* Today in Black History - October 20 *
1895 - Rex Ingram is born near Cairo, Illinois. He will attend
medical school and earn a Phi Beta Kappa key but forsake
medicine for the stage, becoming a powerful actor on the
stage and screen, most notably as "De Lawd" in the 1936 film
"The Green Pastures." He will also appear in "Cabin in the
Sky" and "Anna Lucasta."
1898 - North Carolina Mutual Life and Provident Association is
organized by seven African Americans: John Merrick, Dr. Aaron
M. Moore, P.W. Dawkins, D.T. Watson, W.G. Pearson, E.A.
Johnson, and James E. Shepard. Each invests $50 in the
company, which will grow to become North Carolina Mutual Life
Insurance Company and have over $211 million in assets and
over $8 billion of insurance in force by 1991.
1924 - The "First Colored World Series" of baseball is held in Kansas
City, Missouri. The series, which pits the Kansas City
Monarchs against the Hillsdale team from Darby, Pennsylvania,
is won by the Monarchs, five games to four, and was organized
by Rube Foster.
1932 - Roosevelt Brown is born in Virginia. He will become a football
star at Morgan State College in Baltimore, Maryland, and will
be drafted in the 27th round by the New York Giants in 1953.
He will play for the Giants for 13 seasons and will be elected
to the NFL Hall of Fame in 1975.
1942 - Sixty leading southern African Americans issued the "Durham
Manifesto", calling for fundamental changes in race relations
after a Durham, North Carolina, meeting.
1953 - Jomo Kenyatta and five other Mau Mau leaders are refused an
appeal of their prison terms in British East Africa (Kenya).
Members of the Mau Mau guerilla troops all took an oath to
commit themselves to expelling all white settlers in Kenya
and to eliminate the Africans who cooperated with or benefited
from colonial rule.
1963 - Jim Brown, of the Cleveland Browns, sets the NFL single-season
rushing record, 8,390 yds.
1963 - South Africa begins the trial of Nelson Mandela & eight others
on charges of conspiracy.
1967 - An all-white federal jury in Meridian, Mississippi convicts 7
white men in the murder of 3 civil rights workers. They are
convicted of civil rights' violations.
1968 - Elder Lightfoot Solomon Michaux, dies at the age of 84. His
church services were broadcast weekly, first on radio, then on
television. The theme song of his broadcasts was "Happy am I,
I'm always happy!"
1976 - New York Nets' (ABA), Julius "Dr J" Erving is sold to the
Philadelphia 76ers. This will be the beginning of his All-Star
career in the NBA.
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