles," and "Kind of
Blue," he will also win three Grammy awards for his albums "We Want
Miles," "Decoy," and "Tutu" and be awarded the French Legion d'Honneur
in 1991.
1943 - President Edwin Barclay of Liberia, becomes the first African president
to pay an official visit to an American president, arriving at the
White House.
1949 - Philip Michael Thomas is born in Columbus Ohio. He will become an
actor and will be best known for his role in the TV series, "Miami
Vice." He also will have roles in the movies "Homeboy," "Stigma,"
"Streetfight," "Black Fist," "Miami Vice-The Movie," "Miami Vice 2 -
The Prodigal Son," "A Fight For Jenny," "Death Drug," "A Little Piece
Of Sunshine," "Sparkle," and "The Wizard of Speed and Time."
1961 - The Freedom Ride Coordinating Committee is established in Atlanta,
Georgia.
1968 - Ruth A. Lucas is promoted to Colonel in the U.S. Air Force, the first
African American woman to achieve this rank.
1968 - Arthur Ashe wins the National Men's Singles in the U.S. Lawn Tennis
Association Open Tournament, becoming the first African American male
to win a major tennis title.
1969 - The National Black Economic Development Conference adopts a manifesto
in a Detroit meeting, calling for $500 Million in reparations from
white churches.
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