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Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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Tue, 19 Dec 2006 07:14:03 -0500
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*              Today in Black History - December 19             *

 

1798 - Portrait painter Joshua Johnston places an ad in the 

            "Baltimore Intelligencer" describing himself as "a self-

            taught genius." Johnston, a freeman, will paint portraits 

            of some of the most successful merchant families in 

            Maryland and Virginia.  Only three of his subjects will 

            be African American, among them "Portrait of an Unknown 

            Man" and "Reverend Daniel Coker."

 

1875 - Carter G. Woodson is born in New Canton, Virginia.  A 

            founder of the Association for the Study of Negro Life 

            and History, of the "Journal of Negro History," and Negro 

            History Week, Woodson will write many books on African 

            American history.  The most popular of his books will be, 

            "The Negro in Our History," which will be used extensively 

            in high schools throughout the United States.

 

1886 - Clementine Rubin (later Hunter) is born in Clourtierville, 

            Louisiana.  Because there were no birth certificates 

            issued in rural Louisiana during this time, there is much

            controversy about her exact date of birth. Sources mention

            her birth in December 1886 and January 1887.  The only 

            real documentation of her earliest existence is a 

            christening document dated March, 1887. She will become a 

            painter in the 1930's after spending years working on the 

            Melrose Plantation, a haven for many rural Southern  

            artists.  Her first artistic medium will be quilt making, 

            and her first piece will be in 1938 exhibiting the 

            hardships of plantation life.  Her first painting will be 

            completed in 1939.  In 1955, she will become the first 

            African American artist to have a one person show at the 

            Delgado Museum (now known as the New Orleans Museum of 

            Art).  Her folk-art style will earn her the nickname "the 

            Black Grandma Moses." By the time she joins the ancestors 

            on January 1, 1988, she will be considered one of the 

            twentieth century's leading folk artists.

 

1891 - Charles Randolph Uncles becomes the first African American 

            Catholic priest ordained in the United States.  He is 

            ordained in Baltimore, Maryland. 

 

1910 - The first city ordinance requiring white and black 

            residential areas is passed by the Baltimore City Council. 

            Similar laws will be passed in Norfolk, Richmond, Roanoke, 

            Greensboro, St. Louis, Oklahoma City, Dallas and 

            Louisville.

 

1910 - The Pittsburgh Courier newspaper is founded.

            

1910 - North Carolina College is founded in Durham, North Carolina.

 

1910 - The Norfolk Journal and Guide is established under the 

            leadership of P. B. Young Sr.

 

1930 - James Weldon Johnson resigns as executive secretary of 

            NAACP citing health reasons.

 

1930 - The NAACP's Spingarn Medal is awarded to Henry A. Hunt, 

            Principal, Fort Valley High and Industrial School, Fort 

            Valley, Georgia, for his pioneering work as an educator.

 

1930 - Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, founded at Howard University in 

            1913, is incorporated.

 

1933 - Cicely Tyson is born in the Village of Harlem in New York 

            City.  She will pursue a modeling career, appearing on the 

            covers of both "Vogue" and "Harper's Bazaar at the age of 

            23.  She will later pursue acting and win acclaim for her 

            roles on the stage and on television, as well as in the 

            movie, Sounder (for which she will be named best actress 

            by the National Society of Film Critics and receive an 

            Academy Award nomination) and "The Autobiography of Miss 

            Jane Pittman," for which she will win two Emmys.

 

1941 - Maurice White is born.  He will become a singer, musician 

            (drummer) and founder of Earth, Wind & Fire.  Some of his 

            hits include "Shining Star," "Sing a Song,"  "Got to Get 

            You into My Life," "After the Love Has Gone," and "Best of 

            My Love".

 

1944 - Timothy Reid is born in Norfolk, Virginia.  He will become 

            a comedian and known for his role as "Venus Flytrap" on 

            "WKRP in Cincinnati, as well as "Frank's Place." 

 

1961 - Reggie White is born in Chattanooga, Tennessee. He will 

            become an all-pro defensive lineman for the NFL 

            Philadelphia Eagles and Green Bay Packers.  He will play 

            with Green Bay as they win the 1997 Super Bowl. He will 

            hold the NFL record of 198 sacks until it is broken by 

            Bruce Smith of the Washington Redskins in 2003. He will 

            retire from football at the end of the 1998-1999 season. 

            He will join the ancestors on December 26, 2004, after 

            succumbing to a cardiac arrhythmia caused by cardiac and

            pulmonary sarcoidosis.  

 

1962 - Nyasaland secedes from Rhodesia.

 

1977 - Jimmy Rogers, a bluesman who played guitar for the original 

            Muddy Waters band and who will be inducted into the Blues 

            Hall of Fame in 1994, joins the ancestors in Chicago at the 

            age of 73. He succumbs to colon cancer.  He recorded a 

            string of solo hits beginning in the 1950s, including 

            "Walking by Myself," "Chicago Bound" and "Sloppy Drunk."  

            He played with Water's Band in Chicago clubs and in the 

            studio for about a decade.  In 1996, he won the W.C. Handy 

            award for male traditional blues artist.

 

1989 - Police in Jacksonville, Florida, disarm a parcel bomb at the 

            local NAACP office, the fourth in a series of mail bombs to 

            turn up in the Deep South. One bomb kills a Savannah, 

            Georgia, alderman, and another a federal judge in Alabama. 

            Walter L. Moody Jr. will be convicted in both bombings.


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