* Today in Black History - August 28 *
1818 - Jean Baptiste Pointe du Sable, trader and founder of
Chicago, joins the ancestors.
1921 - Second Pan-African Congress meets in London, Brussels and
Paris, from August 28 to September 6. Of the 113 delegates,
39 are from Africa and 36 were from the United States.
1949 - Paul Robeson's scheduled singing appearance at the Lakeland
picnic grounds near Peekskill in Westchester County, New
York, is disrupted by a riot instigated and provoked by
whites angry at Robeson's political stands.
1945 - Brooklyn Dodgers' owner Branch Rickey and future baseball
great Jackie Robinson meet. They will discuss the
difficulties Robinson, an African American athlete, would
face in major-league baseball. Robinson will receive
$600 a month and a $3,500 signing bonus to play for
Montreal of the International League. He would quickly
move up and enjoy a brilliant career with the Brooklyn
Dodgers.
1955 - Fourteen-year-old Chicago youngster Emmett Till is
kidnapped in Money, Mississippi. Four days later he is
found brutally mutilated and murdered, allegedly for
whistling at a white woman. Two whites will be acquitted
of the crime by an all-white jury. The incident will
receive national publicity and highlight racism and
brutality toward African Americans. This incident is
chronicled on tape # 1 in the "Eyes on the Prize" series.
1962 - Seventy-five ministers and laymen--African American and
whites--primarily from the North, are arrested after a
prayer demonstration in downtown Albany, Georgia.
1963 - Over 250,000 African-Americans and whites converge on the
Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington, at the
time, the largest single protest demonstration in United
States history. The march, organized to support sweeping
civil rights measures, will also be the occasion of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s most famous speech, "I have a
Dream."
1964 - A racially motivated civil disobedience disorder occurs in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1966 - The National Guard is mobilized to protect Milwaukee,
Wisconsin marchers protesting a judge's membership in
lily-white club.
1968 - Rev. Channing E. Philips of Washington, DC, becomes the
first African American to have his/her name placed in
nomination for president by a major national party.
Philips' name is placed in nomination as the favorite
son candidate by the District of Columbia delegation at
the Democratic convention in Chicago and will receive 67
1/2 votes.
1984 - The Jacksons' Victory Tour breaks the existing record for
concert ticket sales. The group surpasses the 1.1 million
mark in only two months.
1988 - Beah Richards wins an Emmy for outstanding guest
performance in the comedy series "Frank's Place." It is
one of the many acting distinctions for the Vicksburg,
Mississippi native, including her Academy Award
nomination for best supporting actress in "Guess Who's
Coming to Dinner."
2018 - Andrew Gillum, mayor of Tallahasee, Florida, wins the Florida
Democratic primary for governor. He is the first African
American to win a primary for governor in the state of Florida.
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