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Date:
Thu, 15 Aug 2019 03:25:39 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - August 15              *

1824 - Freed American slaves establish a settlement in West Africa 
	that will eventually become the country of Liberia.

1843 - The National Black Convention meets at Buffalo, New York, 
	with some seventy delegates from twelve states. The 
	highlight of the convention will be a stirring address by 
	Henry Highland Garnet, a twenty seven-year-old Presbyterian
	pastor who calls for a slave revolt and a general slave 
	strike. Amos G. Beman of New Haven, Connecticut, is 
	elected president of the convention. 

1900 - Riots erupt in New York City as a white plainclothes policeman 
	is killed in a fight with an African American man. It is the 
	fourth racial riot in the city's history. 

1906 - At the second meeting of the Niagara Movement at Harpers 
	Ferry, West Virginia, W.E.B. DuBois demands equal 
	citizenship rights for African Americans, saying, "We will 
	not be satisfied to take one jot or title less than our full
	manhood rights..." 

1925 - Oscar Peterson is born in Montreal (Quebec), Canada. Classically 
	trained in the piano, he will work with top Canadian jazz bands 
	until 1949, when he will first appear in New York City's 
	Carnegie hall. He will be recognized as a jazz innovator who 
	forges a synthesis of bop and swing into his own unique style. 
	He will join the ancestors on December 23, 2007.

1931 - Roy Wilkins joins the NAACP as assistant secretary.  

1931 - The Spingarn Medal is awarded to Richard B. Harrison for his 
	Portrayal of "De Lawd" in "The Green Pastures."

1935 - Vernon Eulion Jordan, Jr, is born in Atlanta, Georgia. He will 
	become a civil rights activist. In 1962 he will be appointed 
	Georgia field director for the National Association for the 
	Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), leading a boycott of 
	Augusta, Georgia merchants who refused to serve African 
	Americans. After four years as NAACP field director, in 1966 
	he will become director of the Southern Regional Council's 
	Voter Education Project. The project will sponsor voter 
	registration campaigns in 11 southern states and conduct 
	seminars, workshops, and conferences for candidates and 
	office holders. After four years, he will take a six-month 
	appointment as a fellow at the Kennedy Institute of Politics 
	at Harvard and then, in 1970, will become executive director 
	of the United Negro College Fund. When Whitney Young, 
	executive director of the National Urban League, joins the
	ancestors in 1972, he will be appointed Young's successor. 
	As director of the league, he will continue its emphasis on 
	African American uplift through training, employment, and 
	social service programs, but the organization will also begin 
	to emphasize research and advocacy as part of its thrust 
	toward implementing promises of the 1960s civil rights 
	reforms. For example, during his administration the league 
	will develop a highly regarded research and information 
	dissemination capability, including a policy journal - The 
	Urban League Review - and the annual State of Black America 
	reports. The State of Black America, issued each January to 
	coincide with the president's State of the Union address, 
	will become a principal source of systematic data on the 
	African American condition in the United States and an 
	important resource for identifying African American policy 
	perspectives. During his tenure at the League he will be 
	recognized as a leading African American spokesman, writing a 
	weekly syndicated column, lecturing, and appearing on national 
	television interview programs. A frequent adviser to government, 
	corporate, and labor leaders, he will be frequently appointed 
	to presidential advisory boards and commissions.

1938 - Maxine Waters is born in St. Louis, Missouri. A longtime 
	California state legislator, in 1990, she will be the 
	second African American woman from California elected to 
	the United States Congress. 

1945 - Gene Upshaw is born in Robstown, Texas. He will become a 
	professional football player and a guard for the Oakland 
	Raiders. After retirement from football, he will become the 
	longtime president of the NFL Players Association. He will
	join the ancestors on August 20, 2008.

1960 - The Republic of the Congo gains independence from the Belgian
	Empire. 

1962 - The Shady Grove Baptist Church is burned in Leesburg, Georgia.

1964 - A racially motivated disturbance occurs in Dixmoor, (a 
	Chicago suburb) Illinois. 

1964 - Ralph Boston of the United States, sets the then long jump 
	record at 27' 3". 

1975 - Joanne Little is acquitted of murder charges in the August 
	27, 1974, killing of a white jailer. The defense said she 
	stabbed the jailer with an ice pick after he made sexual 
	advances.

1979 - Andrew Young resigns under pressure as U.N. ambassador 
	after unauthorized meeting with representatives of the 
	Palestine Liberation Organization. His resignation creates 
	a storm of controversy and divides the African American 
	and Jewish communities.

1999 - Tiger Woods wins the PGA Championship, becoming the youngest 
	player to win two majors since Seve Ballesteros. 

2015 - Julian Bond, a major figure in the 1960s civil rights movement 
	who served as a longtime board chairman of the NAACP, joins
	the ancestors at the age of 75. The Nashville, Tennessee 
	native was considered a symbol and icon of the 1960s civil 
	rights movement. As a Morehouse College student, He helped 
	found the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
	and as its communications director, he was on the front 
	lines of protests that led to the nation's landmark civil 
	rights laws. He later served as board chairman of the 
	500,000-member NAACP for 10 years, but declined to run again 
	for another one-year term in 2010.

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