* Today in Black History - February 3 *
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* "Once a year we go through the charade of February being 'Black *
* History Month.' Black History Month needs to be a 12-MONTH THING. *
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* accomplished while being handicapped with RACISM, it can only *
* inspire us to greater heights, knowing we're on the giant shoulders *
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1855 - The Wisconsin Supreme Court declares that the United States
Fugitive Slave Law is unconstitutional.
1870 - The state of Iowa ratifies the 15th Amendment of the United States
Constitution allowing suffrage for all races & color.
1874 - Blanche Kelso Bruce is elected to the United States Senate from
Mississippi. He will be the first African American senator to
serve a full term and the first to preside over the Senate
during a debate.
1879 - Charles Follis is born in Wooster, Ohio. He will become the
first African American professional football player in the
United States reported by the press. He will play for a
professional team known as the Shelby Blues, in Shelby, Ohio.
starting in 1904 and will retire in 1906 due to injuries.
Most sources will state that 1904 was when his career started,
when he signed a contract on September 16, but Hall of Fame
research indicates the 1902 Shelby Athletic Club that Follis
played on, was indeed professional. Editor's note: In 1972,
The Pro Football Hall of Fame will discover proof that William
(Pudge) Heffelfinger, a Yale All-American, played one game for
$ 500, for the Allegheny Athletic Association in 1892, making
him the actual 'first' African American to play football for
pay. Follis will join the ancestors on April 5, 1910 after
succumbing to pneumonia.
1935 - Johnny "Guitar" Watson is born in Houston. Texas. He will
become a guitarist and singer known for his wild style of
guitar playing and the sound which merged Blues Music with
touches of Rhythm & Blues and Funk. He will join the ancestors
after succumbing to a heart attack, while performing at the
Yokohama Blues Cafe in Japan, on May 17, 1996.
1938 - Emile Griffith is born in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. He will
move to New York City as a young man and discover boxing. He
will win the Golden Gloves title and turn professional in
1958. In his career, he will meet 10 world champions and box
339 title-fight rounds, more than any other fighter in history.
He will be elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame
with the distinction of being the third fighter in history to
hold both the welterweight and middleweight titles. He will
join the ancestors on July 23, 2013.
1938 - Elijah Pitts is born in Mayflower, Arkansas. He will become a
professional football player with the Green Bay Packers. A
major contributor as a running back, he will help his team win
Super Bowl I. He will spend nine years with the Green Bay
Packers during their championship years under Hall of Fame
coach Vince Lombardi. The Packers will win four NFL
championships and two Super Bowls during his career. He will
return to the Super Bowl thirty years later as a running back
coach with the Buffalo Bills. He will join the ancestors on
July 10, 1998 after succumbing to abdominal cancer.
1939 - The Baltimore Museum of Art exhibit, "Contemporary Negro Art",
opens. The exhibit, which will run for 16 days, will feature
works by Richmond Barthe, Aaron Douglas, Archibald Motley,
Jr., and Jacob Lawrence's Toussaint L'Ouverture series.
1943 - Dennis Edwards Jr. is born in Fairfield, Alabama. He will become
a soul and Rhythm & Blues singer who will be best known as the
frontman in The Temptations, on Motown Records. He will join the
Temptations in 1968, replacing David Ruffin and sing with the
group from 1968 to 1976, 1980 to 1984 and 1987 to 1989. In the
mid-1980s, he will attempt a solo career, scoring a hit in 1984
with "Don't Look Any Further" (featuring Siedah Garrett). Until
his transition, he will be the lead singer of The Temptations
Review featuring Dennis Edwards, a Temptations splinter group.
He will join the ancestors on February 1, 2018.
1947 - Percival Prattis of "Our World" in New York City, becomes the
first African American news correspondent admitted to the House
and Senate press galleries in Washington, DC.
1948 - Laura Wheeler Waring, portrait painter and illustrator, joins
the ancestors. Trained at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts, she received the Harmon Award in 1927 for achievement in
the fine arts and, with Betsey Graves Reyneau, completed a set
of 24 renderings of their works entitled "Portraits of
Outstanding Americans of Negro Origins" for the Harmon
Foundation in the 1940's.
1948 - Rosa Ingram and her fourteen and sixteen-year-old sons are
condemned to death for the alleged murder of a white Georgian.
Mrs. Ingram states that she acted in self-defense.
1964 - School officials report that 464,000 Black and Puerto Rican
students boycotted New York City public schools.
1980 - Muhammad Ali starts tour of Africa as President Jimmy Carter's
envoy.
1980 - Larry Holmes TKOs Lorenzo Holmes in 6 rounds for the heavyweight
boxing title.
1981 - The Air Force Academy drops its ban on applicants with sickle-
cell trait. The ban was considered by many a means of
discriminating against African Americans.
1984 - A sellout crowd of 18,210 at Madison Square Garden in New York
City sees Carl Lewis best his own world record in the long
jump by 9-1/4 inches.
1989 - Former St. Louis Cardinals' first baseman, Bill White becomes
the first African American to head an American professional
sports league when he was named to succeed A. Bartlett
Giamatti as National League president.
1993 - The federal trial of four police officers charged with civil
rights violations in the videotaped beating of Rodney King,
begins in Los Angeles.
1993 - Marge Schott is suspended as Cincinnati Reds owner for one year
for her repeated use of racial and ethnic slurs.
2015 - Dr. Charles L. Sifford, the first African American to break the
color barrier in the "whites only" Professional Golfers
Association (PGA), joins the ancestors at the age of 92.
2016 - U.S. President Barack Obama visits his first U.S. mosque - the
Islamic Society of Baltimore mosque in Maryland.
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