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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:
Sat, 15 Dec 2007 13:54:15 -0500
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*                Today in Black History - December 15         *

1644 - A Dutch land grant is issued to Lucas Santomee, son of 
	Peter Santomee, one of the first 11 Africans brought to
	Manhattan. Among the land granted to Santomee and the 
	original Africans is property in Brooklyn and Greenwich 
	Village.

1706 - A slave named Onesimus arrives in the home of Cotton 
	Mather. The slave's experience and explanation of 
	African inoculation will result in Mather's encouragement 
	of Dr. Zabdiel Boylston to inoculate for smallpox in 
	1721.  

1864 - In one of the decisive battles of the Civil War, two 
	brigades of African American troops help crush one of the 
	South's finest armies at the Battle of Nashville.  
	African American troops open the battle on the first day 
	and successfully engage the right flank of the rebel line.  
	On the second day Col. Charles R. Thompson's African 
	American brigade makes a brilliant charge up Overton Hill.  
	The Thirteenth U.S. Colored Troops will sustain more 
	casualties than any other regiment involved in the battle.

1896 - Julia Terry Hammonds receives a patent for the apparatus 
	for holding yarn skeins.

1934 - Maggie Lena Walker, the first woman to head a bank, joins 
	the ancestors at the age of 69.

1934 - The NAACP's Spingarn Award is awarded to William Taylor 
	Burwell Williams, Tuskegee dean and agent of the Jeanes 
	and Slater funds, for his achievements as an educator.

1939 - Cynthia Ann "Cindy" Birdsong is born in Mount Holly 
	Township, New Jersey.  She will become a singer with Patti
	LaBelle and the Bluebells and Diana Ross and the Supremes.

1941 - Lena Horne records the torch classic for Victor Records, 
	that will become her signature song: "Stormy Weather." 

1943 - Thomas W. "Fats" Waller joins the ancestors, outside Kansas 
	City, Missouri at the age of 39, from pneumonia.  The self-
	taught piano player began recording as a teenager and 
	became one of a small group of African American pianists to 
	make piano rolls for the growing player piano industry.  
	Waller's first solo recording in 1926 led to his own radio 
	show and three tours of France.  Waller was known for such 
	popular songs as "Ain't Misbehavin'," "I'm Gonna Sit Right 
	Down and Write Myself a Letter," and "Honeysuckle Rose."
	He also wrote music for the stage and the movies, most 
	notably "Stormy Weather."

1943 - The San Francisco Sun-Reporter is established.  Its co-
	founder, Thomas Fleming will be its editor and a working 
	journalist into his nineties.

1943 - The NAACP's Spingarn Medal is presented to William H. Hastie 
	"for his distinguished career as a jurist and as an 
	uncompromising champion of equal justice."

1950 - Ezzard Charles knocks out Nick Barone to retain his 
	heavyweight boxing title.

1954 - The Netherlands Antilles become a co-equal part of the 
	Kingdom of the Netherlands.

1961 - Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, psychologist and educator, is awarded 
	the NAACP's Spingarn Medal for pioneering studies that 
	influenced the Supreme Court decision on school 
	desegregation.

1961 - Police use tear gas and leashed dogs to stop a mass 
	demonstration by fifteen hundred African Americans in Baton
	Rouge, Louisiana.

1980 - Dave Winfield signs a ten-year contract with the New York 
	Yankees, for somewhere between $1.3 and $1.5 million.  He 
	will become the wealthiest player in the history of U.S. 
	team sports.  The total package for the outfielder is said 
	to be worth over $22 million dollars.

1985 - Businessman J. Bruce Llewellyn and former basketball star 
	Julius Erving become owners of Philadelphia Coca-Cola 
	Bottling, the fourth-largest African American business in 
	the United States.

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