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Date: | Thu, 12 Jun 2003 05:12:23 -0500 |
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* Today in Black History - June 12 *
1826 - Sarah Parker Remond is born in Salem, Massachusetts. She
will become a major abolitionist.
1840 - The World's Anti-Slavery Convention convenes in London,
England. Among those in attendance will be African American
Charles Remond, who will refuse to be seated at the meeting
when he and the other delegates learn that women are being
segregated in the gallery.
1876 - A monument is dedicated to Richard Allen in Philadelphia's
Fairmount Park. It is the first known monument erected by
African Americans to honor one of their heroes.
1935 - Ella Fitzgerald records her first record for Brunswick Records.
The songs on the record were "Love and Kisses" and "I'll Chase
the Blues Away". She is featured with Chick Webb and his band.
Ella is 17 years old at the time and will conduct the Webb
band for three years following his death in 1939.
1961 - The Hinds County Mississippi Board of Supervisors announce that
more than one hundred "Freedom Riders" had been arrested.
1963 - Medgar Evers, field secretary for the Mississippi NAACP, joins
the ancestors after being killed in the driveway outside his
home in Jackson, Mississippi. The African American civil rights
leader is shot to death by white supremacist Byron De La Beckwith.
During World War II, Evers volunteered for the U.S. Army and
participated in the Normandy invasion. In 1952, he joined the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
As a field worker for the NAACP, Evers traveled through his home
state encouraging poor African Americans to register to vote and
recruiting them into the civil rights movement. He was instrumental
in getting witnesses and evidence for the Emmitt Till murder case,
which brought national attention to the plight of African Americans
in the South. He will be widely mourned throughout the civil rights
movement and posthumously receives the NAACP's Spingarn Medal.
1963 - Civil rights group demonstrates at Harlem construction sites
to protest discrimination in the building trade unions.
1967 - The U.S. Supreme Court strikes down a Virginia miscegenation
law (marriage or cohabitation between whites and non-whites).
This decision establishes that no state law can prohibit
interracial marriages.
1967 - A racially motivated civil disturbance occurs in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Three hundred persons are arrested, and the National Guard is
mobilized.
1972 - The National Black MBA Association is incorporated. An organization
of over 2,000 minority holders of advanced business degrees, the
organization's mission is to assist the entry of interested
minorities into the business community.
1981 - Larry Holmes defends his heavyweight boxing title by earning a third-
round TKO (technical knockout) over Leon Spinks in Detroit,
Michigan.
1989 - The U.S. Supreme Court expands the abilities of white males to
challenge court-approved affirmative action plans, even years
after they take effect.
1995 - The Supreme Court deals a potentially crippling blow to federal
affirmative action programs, ruling Congress was limited by the
same strict standards as states in offering special help to
minorities.
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