Monday, April 05, 2010

Today in Black History 04/03/2010

*               Today in Black History - April 3                *

1865 - The Fifth Massachusetts Colored Cavalry and units of the
    Twenty-fifth Corps are in the vanguard of Union troops
    entering Richmond. The Second Division of the Twenty-Fifth
    Corps help to chase Robert E. Lee's army from Petersburg to
    Appomattox Court House, April 3-10. The African American
    division and white Union soldiers are advancing on General
    Lee's trapped army with fixed bayonets when the Confederate
    troops surrender.

1889 - The Savings Bank of the Order of True Reformers opens in
    Richmond, Virginia.

1934 - Richard Mayhew is born in Amityville, New York.  A student
    at the Art Students League, Brooklyn Museum Art School, and
    Columbia University, as well as the Academia in Florence,
    Italy, Mayhew will be one of the most respected and
    revolutionary landscape artists of the 20th century.  He
    will also form "Spiral," a forum for artistic innovation
    and exploration of African American artists' relationships
    to the civil rights movement, with fellow artists Romare
    Bearden, Charles Alston, Hale Woodruff, and others.

1936 - James Harrell McGriff is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 
    He will be surrounded by music as a child, with both parents
    playing piano and cousins Benny Golson and Harold Melvin,
    who were pursuing their own musical talents.  He will be
    influenced to play the organ by neighbor Richard "Groove"
    Holmes, with whom he will study privately. He will also
    study organ at Philadelphia's Combe College of Music and at
    Julliard. In addition, he will study with Milt Buckner and
    with classical organist Sonny Gatewood.  His first hit will
    be with his arrangement of "I Got A Woman", on the Sue
    label, which made it to the top five on both Billboard's
    Rhythm and Blues and Pop charts. There will be close to 100
     albums with Jimmy McGriff's name at the top as leader. He
    will record for Sue, Solid State, United Artists, Blue Note,
    Groove Merchant, Milestone, Headfirst and Telarc. Over his
    prolific career, he will record with George Benson, Kenny
    Burrell, Frank Foster, J.J. Johnson and a two-organ jam
    affair with the late "Groove" Holmes.

1944 - The U.S. Supreme Court (Smith v. Allwright) said that "white
    primaries" that exclude African Americans are
    unconstitutional.

1950 - Carter G. Woodson, "the father of black history," joins the
    ancestors in Washington, DC at the age of 74.

1961 - Edward "Eddie" Regan Murphy is born in Brooklyn, New York. A
    stand-up comedian and star of "Saturday Night Live" before
    pursuing a movie career, Murphy will become one of the
    largest African American box office draws.  Among his most
    successful movies will be "48 Hours," "Trading Places,"
    "Beverly Hills Cop," "Coming to America," and "Harlem
    Nights."

1963 - Led by Martin Luther King, Jr., the Birmingham anti-
    segregation campaign begins.  Before it is over, more than
    2,000 demonstrators, including King, will be arrested. The
    Birmingham Manifesto, issued by Fred Shuttlesworth of the
    Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights the morning of
    the campaign, summarizes the frustration and hopes of the
    protesters: "The patience of an oppressed people cannot
    endure forever.... This is Birmingham's moment of truth in
    which every citizen can play his part in her larger
    destiny."

1964 - Malcolm X speaks at a CORE-sponsored meeting on "The Negro
    Revolt What Comes Next?"  In his speech "The Ballot or
    Bullet," Malcolm warns of a growing black nationalism that
    will no longer tolerate patronizing white political action.

1968 - Less than 24 hours before he is assassinated in Memphis,
    Tennessee, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
    delivers his famous "mountaintop" speech to a rally of
    striking sanitation workers.

1990 - Jazz singer Sarah Vaughan joins the ancestors in suburban
    Los Angeles, California, at the age of 66.

1996 - An Air Force jetliner carrying Commerce Secretary Ron Brown
    and American business executives crashes in Croatia,
    killing all 35 people aboard.

2007 - Eddie Robinson, the longtime Grambling University coach who
    transformed a small, Black college into a football power
    that sent hundreds of players to the NFL, joins the
    ancestors at the age of 88. The soft-spoken coach spent 57
    years at Grambling State University, where he set a
    standard for victories with 408 and nearly every season
    relished seeing his top players drafted by NFL teams.

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