* Today in Black History - October 17 *
1711 - Jupiter Hammon, the first African American to publish
poetry (Complete Works), is born.
1787 - Boston African Americans, led by Prince Hall, submit to
the State Legislature in Boston, Massachusetts, a
petition asking for equal educational rights and
facilities. The petition is not granted.
1806 - Jean Jacques Dessalines, revolutionist and Emperor of
Haiti, joins the ancestors as a result of an
assassination.
1817 - Samuel Ringgold Ward is born on the Eastern Shore of
Maryland. He will be considered one of the finest
abolitionist orators.
1871 - President Grant suspends the writ of habeas corpus and
declares martial law in nine South Carolina counties
affected by Ku Klux Klan disturbances.
1888 - The first African American bank, Capital Savings Bank of
Washington, DC, opens for business.
1894 - Ohio National Guard kills 3 members of a lynch mob while
rescuing an African American man.
1909 - William R. Cole is born in East Orange, New Jersey. He
will become a jazz drummer best known as "Cozy Cole."
He will begin to play professionally as a teenager and
will make his first recording at age 20 with Jelly Roll
Morton's Red Hot Peppers. Cozy Cole will join Cab
Calloway's band in 1939 and will join CBS radio in 1943
to play in Raymond Scott's Orchestra, becoming one of
the first African American musicians on a network
musical staff. In 1958, Cole will make a solo hit
record, "Topsy," that sells more than a million copies.
He will join the ancestors in 1981.
1928 - James "Junior" Gilliam is born. He will become a
professional baseball player for the Brooklyn Dodgers
and will be the National League Rookie of the Year in
1953.
1956 - Mae C. Jemison is born in Decatur, Alabama. She will
grow up in Chicago, become a physician, serve in the
Peace Corps in Africa, and practice medicine in Los
Angeles, before being selected for the astronaut
training program in 1987.
1969 - Dr. Clifton R. Wharton Jr., is elected president of
Michigan State University and becomes the first African
American to head a major, predominantly white university
in the twentieth century.
1985 - Legendary jazz and blues singer Alberta Hunter joins the
ancestors in New York City. She achieved fame in
Chicago jazz clubs in the 1920's, toured Europe in the
1930's and, after over 20 years of anonymity as a nurse,
returned to performing in 1977.
1990 - Dr. Ralph Abernathy, civil rights leader, joins the
ancestors.
1991 - The 100th episode of "A Different World" airs on NBC.
The acclaimed show, a spin-off of "The Cosby Show" that
stars Jasmine Guy, Kadeem Hardison, and an ensemble of
young African American actors, is directed by Debbie
Allen.
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