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From:
The Muniah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 13 May 2012 09:24:23 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - May 13			*

1865 - Two white regiments and an African American regiment, the 
	Sixty-second U.S. Colored Troops, fight in the last action 
	of the civil war at White's Ranch, Texas.

1871 - Alcorn A&M College (now Alcorn A&M University) opens in 
	Lorman, Mississippi.

1888 - Princess Isabel of Brazil signs the "Lei Aurea" (Golden 
	Law) which abolishes slavery.  Slavery is ended in part to
	appease the efforts of abolitionists, but mostly because 
	it is less expensive for employers to hire wageworkers 
	than to keep slaves.  Plantation owners oppose the law 
	because they are not compensated for releasing their 
	slaves. The passage of the law hastens the fall of the 
	Brazilian monarchy. 

1891 - Isaac Murphy becomes the first jockey to win three Kentucky 
	Derbys as he wins the fabled race astride Kingman.  
	Kingman was trained by Dud Allen, an African American 
	trainer. 

1914 - Joseph Louis Barrow is born in Lexington, Alabama.  He will 
	be better known as Joe Louis.  "The Brown Bomber" will 
	hold the heavyweight crown from his 1937 title match with 
	James J. Braddock until his first retirement in 1949.  In 
	his 71 professional fights, he will amass a record of 68 
	victories, 54 by knockouts.

1933 - John Junior "Johnny" Roseboro is born in Ashland, Ohio.  He 
	will become a professional baseball player in 1957 and will 
	play as a catcher for the Dodgers from 1957-1967, Minnesota 
	Twins from 1968 to 1969, and the Washington Senators in 
	1970. He will be a Gold Glove Award winner twice and a four-
	time All-Star during a fourteen-year career. He will join 
	the ancestors on August 16, 2002.

1938 - Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra record the New Orleans' 
	jazz standard, "When The Saints Go Marching In", on Decca 
	Records making it extremely popular. 

1943 - Mary Wells is born in Detroit, Michigan.  She will become a 
	singer for the Motown label and record the hits, "My Guy," 
	"Two Lovers," "You Beat Me to the Punch," and "The One Who 
	Really Loves You." She will join the ancestors on July 26, 
	1992 after succumbing to pneumonia and complications of 
	larynx cancer.

1949  - Franklin Ajaye is born in Brooklyn, New York.  He will 
	become a comedy writer, comedian and actor.  He will appear 
	in the movies "The Jazz Singer," "Car Wash," "Hysterical," 
	"The Wrong Guys," and "Jock Jokes."

1950 - Steveland Judkins Morris is born in Saginaw, Michigan.  As 
	12-year-old Little Stevie Wonder, he will become a singing 
	and musical sensation notable for "Fingertips, Part 2."  
	Wonder will continue to record through-out adulthood, with 
	the albums "Talking Book," "Songs in the Key of Life," "The
	Woman in Red," and the soundtrack to the movie "Jungle 
	Fever." Among other awards he will win more than 16 Grammys 
	and a 1984 best song Oscar for "I Just Called to Say I Love
	You."  He will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of 
	Fame in 1989.

1961 - Dennis Rodman is born in Texas.  He will become a 
	professional basketball player and will help two different 
	teams win multiple NBA championships.

1966 - Federal education funding is denied to 12 school districts 
	in the South because of violations of the 1964 Civil Rights
	Act.

1971 - (James) Charles Evers becomes the first African American 
	mayor of Fayette, Mississippi.

1971 - Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul, receives a gold record 
	for her version of "Bridge Over Troubled Water", originally 
	a Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel tune. 

1978 - Henry Rono of Kenya sets the record for the 3,000 meter 
	steeplechase (8:05.4).  The record will stand for eleven 
	years.

1979 - Max Robinson becomes the first African American network news
	anchor when he anchors ABC's World News Tonight.

1983 - Reggie Jackson becomes the first major leaguer to strike out 
	2,000 times.

1985 - Philadelphia Police bomb a house held by the group "Move", 
	killing eleven persons.  Ramona Africa and a 13-year-old 
	boy are the only people to escape the inferno that the 
	blast caused inside 6221 Osage Street.  The heat from the 
	blast also ignites a fire that destroys 60 other homes and 
	leaves 250 people homeless, angry and heartbroken in a 
	working-class section of West Philadelphia. 

1990 - George Stallings is ordained as the first bishop of the 
	newly established African American Catholic Church.  
	Stallings broke from the Roman Catholic Church in 1989, 
	citing the church's failure to meet the needs of African 
	American Catholics.

1995 - Army Captain Lawrence Rockwood is convicted at his court-
	martial in Fort Drum, New York, of conducting an 
	unauthorized investigation of reported human rights abuses 
	at a Haitian prison (the next day, Rockwood is dismissed 
	from the military, but receives no prison time). 

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