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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:
Tue, 25 Dec 2001 14:21:04 -0500
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*                Today in Black History - December 25               *

1760 - Jupiter Hammon, a New York slave who was probably the first
        African American poet, publishes "An Evening Thought:
        Salvation by Christ".

1776 - Oliver Cromwell and Prince Whipple are among soldiers who cross
        the Delaware River with George Washington to successfully attack
        the Hessians in Trenton, New Jersey, during the Revolutionary
        War.

1807 - Charles B. Ray is born in Falmouth, Massachusetts.  He will enter
        Wesleyan University in Connecticut and be forced to withdraw due
        to objections from northerners and southerners.  He will later
        become a prominent African American leader.

1835 - Benjamin Tucker Tanner is born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
        Father of famous painter Henry O. Tanner, he will become an
        A.M.E. bishop and editor of the "Christian Recorder" and
        founder in 1884 of the A.M.E. Church Review," a leading
        magazine of the day.

1837 - Cheyney University is established in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
        It will be first known as the "Institute for Colored Youth".  The
        school will be moved to George Cheyney's farm, 24 miles west of
        Philadelphia, in 1902.  It will be renamed in 1913 to "The
        Cheyney Training School for Teachers."  Cheyney University of
        Pennsylvania is the first historically Black institution of
        learning in America.  It is also the first college in the United
        States to receive official state certification as an institution
        of higher academic education for African Americans.

1837 - Charles Lenox Remond begins his career as an antislavery agent.
        Remond will be one of the first African Americans employed as a
        lecturer by the antislavery movement.  He will work many years
        for the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society.

1865 - Atlanta University in Atlanta, Georgia, Shaw University in
        Raleigh, North Carolina, and Virginia Union University in
        Richmond, Virginia are founded.

1875 - Charles Caldwell joins the ancestors after being assassinated in
        Clinton, Mississippi.  He was the first African American in the
        state of Mississippi to be accused of the murder of a white man
        and found "not guilty" by an all-white jury. He was later
        elected to the state senate.

1907 - Cabel "Cab" Calloway is born in Rochester, New York.  A versatile
        jazz bandleader and singer who will popularize scat singing, his
        song "Minnie the Moocher" will be the first million-selling
        jazz record.  Calloway will also appear in the movie "Porgy and
        Bess" as well as perform as a singer in the touring companies
        of "Porgy" and "Hello Dolly."

1951 - Harry T. Moore, a Florida NAACP official, joins the ancestors
        after being killed by a bomb in his home in Mims, Florida.
        Active in expanding the African American vote in Florida and
        in desegregating the University of Florida, Moore will be
        posthumously awarded the NAACP's Spingarn Medal in 1952.

1951 - The NAACP's Spingarn Medal is presented to Mabel K. Staupers for
        her leadership in the field of nursing.

1956 - The home of Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth, a Birmingham, Alabama
        protest leader, is destroyed by a dynamite bomb.

1958 - Rickey Henderson is born.  He will grow up to become a baseball
        player with the Oakland Athletics and New York Yankees and will
        become the stolen base king.

1965 - The Congress of Racial Equality announces that its national
        director, Dr. James Farmer, would resign on March 1.

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