Thursday, April 08, 2010

Today in Black History 04/08/2010

*               Today in Black History - April 8               *

1922 - Carmen McRae is born in the village of Harlem in New York
    City. She will study classical piano in her youth, even
    though singing was her first love. She will win an
    amateur contest at the Apollo Theater and begin her
    singing career.  She will be influenced by Billie
    Holiday, who will become a lifelong friend and mentor.
    She will devote her albums and the majority of her
    nightclub acts to Lady Day's memory. Her association
    with jazz accordionist Matt Mathews will lead to her
    first solo recordings in 1953-1954. In her later years,
    McRae's original style will influence singers Betty
    Carter and Carol Sloane.  Her best known recordings will
    be "Skyliner" (1956) and "Take Five" with Dave Brubeck
    (1961). She will also work in films and will appear in
    "Hotel" (1967) and "Jo Jo Dancer Your Life is Calling"
    (1986).  She will receive six Grammy award nominations
    and the National Endowment for the Arts' National Jazz
    Masters Fellowship Award in 1994. She will join the
    ancestors in 1994.

1938 - Cornetist and bandleader Joe "King" Oliver joins the
    ancestors in Savannah, Georgia.  He was considered one
    of the leading musicians of New Orleans-style jazz and
    served as a mentor to Louis Armstrong, who played with
    him in 1922 and 1923.

1974 - Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves hits his 715th home run
    against a pitch thrown by Los Angeles Dodger Al Downing
    at a home game in Fulton County Stadium. Aaron's home
    run breaks the long-standing home run record of Babe
    Ruth.

1975 - Frank Robinson, major league baseball's first African
    American manager, gets off to a winning start as his
    team, the Cleveland Indians, defeat the New York
    Yankees, 5-3.

1980 - State troopers are mobilized to stop racially motivated
    civil disturbances in Wrightsville, Georgia.  Racial
    incidents are also reported in Chattanooga, Tennessee,
    Oceanside, California, Kokomo, Indiana, Wichita, Kansas,
    and Johnston County, North Carolina.

1987 - Los Angeles Dodgers general manager Al Campanis is fired
    for alleged racially biased comments about the
    managerial potential of African Americans.

1990 - Percy Julian, who helped create drugs to combat glaucoma
    and methods to mass produce cortisone, and agricultural
    scientist George Washington Carver are the first African
    American inventors admitted into the National Inventors
    Hall of Fame in the hall's 17-year history.

1992 - Tennis great Arthur Ashe announces at a New York news
    conference that he had AIDS.  He contracted the virus
    from a transfusion needed for an earlier heart surgery. 
    Ashe will join the ancestors in February 1993 of
    AIDS-related pneumonia at age 49.

2001 - Tiger Woods becomes the first golfer to hold all four
    major professional golf titles at one time when he wins
    the 2001 Masters tournament.

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