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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Mon, 4 Jul 2005 08:12:06 -0400
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*                   Today in Black History - July 4                    *

1776 - The Declaration of Independence is adopted.  A section written by
        Thomas Jefferson denouncing slavery is deleted.

1779 - Colonel Arent Schuyler De Puyster notes the presence of "Jean
        Baptiste Point DuSable, a handsome Negro, well-educated and settled
        at Eschikagou."  It is the first recorded mention of "DuSable, who
        settled the area that will become known as Chicago.

1827 - New York State abolishes slavery.

1845 - Wildfire Lewis is born in Greenwich, New York.  After living with
        Chippewa relatives, she will enroll in Oberlin College's preparatory
        and college program.  Changing her name to Mary Edmonia Lewis, she
        will travel to Boston and abroad where she will become one of the
        most outstanding sculptors of her day.  Among her most famous works
        will be "Forever Free," "Hagar in Her Despair in the Wilderness" and
        "Death of Cleopatra."

1875 - White Democrats kill several African Americans in terrorist attacks
        in Vicksburg, Mississippi.

1881 - Tuskegee Institute opens in Tuskegee, Alabama, with Booker T.
Washington
        as its first president.

1892 - Arthur George Gaston is born in a log cabin, built by his
grandparents,
        former slaves, in Marengo County, Alabama, near Demopolis.  He will
        drop out of school after the tenth grade and will become one of the
        most successful proponents of Booker T. Washington's brand of capitalism.
        A Washington disciple as a child, Gaston became a self-made millionaire
        and one of the richest African American men in America in the 1950s.  His
        many businesses thrived on the social separateness legislated by the Jim
        Crow laws in segregated Alabama. Gaston will make it his personal mission
        to urge African Americans to seek "green power," a term he remembered
        Washington using.  His quiet role in the civil right movement was also
        noted, saying once that African Americans needed a Martin Luther King, Jr.
        of economics to fire them up the way King had about integration.  Gaston
        made the following statement that summed up his position on economic
        empowerment for people of color -- "It doesn't do any good to arrive at
        first-class citizenship, if you arrive broke."  He will live to the age of
        103.

1910 - Jack Johnson KOs James Jeffries in 15 rounds, ending Jeffries'
come-back try.

1938 - Bill Withers, rhythm & blues singer ("Lean on Me"), is born in West
Virginia.

1959 - The Cayman Islands, separated from Jamaica, are made a British Crown
Colony.

1963 - Marian Anderson and Ralph Bunche receive the first Medals of Freedom
from
        President John F. Kennedy, the creator of the award.

1970 - 100 persons are injured in racially motivated disturbances in Asbury
Park,
        New Jersey.

1990 - "2 Live Crew" release "Banned in the USA"; the lyrics quote "The Star
        Spangled Banner" & "The Gettysburg Address."

1991 - The National Civil Rights Museum officially opens at the Lorraine
Motel in
        Memphis, Tennessee, the site of the assassination of civil rights leader
        Martin Luther King, Jr.

1994 - Rwandan Tutsi rebels seize control of most of their country's
capital,
        Kigali, and continue advancing on areas held by the Hutu-led government.

2003 - Barry White, Rhythm & Blues balladeer, joins the ancestors at the age
of 58
        after succumbing to complications of high blood pressure, kidney disease
        and a mild stroke.  His hits included "Can't Get Enough of Your Love,
        Babe" and "I've Got So Much to Give."

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