* Today in Black History - June 26 *
1893 - William Lee Conley "Big Bill Broonzy", blues singer, is born in
Scott, Mississippi.
1894 - The American Railway Union, led by Eugene Debs, calls a general
strike in sympathy with Pullman workers.
1934 - W.E.B. Du Bois resigns from the NAACP over the association's
policies and strategies. Du Bois had been editor of the
association's "Crisis" magazine and director of publicity and
research. The resignation brings control of the magazine under
the leadership of of chief executive Walter White and its new
editor and NAACP assistant secretary, Roy Wilkins.
1938 - James Weldon Johnson, dies of injuries received in an automobile
accident near his summer home in Wiscosset, Maine.
1940 - Billy Davis Jr., singer with the 5th Dimension, is born in St. Louis,
Missouri.
1950 - The American Medical Association seats the first African American
delegates at its convention.
1952 - The African National Congress begins its Defiance of Unjust Laws
campaign in South Africa.
1956 - Jazz trumpeter Clifford Brown dies in an auto accident on the
Pennsylvania Turnpike. Founder of the Brown-Roach Quintet with
Max Roach two years earlier, Brown had built a reputation as one
of the finest jazz trumpeters of his day as a major proponent of
hard bop.
1959 - Prince Edward County, Virginia, abandons (closes) the public school
system in an attempt to prevent school desegregation.
1959 - Floyd Paterson loses the Heavyweight Boxing Championship to Ingemar
Johansson of Sweden.
1966 - The 220-mile voter registration march from Memphis, Tennessee to
Jackson, Mississippi ends with a rally of some thirty thousand at
the Mississippi state capitol.
1970 - Frank Robinson hits 2 grand slams as Baltimore Orioles beat the
Washington Senators 12-2.
1960 - Madagascar becomes independent from France.
1978 - "Girl," a single-sentence two page short story of a mother's preachy
advice to her daughter, appears in the "New Yorker" magazine.
Written by Jamaica Kincaid, the story will make her a literary
celebrity and will be followed by short story collections and the
novels "Annie John" and "Lucy".
1979 - Muhammad Ali announces that he was retiring as world heavyweight boxing
champion. The 37-year-old fighter said, "Everything gets old, and you
can't go on like years ago." The "Float like a butterfly, sting like a
bee" act was no more.
1990 - African National Congress leader Nelson Mandela addresses the U.S.
Congress, asking for "material resources" to hasten the end of white-
led rule.
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