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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
Fri, 3 Jun 2011 09:37:35 -0400
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*                  Today in Black History - June 3              *

1833 - The fourth national Black convention meets in Philadelphia,
        Pennsylvania with sixty-two delegates from eight states.
	Abraham D. Shadd of Pennsylvania is elected president.

1854 - Two thousand United States troops escort celebrated fugitive 
	slave, Anthony Burns through the streets of Boston.

1871 - Miles Vandehurst Lynk is born near Brownsville, Tennessee.  A
        physician at 19, he founds the first African American medical
        journal, the "Medical and Surgical Observer," and will be one
        of the organizers of what will later become the National 
	Medical Association.

1887 - Roland Hayes is born in Curryville, Tennessee.  A noted 
	concert artist, Hayes will be the first African American to 
	give a concert in Boston's Symphony Hall.  His career will 
	take him throughout the U.S. and to London for a command 
	performance before King George V. He will be awarded the 
	Spingarn Medal in 1924 for his musical accomplishments. He 
	will join the ancestors in 1977.

1904 - Charles R. Drew, creator of the plasma method of blood 
	preservation, is born in Washington, DC.  He will receive 
	the NAACP's Spingarn Medal for his contributions in 1944 
	and, in 1981, be posthumously honored by the U.S. Postal 
	Service with a commemorative stamp. He will join the 
	ancestors on April 1, 1950.

1906 - Freda McDonald is born in St. Louis, Missouri.  She will 
	become a singer and entertainer known as Josephine Baker.  
	A chorus girl in the 1923 musical "Shuffle Along," she will 
	travel to Paris, introduce "le jazz hot" in the show "La 
	Revue Negre," and will cause a sensation with the Folies 
	Bergeres when she performs topless on a mirror, wearing a 
	rubber banana skirt.  A World War II Red Cross volunteer, 
	Baker will perform for the Allied troops and in the 1950's 
	she will tour the U.S., fighting for desegregated theaters 
	and restaurants. She will join the ancestors in 1975.
	
1919 - Liberty Life Insurance Company in Chicago, Illinois, the 
	first old-line legal reserve company organized by African 
	Americans in the North, is incorporated. 

1932 - Dakota Staton

1942 - Curtis Mayfield is born in Chattanooga, Tennessee and will 
	be raised in Chicago, Illinois. He will become a singer, 
	songwriter, and producer.  He will be a member of the group 
	The Impressions. He will write many hits for the group, 
	Jerry Butler and himself.  He will start a successful solo 
	career in 1970.  He will become paralyzed from the chest 
	down in 1990 when a stage lighting tower falls on him.  
	After recuperating, he will still continue to perform. He 
	will join the ancestors on Sunday, December 26, 1999.

1946 - In its "Morgan vs. Commonwealth of Virginia" ruling, the U.S. 
        Supreme Court bars segregation in interstate bus travel.

1949 - Wesley Anthony Brown becomes the first African American to 
	graduate from the U.S. Naval Academy.

1951 - Deniece Chandler is born in Gary, Indiana.  She will become a 
	singer and will be known as Deniece Williams.  She will get 
	her first break as a member of Stevie Wonder's backup group 
	Wonderlove during 1972-75. She will grow into a successful 
	solo career in both secular and gospel music.

1997 - Harvey Johnson, who defeats the incumbent mayor in the 
	Democratic Primary, is elected Jackson, Mississippi's first 
	African American mayor, defeating the Republican candidate 
	by more than two-to-one. Johnson, an urban planner and 
	former state tax commissioner, was making his second run to 
	head the city of about 200,000. He upset incumbent Kane 
	Ditto to earn the right to face GOP businesswoman Charlotte 
	Reeves in the general election.

1997 - Bro. Mosi Hoj issues the email that will establish the 
	beginning of the "Today in Black History" series that will 
	eventually be known as the "Munirah Chronicle."

2009 - Cora Walton "KoKo" Taylor joins the ancestors at the age of 80,
	after succumbing to complications from surgery for 
	gastrointestinal bleeding. She had been known as the "Queen
	of the Blues," over the course of her almost 50-year career.

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