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Sat, 16 Dec 2006 11:57:11 -0500
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*                Today in Black History - December 16          *

 

1834 - George Ruffin is born in Richmond, Virginia.  He will be 

            the first African American to obtain a law degree from 

            Harvard University and will be a lifelong champion for 

            African American suffrage and equality.

 

1838 - The Zulu chieftain Dingaan is defeated by the Boers in 

            South Africa.

 

1859 - Shields Green and John Anthony Copeland, two of five 

            African American freedom fighters, are hanged for their 

            participation in John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry.  

            Copeland will be led to the gallows shouting "I am dying 

            for freedom.  I could not die for a better cause.  I had 

            rather die than be a slave."

 

1859 - The last slave ship, the Clothilde, landed a shipment of 

            slaves at Mobile Bay, Alabama.

 

1870 - The Colored Methodist Church of America is established at 

            Jackson, Tennessee.  The organization will change its 

            name in 1954 to the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church.

            The denomination will grow to include approximately 3,000 

            congregations. 

 

1875 - Charles Caldwell, a militant African American militia 

            officer, joins the ancestors, after being assassinated in 

            Clinton, Mississippi.

 

1875 - Alabama A&M College, Knoxville College and Lane College are 

            established.

 

1875 - Governor Daniel H. Chamberlain, acting in concert with 

            white Democrats and conservatives, refuses to resign his 

            commission.

 

1875 - William J. Whippers is elected judge of the circuit court 

            of Charleston by the South Carolina General Assembly.

 

1895 - Andy Razafkerief(Razaf) is born in Washington, DC.  He will

            become an important lyricist and musical collaborator with 

            Eubie Blake and Fats Waller.  His most famous songs will 

            include "Ain't Misbehavin'," "Honeysuckle Rose," and the 

            lyrics to "Stomping at the Savoy."  He will be inducted 

            into the Songwriters' Hall of Fame in 1972.

 

1934 - John Edward Jacobs is born in Trout, Louisiana and will be 

            raised in Houston, Texas.  Jacobs will serve the National 

            Urban League in many capacities and in 1982 will replace 

            Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. as its president.

 

1937 - Augusta Savage, sculptress, is commissioned to sculpt a 

            piece for the 1939 New York World's Fair.  The sculpture 

            is to symbolize the African American contribution to the 

            field of music.  It is the first such commission given to 

            an African American.

 

1946 - The first coining honoring an African American and designed 

            by an African American is issued.  The fifty-cent piece 

            contains the bust of Booker T. Washington.

 

1962 - William "The Refrigerator" Perry, is born.  He will become 

            an NFL defensive lineman with the Chicago Bears.  He will 

            be best known for his occasional performance as a running 

            back on short yardage situations.

 

1967 - Wilt Chamberlain, of the NBA Philadelphia 76ers, scores 68 

            points against the Chicago Bulls.

 

1973 - Jim Brown's single season rushing record in the NFL is 

            smashed by O.J. Simpson.  Brown rushed for 1,863 yards, 

            while Simpson ran for 2,003 yards. 

 

1976 - Rep. Andrew Young is appointed Ambassador and Chief 

            representative to the United Nations by President Jimmy 

            Carter.

 

1990 - Jean-Bertrand Aristide is elected president of Haiti in 

            the country's first democratic elections.


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