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The Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 12 Dec 2010 22:45:58 -0500
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*                Today in Black History - December 12           *

1870 - Joseph Hayne Rainey is the first African American to serve
	in Congress representing South Carolina.  He is sworn in 
	to fill an unexpired term.

1872 - U.S. Attorney General George Williams sends a telegram to 
	"Acting Governor Pinchback," saying that the African 
	American politician "was recognized by the President as 
	the lawful executive of Louisiana."

1899 - Boston native, dentist, and avid golfer, George F. Grant 
	receives a patent for a wooden golf tee.  Prior to the 
	use of the tee, wet sand was used to make a small mound 
	to place the ball. Grant's invention will revolutionize 
	the manner in which golfers swing at the ball.

1912 - Henry Armstrong is born in St. Louis, Missouri.  In 1938 
	he will become the first boxer to hold three titles after 
	winning the lightweight boxing championship. 

1913 - James Cleveland "Jesse" Owens is born in Oakville, Alabama.
	He will become a world-class athlete in college, setting 
	world records in many events.  He will go on to win 4 gold 
	medals in the 1936 Berlin Olympics, spoiling Hitler's 
	plans to showcase Aryan sports supremacy.

1918 - Famed jazz singer Joe Williams is born in Cordele, Georgia.
	Williams will sing for seven years in Count Basie's band, 
	where he will record  such hits as "Every Day I have the 
	Blues."

1929 - Vincent Smith is born in New York City.  Smith will exhibit 
	his works on four continents and be represented in the 
	collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the National 
	Museum of American Art, and the National Museum of Afro-
	American Artists in Boston.

1938 - The U.S. Supreme Court rules in Missouri that a state must 
	provide equal educational facilities for African Americans
	within its boundaries.  Lloyd Gaines, the plaintiff in the 
	case, disappears after the decision and is never seen 
	again.

1941 - Dionne Warwick is born in East Orange, New Jersey.  Warwick 
	will sing in a gospel trio with her sister Dee Dee and 
	cousin Cissy Houston, and begin her solo career in 1960 
	singing the songs of Burt Bacharach and Hal David.  She 
	will become a three-time Grammy winner.

1943 - Grover Washington, Jr. is born in Buffalo, New York.  He 
	will become a renown jazz artist and famous for his 
	recording of "Mr. Magic." He will join the ancestors on
	December 17, 1999.

1961 - Martin Luther King Jr., along with over seven hundred 
	demonstrators is arrested in Albany, Ga., after five mass 
	marches on city hall to protest segregation.  The arrests 
	trigger the militant Albany movement.

1963 - Kenya achieves its independence from Great Britain with 
	Jomo Kenyatta as its first prime minister.

1963 - Medgar Wiley Evers is awarded the Spingarn Medal 
	posthumously for his civil rights leadership.

1965 - Johnny Lee, an actor best known for his portrayal of 
	"Calhoun" on "The Amos 'n' Andy Show," joins the ancestors 
	at the age of 67.

1965 - Gale Sayers, of the Chicago Bears, scores 6 touchdowns and 
	ties the NFL record.

1968 - Arthur Ashe becomes the first African American to be ranked 
	Number One in tennis.

1975 - The National Association of Black Journalists is formed in
	Washington, DC.  Among its founding members are Max 
	Robinson, who will become the first African American anchor 
	of a national network news program, and Acel Moore, a 
	future Pulitzer Prize winner.

1979 - Rhodesia becomes the independent nation of Zimbabwe.

1986 - Bone Crusher Smith knocks out WBA champion Tim Witherspoon 
	in Madison Square Garden in New York City.

2007 - Ike Turner, whose role as one of rock's critical architects
	was overshadowed by his ogre-like image as the man who 
	brutally abused former wife and rock icon Tina Turner, 
	joins the ancestors at his home in suburban San Diego at the
	age of 76. 

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