* Today in Black History - March 10 *
1850 - Hallie Quinn Brown is born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She
will become a Black educator and elocutionist who will
pioneer the movement for Black women’s clubs in the United
States. The daughter of former slaves, she will receive a
B.S. from Wilberforce University in Ohio in 1873. She will
then teach on plantations and in the public schools of
Mississippi and South Carolina. After graduating from the
Chautauqua Lecture School, and teaching in Dayton, Ohio,
and in Alabama, she will return to Wilberforce to teach
elocution. At that time she will begin her extensive travels
as an elocutionist and lecturer, speaking in Europe as well
as the United States on topics of the life of Blacks in
America. She will assist in founding the earliest women’s
clubs for Blacks and, from 1905 to 1912, will serve as
president of the Ohio State Federation of Colored Women’s
Clubs. She will also help to found the Colored Women’s
League of Washington, D.C., a predecessor of
the National Association of Colored Women. She will also
author "Homespun Heroines and Other Women of Distinction,"
a 1926 collection of biographical sketches of notable
African American women. She will join the ancestors on
September 16, 1949, in Wilberforce, Ohio.
1861 - West African political leader El Hadj Umar Tall seizes the city
of Segou, destroying the Bambara Empire of Mali.
1863 - Two U.S. African American infantry regiments, the First and
Second South Carolina Volunteers, capture and occupy
Jacksonville, Florida, causing panic along the Southern
seaboard. These regiments are not to be confused with the
confederate army First South Carolina Volunteers Infantry
Regiment.
1893 - Ivory Coast becomes a French colony (Cote d'Ivoire).
1900 - Regents for the King of Uganda and leading chiefs sign a treaty
with Great Britain agreeing to the organization of the
government, taxation, courts, military, and other functions of
their country, which is under British protection.
1913 - Harriet Tubman joins the ancestors in Auburn, New York. An
escaped slave, Tubman was known to the Underground Railroad as
"Black Moses" for her heroic trips south to free hundreds of
slaves. During the Civil War, she served as a scout, spy,
cook, and nurse.
1963 - Jasmine Guy is born in Boston, Massachusetts. She will become
an actress on television and will be best known for her role
as "Whitley" in the series "A Different World."
1969 - James Earl Ray pleads guilty in the first degree to the murder
of Dr. Martin L. King, Jr. and will be sentenced to 99 years
in prison. The House Select Committee on Assassinations will
later state that although it believes Ray shot King, Ray was
part of a larger conspiracy. Ray will later repudiate that
plea, maintaining his innocence until his death.
1972 - Three thousand delegates and five thousand observers attend
the first African American political convention in Gary,
Indiana. The NAACP and other groups withdraw from the
convention after the adoption of resolutions that are critical
of busing and the state of Israel.
1990 - Haitian ruler Lt. Gen. Prosper Avril resigns during a popular
uprising against his military regime.
2017 - Joni Sledge joins the ancestors at her home in Phoenix, Arizona.
She was best known as a member of the pop group "Sister Sledge."
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