Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Today in Black History 04/06/2010

*               Today in Black History - April 6                *

1798 - James P. Beckwourth is born in Fredericksburg, Virginia.  He
    will become a noted scout in the western United States and
    will discover a pass in the Sierra Nevada mountains between
    the Feather and Truckee rivers that will bear his name.

1830 - James Augustine Healy is born to an Irish planter and a slave
    on a plantation near Macon, Georgia.  He will become the
    first African American Roman Catholic bishop in America.

1865 - Writing in the "Philadelphia Press" under the pen name
    "Rollin," Thomas Morris Chester describes the Union Army's
    triumphant entry into the city of Richmond, Virginia, during
    the closing days of the Civil War.  Rollin is the only
    African American newspaperman writing for a mainstream
    daily. There will be no others for almost 70 years.

1869 - Ebenezer Don Carlos Bassett, the principal of the Institute for
    Colored Youth in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is named Minister
    to Haiti and becomes the first major African American diplomat
    and the first African American to receive a major appointment
    from the United States government.

1909 - Matthew Henson, accompanying Commander Robert Peary's
    expedition, is the first, in the party of six, to discover the
    North Pole. The claim, disputed by scientific skeptics, was
    upheld in 1989 by the Navigation Foundation. Although in
    later years Henson will be called Peary's servant or merely
    "one Negro" on the expedition, Henson is a valuable colleague
    and co-discoverer of the pole.  Peary says, "I couldn't get
    along without him."

1917 - America enters World War I. President Wilson, who has just
    inaugurated a policy of segregation in government agencies,
    tells Congress that "the world must be made safe for
    democracy."

1931 - The first trial of the Scottsboro Boys begins in Scottsboro,
    Alabama.  This trial of nine African American youths accused
    of raping two white women on a freight train become a cause
    celebre.

1931 - Ivan Dixon is born in New York City.  He will become an actor
    and director and will be best known for his comedic role on
    the TV series "Hogan's Heroes."  One of his first acting
    credits will be for the celebrated television anthology show
    "The Dupont Show of the Month" in the 1960 production of
    "Arrowsmith." He will go on to act in the film version of the
    theatrical drama "A Raisin in the Sun" with Ruby Dee and
    Sidney Poitier in 1961, in which he plays Asagai, the African
    boyfriend of Beneatha. He will also portray Jim in the 1959
    film version of "Porgy and Bess." His other pre-"Hogan's
    Heroes" film work includes: "Something of Value" (1957), "The
    Murder Men" (1961), and "The Battle at Bloody Beach" (1961).
    After leaving Hogan's heroes he will appear in more films
    including "A Patch of Blue" and "Car Wash."  Ivan will begin
    directing films in the early 1970s, such as the 1972 gang
    warfare flick "Trouble Man" and the 1973 action movie "The
    Spook Who Sat by the Door" (which he will also produce). For
    television, he will direct "Love Is Not Enough" (1978), the
    series "Palmerstown, U.S.A." (1980), the detective series
    "Hawaiian Heat" (1984), and the telemovie "Percy & Thunder"
    (1993).

1937 - William December is born in the village of Harlem in New York
    City.  He will become one of the most romantic leading men of
    film and television, better known as 'Billy Dee Williams.' 
    Among his best known roles will be football great Gale Sayers
    in the TV movie "Brian's Song" as well as leading parts in
    the movies "Lady Sings the Blues," "Mahogany" and two "Star
    Wars" films.

1971 - "Contemporary Black Artists in America" opens at the Whitney
    Museum of American Art in New York City.  The exhibit includes
    the work of 58 master painters and sculptors such as Jacob
    Lawrence, Charles White, Alma Thomas, Betye Saar, David
    Driskell, Richard Hunt, and others.

1994 - The presidents of Rwanda and Burundi are killed in a mysterious
    plane crash near Rwanda's capital. Widespread violence erupts
    in Rwanda over claims the plane had been shot down.

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