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Sat, 1 Apr 2006 13:27:49 -0500
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*                   Today in Black History - April 1                  *

1867 - African Americans vote in a municipal election in Tuscumbia, 
	Alabama.  Military officials set aside the election pending 
	clarification on electoral procedures.

1868 - Hampton Institute is founded in Hampton, Virginia, by General 
	Samuel Chapman Armstrong.

1895 - Alberta Hunter is born in Memphis, Tennessee.  She will run away 
	from home at the age of twelve and go to Chicago, Illinois to 
	become a Blues singer.  She will work in a variety of clubs until 
	the violence in the Chicago club scene prompts her to move to New 
	York City.  There she will record for a variety of blues labels.  
	She will write a lot of her own songs and songs for other 
	performers.  Her song "Down Hearted Blues," will become Bessie 
	Smith's first record in 1923.  She will perform in Europe and 
	America until 1956, when she will retire from performing.  She 
	will work for more than twenty years as a nurse in a New York 
	hospital and in 1977, at the age of 82, surprisingly return to 
	the stage.  She will perform until she joins the ancestors in 
	1984.

1905 - The British East African Protectorate becomes the colony of Kenya.

1917 - Scott Joplin dies in New York City.  One of the early developers of 
	ragtime and the author of "Maple Leaf Rag," Joplin also created 
	several rag-time and grand operas, the most noteworthy of which, 
	"Treemonisha," consumed his later years in an attempt to have it 
	published and performed.

1924 - The British Crown takes over Northern Rhodesia from the British 
	South Africa Company.

1929 - Morehouse College, Spelman College and Atlanta University are 
	merged, creating a 'new' Atlanta University.  Dr. John Hope of 
	Morehouse College, is named president.

1930 - Zawditu, the first reigning female monarch of Ethiopia, joins the
	ancestors.  She was the second daughter of Emperor Menelik II.  She 
	had been Empress of Ethiopia since 1916.

1939 - Rudolph Bernard Isley is born in Cincinnati, Ohio.  He will become 
	a singer at the age of six with his brothers O'Kelly, Ronald and 
	Vernon Isley and form the group, The Isley Brothers.  They will 
	leave Cincinnati in 1956 and go to New York City to pursue their 
	musical career.  Rudolph and his brothers will obtain fame and 
	success nationally and internationally earning numerous platinum 
	and gold albums which contain such classic hits as "Shout," "Twist 
	and Shout," "It's Your Thing," "Who's That Lady," "Fight the Power,"

	"For the Love of You," "Harvest For The World," "Live It Up," 
	"Footsteps in the Dark," "Work to Do," "Don't Say Good Night" and 
	many others.

1950 - Charles R. Drew, surgeon and developer of the blood bank concept, 
	joins the ancestors after an automobile accident near Burlington, 
	North Carolina at the age of 45. 

1951 - Oscar Micheaux joins the ancestors in Charlotte, North Carolina.  
	Micheaux formed his own film production company, Oscar Micheaux 
	Corporation, to produce his novel "The Homesteader" and over 30 
	other movies, notably "Birthright," which was adapted from a novel 
	by Pulitzer Prize-winning author T.S. Stribling, and "Body and
Soul," 
	which marked the film debut of Paul Robeson.

1966 - The first World Festival of Negro Arts opens in Dakar, Senegal, with 
	the U.S. African American delegation having one of the largest
number 
	of representatives.  First prizes are won by poet Robert Hayden, 
	engraver William Majors, actors Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln, gospel

	singer Mahalia Jackson, jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong, and 
	sociologist Kenneth Clark.

1984 - Marvin Gaye joins the ancestors after being shot to death by his 
	father, Marvin Gaye, Sr. in Los Angeles, California, one day before 
	his forty-fifth birthday.  The elder Gaye will plead guilty to 
	voluntary manslaughter, and receive probation.  Marvin Gaye was one 
	of the most talented soul singers of all time.  Unlike most soul 
	greats, Gaye's artistic inclinations evolved over the course of
	three decades, moving from hard-driving soul-pop to funk and dance
	grooves.

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