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Thu, 1 Oct 2020 11:52:10 -0400
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*		  Today in Black History - October 1             *

1851 - William "Jerry" Henry, a runaway slave and craftsman who had 
	settled in Syracuse, New York, is arrested by a United 
	States Marshal and scheduled to be returned to slavery.  
	Ten thousand citizens of the city will storm the sheriff's 
	office and courthouse, free Henry, and aid his escape to 
	Canada via the underground railroad. 

1872 - Morgan State College (now University) is founded in 
	Baltimore, Maryland.

1886 - Kentucky State College (now University) is founded in 
	Frankfort, Kentucky.  

1897 - Virginia Proctor Powell, first female African American 
	librarian is born in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania. She will 
	follow in her mother's footsteps and continue her education 
	at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio. In 1919, She will earn
	her Bachelor of Arts degree in English literature from Oberlin.
	She will move back to Pittsburgh where, although having 
	adequate training and experience, she was unable to pursue her
	desired goal of teaching and spent some time working at her 
	aunt's salon as a beautician. Aware of her passion for children
	and books, Charles Wilbur Florence, her future husband, will
	encourage her to pursue a career in librarianship. During a 
	time when African Americans were rarely considered for 
	admission into predominantly white universities, she will be 
	considered for admission into the Pittsburgh Carnegie Library 
	School (now the University of Pittsburgh School of Information 
	Sciences). There will be much debate about allowing a Black 
	person into the program. School officials will be concerned with 
	how white students might react to having a Black peer and the 
	likelihood that she would not find work upon completion of the 
	program. She will finish the program in 1923. Over time she 
	will work as a librarian in Richmond, Virginia and Washington, 
	D.C. She will join the ancestors in Richmond, Virginia in 1991.

1937 - The Pullman Company formally recognizes the Brotherhood of 
	Sleeping Car Porters.  

1937 - The Spingarn Medal is awarded to Walter White, NAACP 
	secretary, for his leadership and work in the anti-
	lynching movement.

1945 - Donny Hathaway is born in Chicago, Illinois. He will be 
	an influential pop and Rhythm & Blues singer of the 1970s 
	whose hit songs will include "The Ghetto" and "The Closer 
	I Get to You" (with Roberta Flack). His collaborations with 
	Roberta Flack will score high on the charts and win him the 
	Grammy Award for "Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with 
	Vocal" for the duet, "Where Is the Love" in 1973. He will join 
	the ancestors, after taking his own life, on January 13, 1979.

1945 - Rodney Cline "Rod" Carew, baseball Hall of Famer, is born in Gaton, 
	Panama, (formally Panama Canal Zone). He will win the American 
	League's Rookie of the Year award in 1967 and be elected to the 
	first of 18 consecutive All-Star game appearances. He will steal 
	home seven times in the 1969 season to lead the majors, just 
	missing Ty Cobb's Major League record of eight and the most in the 
	major leagues since Pete Reiser stole seven for the Brooklyn 
	Dodgers in 1946. His career total of 17 steals of home currently 
	puts him tied for 17th on the list with former New York Giant MVP 
	Larry Doyle and fellow Hall of Famer Eddie Collins. In 1972, He 
	will lead the American League in batting, hitting .318, and 
	remarkably, without hitting a single home run for the only time in 
	his career. He is, to date, the only player in the American League 
	or in the modern era to win the batting title with no home runs. 
	In 1975, he will join Ty Cobb as the only players to lead both the 
	American and National Leagues in batting average for three 
	consecutive seasons. In the 1977 season, he will bat .388, which is
	the highest since Boston's Ted Williams hit .406 in 1941, and win 
	the American League's Most Valuable Player award. He will be 
	inducted into the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame in 1991. He 
	will also be inducted into the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall 
	of Fame.
	
1945 - Heavyweight champion,  Joe Louis, is discharged from the army.

1947 - United States' control of Haitian Custom Service and governmental 
	revenue ends. 

1948 - The California Supreme Court voids state statutes banning interracial 
	marriages.

1948 - Edward Dudley is named Ambassador to Liberia. 

1951 - The 24th Infantry Regiment, last of the all African American military 
	units authorized by Congress in 1866, is deactivated in Korea.

1954 - The British colony of Nigeria becomes a federation.

1955 - Howard Hewitt is born in Akron, Ohio. He will move to Los Angeles where 
	he would eventually meet Soul Train dancer and future first wife Rainey 
	Riley-Cunningham, then a secretary of the show's creator and original 
	host Don Cornelius. It was Cornelius who will introduce him to fellow 
	Soul Train dancers Jody Watley and Jeffrey Daniel, and their group, 
	Shalamar, is born. The trio is best known for songs such as "Second Time 
	Around", "A Night to Remember", "Dancing in the Sheets" and the ballad 
	"This Is For The Lover In You". He will be the group's lead singer from 
	1979 until 1985. When Shalamar breaks up in the mid 1980s, he will go on 
	to pursue a solo career. In 1986 he will be arrested and indicted in Miami 
	with his fiance Mori Molina for possession with an intent to distribute 
	cocaine. He subsequently will marry Molina who will be convicted and serve 
	prison time. He will then be acquitted of the charges. He will sign with 
	Elektra Records and record 1986's "I Commit To Love" (R&B #12), a relatively 
	solid urban album that will yield two R&B hits, "I'm For Real" (R&B #2) and 
	"Stay" (R&B #8). The album will also include "Say Amen", a gospel tune that 
	will become a surprise hit on the Gospel charts and is his signature song. 
	He will contribute vocals to La Toya Jackson's Hot 100 hit single "Heart 
	Don't Lie" in 1984.

1960 - Nigeria proclaims its independence from Great Britain.

1960 - Nigeria becomes the 99th member of the United Nations.

1961 - East & West Cameroon merge and become the Federal 
	Republic of Cameroon.

1963 - Nigeria enacts a new constitution and becomes a republic within the British 
	Commonwealth.

1966 - The Black Panther party is founded in Oakland, California by Huey Newton and 
	Bobby Seale.

1977 - Brazilian soccer great, Pele', plays his final game for the New York Cosmos in an 
	exhibition against Santos in front of 75,000 at Giants Stadium. He retires with 
	1,281 goals in 1,363 games.

1982 - Marvin Gaye releases his last studio album "Midnight Love" featuring single "Sexual 
	Healing".

1988 - Flamboyant American sprinter Florence Griffith Joyner wins her third gold medal of 
	the Seoul Olympics, anchoring the victorious United States' 4 x 100m relay team.

1989 - Dallas Cowboy, Ed "Too Tall" Jones records his 1,000th NFL tackle in a 30-13 defeat 
	to the New York Giants at Texas Stadium.

1990 - 10,000 Uganda Rwanda Patriotic Front rebels move into Rwanda.

1991 - Dr. Mary Schmidt Campbell assumes her duties as dean of New York University's 
	Tisch School of the Arts. A noted art historian, Schmidt had previously served 
	as commissioner of cultural affairs, director of the Studio of Harlem, and chair 
	of the Smithsonian Institution's Advisory Committee that recommended creation of 
	a national African American museum.

1993 - In his first World Boxing Council heavyweight title defense, Lennox Lewis beats fellow 
	Londoner Frank Bruno by TKO in 7 rounds at the National Stadium in Cardiff, Wales.

1994 - South African President Nelson Mandela visits the United States.

1997 - Minnesota Timberwolves NBA forward Kevin Garnett, just 2 years out of high school, signs a 
	record 6-year, $123 million contract extension.

2000 - An all-African podium for the men's marathon at the Sydney Olympics as Gezahegne Abera of 
	Ethiopia runs 2:10:11 for the gold medal, 0.20s ahead of Kenyan Erick Wainaina with bronze 
	to Ethiopian Tesfaye Tola.

2000 - NBA stars Ray Allen and Vince Carter each score 13 points as the United States beats France 
	85-75 to win the men's basketball gold medal at the Sydney Olympics.

2007 - Most of the Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 came into force in the United Kingdom.

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