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Date:
Sat, 18 Jul 2009 15:06:29 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - July 18	        *

1753 - Lemuel Haynes, colonial American Congregational clergyman,
	is born in West Hartford, Connecticut. He will be 
	abandoned at five months old by his African father and 
	Anglo mother. He will be indentured to a white family in 
	Massachusetts. When he becomes a free man at age 21 in 
	1774, one of his first choices is to join freedom's cause
	and serve in a military unit from Connecticut. He will 
	not only fight on the battlefield, but will write about 
	freedom in poems and essays. He will be inspired by the
	Declaration of Independence, and in 1776 will write an 
	essay about the need to extend freedom to Africans. His
	essay is called, “Liberty Further Extended.” After the
	American Revolutionary War, he will study Latin, Greek 
	and theology, and will be licensed to preach in 1780. In
	1785, he will be ordained to a church in Torrington, 
	Connecticut, making him the first African American to 
	pastor a white congregation.  He also will become the 
	first African American to receive an honorary degree 
	(M.A.) from a White college (Middlebury College), in 1804
	at its second commencement.  He will serve as pastor in 
	Bennington, Manchester, and Granville, New York, until he
	joins the ancestors on September 28, 1833 at the age of 
	eighty.

1863 - The 54th Massachusetts Volunteers charge Fort Wagner in 
	Charleston, South Carolina.   Although the Union forces 
	suffer great losses, Sergeant William H. Carney of Company
	C exhibits bravery in battle by maintaining the colors 
	high despite three bullet wounds.  Although cited for 
	bravery, it will take 37 years for Carney to receive the
	Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions.

1899 - Patent number 629,286 is issued to L.C. Bailey for a 
	folding bed.

1905 - Granville T. Woods patents railway brakes.

1918 - Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela is born near Umtata in Transkei, 
	South Africa in the Eastern Cape, into the royal family 
	of the Tembu, a Xhosa-speaking tribe. His father is Chief
	Henry Mandela. He will be educated at University College 
	of Fort Hare and the University of Witwatersrand and 
	qualifies to practice law in 1942. He will join the 
	African National Congress in 1944 and engage in resistance
	against the ruling National Party's apartheid policies 
	after 1948. He will go on trial for treason in 1956-1961 
	and be acquitted in 1961. After the banning of the ANC in
	1960, he will argue for the setting up of a military wing
	within the ANC. In June 1961, the ANC executive will 
	consider his proposal on the use of violent tactics and 
	agree that those members who wished to involve themselves
	in his campaign would not be stopped from doing so by the
	ANC. This will lead to the formation of Umkhonto we Sizwe.
	He will be arrested in 1962 and sentenced to five years' 
	imprisonment with hard labor. In 1963, when many fellow 
	leaders of the ANC and the Umkhonto we Sizwe are arrested,
	he will be brought to stand trial with them for plotting 
	to overthrow the government by violence. His statement
	from the dock will receive considerable international 
	publicity. On June 12, 1964, he is among eight accused, 
	that will be sentenced to life imprisonment. From 1964 to
	1982, he will be incarcerated at Robben Island Prison, off
	the shore from Cape Town; thereafter, he will be at 
	Pollsmoor Prison, nearby on the mainland. He will be 
	released on February 11, 1990. After his release, he will
	plunge himself wholeheartedly into his life's work, 
	striving to attain the goals he and others had set out 
	almost four decades earlier. In 1991, at the first 
	national conference of the ANC held inside South Africa 
	after the organization had been banned in 1960, Mandela 
	will be elected President of the ANC while his lifelong 
	friend and colleague, Oliver Tambo, will become the 
	organization's National Chairperson. He will become the 
	first Black African President of South Africa on May 10, 
	1994 (Inauguration Date). 

1941 - Martha Reeves is born in Eufaula, Alabama.  Her family will
	move to Detroit, Michigan before her first birthday. As a
	child, she will sing in her grandfather's church and in 
	school, and continue her vocal training through high school.
	After graduating in 1959, she will join a girl group called
	the Fascinations, and the following year co-founds the 
	Del-Phis, whose membership will include the future 
	Vandellas. In 1961, she will win a talent contest as a solo
	act and get a nightclub engagement performing as Martha 
	LaVaille. There she will be noticed by Motown executive
	William "Mickey" Stevenson, who will invite her to stop by 
	the label's offices. She will not land an audition right 
	away, but will parlay her visit into a secretarial job in 
	the A&R department. She will catch a lucky break when backup
	singers are needed for a recording session, and the Del-Phis
	will wind up supporting Marvin Gaye on his first hit, 1962's
	"Stubborn Kind of Fellow." Stevenson will be impressed 
	enough to record a Del-Phis (renamed the Vels) single, 
	"You'll Never Cherish a Love So True ('Til You Lose It)," 
	and release it on Motown's Mel-O-Dy subsidiary. One day, 
	Mary Wells fails to show up for a recording session, and 
	musicians' union rules demand that a lead vocalist be 
	present on the microphone -- so she will be hastily tapped
	to sing "I'll Have to Let Him Go." That song will become 
	the first single credited to the newly renamed Martha & the
	Vandellas in 1963. Their second single, the ballad "Come 
	and Get These Memories," will reach the Rhythm & Blues Top
	Five. Martha & the Vandellas will rack up an impressive 
	slate of Motown classics that will include the Top Five 
	smashes "(Love Is Like A) Heat Wave" and "Dancing in the 
	Street," plus "Nowhere to Run," "I'm Ready for Love," 
	"Jimmy Mack," and "Honey Chile," all of which will make the
	Rhythm & Blues Top Five. Martha & the Vandellas' run of 
	success will continue through 1967. They will continue to 
	perform and record for several more years, but will never 
	match their past success and will disband in December 1972
	after a farewell concert in Detroit. She will eventually 
	leave Motown and record for other labels with minimal 
	success. In 1989, she will reunite with original Vandellas
	Annette Sterling and Rosalind Holmes and cut the single 
	"Step Into My Shoes" for British producer Ian Levine's 
	Motor City label. However, she will continue to make her 
	primary living on the nostalgia circuit. She will be 
	inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995.  

1951 - Jersey Joe Walcott, at age 37, becomes oldest boxer to date,
	to win the World Heavyweight Championship knocking out 
	Ezzard Charles in five rounds.
 
1959 - William Wright becomes the first African American to win a 
	a USGA title, the U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship.
	He is 23 and a senior at Western Washington University.

1964 - Racially motivated disturbances occur in Harlem in New York
	City.  The civil unrest will last until July 22 and will 
	spread into the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn.

1970 - Willie Mays gets his 3,000th base hit.

1998 - The "Spirit of Freedom Memorial" and "Theme Park" is 
	unveiled in Washington, DC to honor the U. S. Colored 
	Troops, who fought in the U.S. Civil War.

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