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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Tue, 2 Jan 2007 10:19:40 -0500
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*                 Today in Black History - January 2                 *

 

1800 - Members of the Free Black Commission of Philadelphia petitions 

            Congress to abolish slavery.

 

1831 - The "Liberator" is published for the first time.  An abolitionist

            newspaper, it is started by William Lloyd Garrison.

 

1837 - The first National Negro Congress is held in Washington, DC.

 

1872 - The Mississippi legislature meets and elects John R. Lynch as the

            Speaker of the House, at the age of twenty-four.

 

1898 - Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander is born in Philadelphia,

            Pennsylvania.  She will become the first African American to 

            earn a Ph.D. in economics. 

 

1903 - President Theodore Roosevelt shuts down the U.S. Post Office in

            Indianola, Mississippi, for refusing to accept its appointed 

            postmistress because she is an African American.

 

1915 - John Hope Franklin is born in Rentlesville, Oklahoma.  He will

            become a scholar and historian most famous for his book "From

            Slavery to Freedom: A History of Negro Americans," which will 

            sell over two million copies.

 

1947 - Calvin Hill is born in the Turner Station neighborhood in

            Dundalk, Maryland.  He will be a running back with a 12 year

            National Football League career from 1969 to 1981. He played for


            the Dallas Cowboys, Washington Redskins and Cleveland Browns.

            He will be named to the Pro Bowl team 4 times (1969, 1972, 1973 

            and 1974). He will be the father of NBA star Grant Hill.

 

1957 - Sugar Ray Robinson is defeated by Gene Fullmer for the world

            middleweight boxing title.

 

1963 - Bobby "Blue" Bland's "That's The Way Love Is" is released by 

            Duke Records.

 

1965 - The Selma, Alabama voter registration drive begins, led by the

            Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  It is a major effort to get

            African American voters registered to vote in Alabama.

 

1970 - Clifton Reginald Wharton, Jr. becomes the first African American

            president of Michigan State University and the first African

            American president of a major American university in the 

            twentieth century.

 

1970 - Dr. Benjamin E. Mays is named the first African American 

            president of the Atlanta, Georgia Board of Education.

 

1977 - Erroll Garner, pianist and composer, joins the ancestors in Los 

            Angeles, California.  He was considered the best-selling jazz 

            pianist in the world, most famous for the jazz standard "Misty."

 

1977 - Ellis Wilson joins the ancestors.   An artist known for his 

            striking paintings of African Americans, his work had been 

            exhibited at the New York World's Fair of 1939, the Harmon 

            Foundation, and the Detroit Institute of Arts.  Among his 

            best-known works are "Funeral Procession," "Field Workers," and 

            "To Market."

 

1980 - Larry Williams, rhythm and blues singer best known for "Bony 

            Maronie"), joins the ancestors. He is found dead with a 

            gunshot wound to the head at the age of 45.

 

1981 - David Lynch, singer with The Platters, joins the ancestors at the 

            age of 76.

 

1984 - W. Wilson Goode, the son of a sharecropper, is sworn in as the

            first African American mayor of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

 

1991 - Sharon Pratt Dixon is sworn in as mayor of Washington, DC, 

            becoming the first African American woman to head a city of 

            Washington's size and prominence.


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