MUNIRAH Archives

The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts

MUNIRAH@LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 25 Mar 2008 11:51:30 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (117 lines)
*		     Today in Black History - March 25		   *

1807 - The British Parliament abolishes the African slave trade. 
	Although slavery was abolished within England in 1772, it 
	was still allowed in the British colonies, as was the slave 
	trade. The continued slave trade was not only accepted, but 
	considered essential to the power and prosperity of the 
	British Empire. English slave-merchants made fortunes 
	carrying slaves from Africa to the British colonies in 
	North America and the Caribbean, and many of England's 
	industries, notably textiles and sugar refining, depended 
	on raw materials produced by slave labor on colonial 
	plantations. Still, there were opponents, and in 1787, they
	launched a nationwide campaign to seek the abolition of the 
	slave trade.

1843 - African American explorer Dodson sets out in search of the 
	Northwest Passage.

1910 - The Liberian Commission recommends financial aid to Liberia 
	and the establishment of a U.S. Navy coaling station in the 
	African country.

1931 - Ida B. Wells-Barnett, journalist, militant African American 
	rights and anti-lynching advocate, and a founder of the 
	NAACP, joins the ancestors in Chicago at the age of 78.

1931 - Nine African American youths are arrested in Scottsboro, 
	Alabama, for allegedly raping two white women.  Although 
	they will be quickly convicted, in a trial that outraged 
	African Americans and much of the nation, the case will be 
	appealed and the "Scottsboro Boys" will be retried several 
	times.

1939 - Toni Cade Bambara is born in New York City.  She will become 
	a noted writer of such fiction as "Gorilla, My Love," and 
	"The Salt Eaters."

1942 - Aretha Louise Franklin is born in Memphis, Tennessee.  She 
	will be abandoned by her mother when she was 6, and raised 
	by her father, the Reverend C. L. Franklin, who is one of 
	the most famous Black ministers in the North, and her aunt, 
	the legendary gospel singer Clara Ward. She will grow up 
	singing in her father's New Bethel Baptist Church in 
	Detroit, Michigan. Family friends Mahalia Jackson and Sam 
	Cooke will encourage her recording career, and when Columbia
	Records producer John Hammond first hears the 18-year-old, 
	he calls her "an untutored genius, the best natural singer 
	since Billie Holiday."  It will not be until her move from 
	Columbia's pop/jazz orchestrations to Atlantic Records' 
	soulful, Rhythm and Blues style, in 1966, that her career 
	skyrockets. Under the auspices of Jerry Wexler, she will 
	sing fierce, frantic hits like "I Never Loved a Man,"
	"Respect," "Natural Woman," and "Chain of Fools." In 1968, 
	she will make the cover of Time magazine. From her first 
	singing experiences in her father's church through a singing 
	career and 21 gold records, she will earn the title, "Queen 
	of Soul."  She will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of 
	Fame in 1987. 

1965 - The Selma-to-Montgomery march ended with rally of some fifty
	thousand at Alabama capitol.  One of the marchers, a white
	civil rights worker named Viola Liuzzo, is shot to death on
	U.S. Highway 80 after the rally by white terrorists.  Three
	Klansmen are convicted of violating her civil rights and
	sentenced to ten years in prison.

1967 - Debi Thomas is born.  After being raised in San Jose, 
	California by her mother(who shuttled her back and forth 
	between home, school and practice at the rate of 3,000 miles 
	per month), she will become the first African American to 
	win the world figure skating championship (1986).  She will 
	later become the first African American to win a medal in 
	the Winter Olympics (Bronze Medal in Figure Skating - 
	February 27, 1988).	

1975 - Salem Poor, who fought alongside other colonists during the 
	Battle of Bunker Hill, is honored as one of four 
	"Contributors to the Cause," a commemorative issue of the 
	U.S. Postal Service.

1991 - Whoopi Goldberg wins the Academy Award for best actress in a 
	supporting role for "Ghost." Also winning an Oscar is 
	Russell Williams II, for best sound editing for the movie 
	"Dances with Wolves."  It is Williams's second Oscar in a 
	row (the first was for "Glory"), a record for an African 
	American.

1994 - American troops complete their withdrawal from Somalia.

2000 - Character actress Helen Martin, who played the little old 
	lady next door in the mid-1980s television series "227" and
	Halle Berry's matriarch in the political comedy "Bulworth,"
	joins the ancestors at the age of 90.  An original member 
	of Harlem's American Negro Theater, Martin was one of the 
	first African American actresses to appear on Broadway when 
	Orson Welles cast her in his production of "Native Son." 
	She worked primarily as a stage actress early in her career,
	but was perhaps best known for appearing as grandmotherly 
	characters in television series about African American 
	families.

______________________________________________________________
           Munirah Chronicle is edited by Rene' A. Perry
              "The TRUTH shall make you free"

   E-mail:   <[log in to unmask]>
   Archives: http://listserv.icors.org/archives/Munirah.html
             http://blackagenda.com/cybercolonies/index.htm
   _____________________________________________________________
   To SUBSCRIBE send E-mail to: <[log in to unmask]>
   In the E-mail body place:  Subscribe Munirah Your FULL Name
   ______________________________________________________________
   Munirah(TM) is a trademark of Information Man. Copyright 1997 - 2007,
   All Rights Reserved by the Information Man in association with
   The Black Agenda.

ATOM RSS1 RSS2