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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 17 Mar 2016 08:19:03 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - March 17		*

1806 - Norbert Rillieux is born a free man in New Orleans, Louisiana. 
	Rillieux will become best known for his revolutionary 
	improvements in sugar refining methods.  Awarded his second 
	patent for an evaporator, the invention will be widely used 
	throughout Louisiana and the West Indies, dramatically 
	increasing and modernizing sugar production. He will join
	the ancestors on October 8. 1894 in Paris, France.

1865 - Aaron Anderson wins the Navy's Medal of Honor for his heroic 
	actions aboard the USS Wyandank during the Civil War.

1886 - A massacre occurs in Carrollton, Mississippi. Twenty African
	Americans are killed by white supremacists.

1891 - West Virginia State College is founded in Institute, West 
	Virginia.

1896 - C.B. Scott receives a patent for the street sweeper.

1898 - Blanche Kelso Bruce joins the ancestors in Washington, DC at 
	the age of 57.

1912 - Bayard Rustin is born in West Chester, Pennsylvania.  He will 
	become a civil rights leader and peace activist.  He will join
	Martin Luther King Jr. in organizing the bus boycott that will
	establish King as a national figure.  For the next 10 years, 
	he will move back and forth between the world of the civil 
	rights movement and the world of peace activism.  He will be 
	instrumental in helping A. Philip Randolph plan the 1963 March 
	on Washington. But due to his youthful ties to the Communist 
	Party, a wartime imprisonment, and an arrest in California on 
	public morals charges, Rustin will be obligated to limit his 
	public exposure to avoid problems for King and others whom 
	Southern white leaders (and the FBI) were attempting to 
	destroy. He will join the ancestors on August 24, 1987.

1919 - Nathaniel Adams Coles is born in Montgomery, Alabama.  Better 
	known as Nat "King" Cole, he will start his musical career in
	a band with his brother Eddie and in a production of "Shuffle
	Along."  Leader of the King Cole Trio, he will achieve 
	international acclaim as a jazz pianist before becoming an 
	even more popular balladeer known for such songs as "Mona 
	Lisa," "The Christmas Song" and "Unforgettable."  Cole will 
	also have the distinction of being the first African American
	to host a network television variety show (1956-1957), a 
	pioneer in breaking down racial barriers in Las Vegas, and a 
	founding member of the National Academy of Recording Arts and 
	Sciences, which will honor him with a posthumous Lifetime 
	Achievement Grammy in 1989. He will join the ancestors on 
	February 15, 1965, after succumbing to lung cancer.

1933 - Myrlie Beasley is born in Vicksburg, Mississippi.  She will 
	become the wife of civil rights activist Medgar Evers in 1951 
	and will work with him in order to combat discrimination and 
	segregation in Mississippi.  Together, they will open and 
	manage the first NAACP Mississippi State Office.  Her husband
	will be assassinated in 1963, by white supremacist, Byron de 
	la Beckwith.  She will later move to California where she will
	graduate from Pomona College. She will work in the corporate 
	world as Director for Consumer Affairs at the Atlantic 
	Richfield Company and in government as a Commissioner of the 
	Los Angeles, California, Board of Public Works. She will be 
	the first African American woman to serve on that board. She 
	will be the author of the book, "For Us, the Living," and the
	recipient of numerous honorary degrees.  She will later become
	Mrs. Myrlie Evers-Williams and be elected vice-chairperson of 
	the NAACP in 1994, and in 1995 will become the first woman 
	chairperson. In 1998, she will be succeeded by Julian Bond as
	Chair of the NAACP.

1970 - The United States casts its first veto in the U.N. Security 
	Council. The U.S. kills a resolution that would have condemned
	Britain for failure to use force to overthrow the white-ruled
	government of Rhodesia.

2000 - More than 300 members of a religious sect burn to death in a 
	makeshift church in southwestern Uganda.

2008 - David Paterson is sworn in as New York's 55th governor. He is
	New York's first Black governor and the nation's first legally
	blind governor.

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