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*		Today in Black History - February 18                *

************************************************************
* "Once a year we go through the charade of February being 'Black       *
* History Month.' Black History Month needs to be a 12-MONTH THING. *
* When we all learn about our history, about how much we've              *
* accomplished while being handicapped with RACISM, it can only        *
* inspire us to greater heights, knowing we're on the giant shoulders   *
* of our ANCESTORS." Subscribe to the Munirah Chronicle and receive   *
* Black Facts every day of the year.                                                  *
*  To SUBSCRIBE send E-mail to: <[log in to unmask]>  *
*  In the E-mail body place:  Subscribe Munirah Your FULL Name          *
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1688 - The first formal protest against slavery by an organized white 
	body in the English American colonies is made by Germantown,
	Pennsylvania Quakers and Mennonites at a monthly meeting. 
             When some members of the Quaker community began to buy 
             slaves, Francis Daniel Pastorius, the founder of Germantown, 
             was outraged.  On this day, Pastorius will meet with three 
             other Germantown Quaker men to draft a denunciation of 
             slavery. Known as "The Germantown Protest," it is regarded as 
             the first protest against slavery by whites in the American 
             colonies.  The reasoning of the denunciation was based on the 
             Golden Rule: since white people did not want to be slaves 
             themselves, they had no right to enslave Black African men 
             and women.  Despite the Germantown Protest, some Quaker 
             families continued to keep slaves.  Nonetheless, by the 19th 
             century Quakers were prominent in the movement to abolish 
             slavery in the United States.

1865 - Confederate Troops abandon Charleston, South Carolina.   The 
	first Union troops to enter the city include the Twenty-first 
	U.S. Colored Troops, followed by two companies of the Fifty-
	fourth Massachusetts Volunteers.

1867 - The Augusta Institute is founded in Georgia. It is established 
	as an institution of higher learning for African American 
	students, and moves to Atlanta in 1879. In 1913, the name is
	changed to Morehouse College.  

1894 - Paul Revere Williams is born in Los Angeles, California.  He 
	will become one of the most famous African American 
	architects, designer of private  residences in Los Angeles, 
	the Hollywood YMCA, the Beverly-Wiltshire Hotel, UCLA's 
             Botany Building and many others.  Among his many awards 
             will be the NAACP's Spingarn Medal in 1953.

1931 - Toni Morrison is born in Lorain, Ohio.  She will become one of 
	the most celebrated modern novelists of the 20th century, 
	winning the National Book Critics Award in 1978 for "Song of 
	Solomon" and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1988 for 
	"Beloved."  In 1993, she will become the first African 
	American to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.

1965 - The Gambia gains its independence from Great Britain.

1973 - Palmer Hayden joins the ancestors in New York City.  One of the 
	principal artists of the Harlem Renaissance who, like Henry 0. 
	Tanner and others, studied in Paris, his most enduring work 
	often depicted everyday scenes of African American life. 

1979 - The miniseries "Roots: The Next Generations" premiers on ABC 
	TV. 

1995 - The NAACP replaces veteran chairman William Gibson with Myrlie
	Evers-Williams, the widow of slain civil rights leader Medgar 
	Evers, after the rank-and-file declared no confidence in 
	Gibson's leadership.

2006 - Shani Davis, from Chicago's South Side, becomes the first Black 
	athlete to claim an individual gold medal in Winter Olympic 
	history, winning the 1,000-meter speedskating race in 1 min., 
	8.89 seconds.

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