Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Today in Black History 04/23/2010

*               Today in Black History - April 23               *

1856 - Granville T. Woods, who will become an inventor of steam
    boilers, furnaces, incubators and auto air brakes and
    holder of over 50 patents, is born in Columbus, Ohio.

1872 - Charlotte E. Ray becomes the first African American woman
    lawyer in ceremonies held in Washington, DC admitting her
    to practice before the bar. She had received her law degree
    from Howard University on February 27.

1894 - Jimmy Noone is born in New Orleans, Louisiana.  He will
    become a jazz clarinetist and a major influence on the
    swing music of the 1930's and 1940's. He will be a band
    leader and be best known as the leader of "Jimmy Noone's
    Apex Club Orchestra."  Two of the people most influenced by
    Jimmy Noone's style will be Benny Goodman and Jimmy Dorsey. 
    He will join the ancestors after suffering a fatal heart
    attack, while performing with "Kid" Ory on April 19, 1944.

1895 - Jorge Mateus Vicente Lima is born in Alagoas, Brazil.  He
    will become a poet, novelist, essayist, painter, doctor,
    and politician.  He will become best known as a writer,
    manipulating Brazilian subjects, at the same time analyzing
    Afro-Brazilian culture and heritage. He will become a
    fixture in the Brazilian experience during the 1920's. Even
    though he became a physician, he will exhibit his talents
    as a writer in writings from his youth. His most famous
    writing will be a poem,    "Essa Nega Fulo" (That Black Girl
    Fulo), written in 1928.  The poem will explore the dynamics
    between a slave master, the slave and her mistress. He
    will join the ancestors in 1953 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

1898 - Alfredo da Rocha Viana Jr. is born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
    He will become a composer and bandleader best known as
    "Pixinguinha." By the time he was a teenager, he will be
    respected for his talent as a flutist. After traveling with
    his first band to France in 1922, he will open the door of
    Brazilian music to the world. He will be credited with
    assisting to invent the "samba." He is generally referred
    to as the King of Samba and the Father of Musica Popular
    Brasileira. He will join the ancestors on February 17, 1973
    in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

1913 - The National Urban League is incorporated in New York City.
    The organization is founded in 1910 when the Committee on
    Urban Conditions Among Negroes met in New York to discuss
    means to assist rural African Americans in the transition
    to urban life.  Founders include Mrs. Ruth Standish Baldwin
    and Dr. George Edmund Haynes, who becomes the league's
    first executive director.

1941 - New Yorkers are treated to a performance of Cafi Society at
    Carnegie Hall by a group of jazz artists that includes
    Albert "Jug" Ammons, Hazel Scott, and Art Tatum.  It also
    marks the first performance of Helena (later Lena) Horne,
    who sings "Summertime," among other songs.

1944 - The NAACP Youth Council and Committee for Unity in Motion
    Pictures selects its first Motion Picture Award recipients.
    Given to honor actors whose roles advance the image of
    African Americans in motion pictures, awards go to Rex
    Ingram for "Sahara," Lena Horne for "As Thousands Cheer,"
    Leigh Whipper for "The Oxbow Incident" and "Mission to
    Moscow," Hazel Scott for her debut in "Something to Shout
    About" and Dooley Wilson for his role as Sam in
    "Casablanca," among others. The awards will be the fore-
    runner to the NAACP's Image Awards.

1948 - Charles Richard Johnson in born in Evanston, Illinois.  He
    will become an novelist, essayist and screenwriter.  He
    will begin his career after graduating from the State
    University of New York at Stonybrook with a Ph.D. in
    philosophy.  He will be mentored by W.E.B. Du Bois, Ralph
    Ellison, Jean Toomer, Richard Wright and John Gardner. He
    will be known for his works, "Middle Passage," "Oxherding
    Tale," "The Sorcerer's Apprentice," and "Being and Race:
    Black Writing Since 1970." He will win the 1990 National
    Book Award for "Middle Passage."

1954 - Hammerin' Hank Aaron, of the Milwaukee Braves, hits the
    first of what will be 755 career home runs, in a game
    against the St. Louis Cardinals. The score will be 7-5 in
    favor of the Braves.

1955 - U.S. Supreme Court refuses to review a lower court decision
    which would ban segregation in intrastate bus travel.

1964 - James Baldwin's play, "Blues for Mr. Charlie" opens on
    Broadway.  Starring Al Freeman, Jr., Diana Sands, and
    others, the play reveals the plight of African Americans in
    the South.

1971 - Columbia University operations are virtually ended for the
    year by African American and white students who seize five
    buildings on campus.

1971 - William Tubman, president of Liberia, joins the ancestors at
    the age of 76.  He had been president of Liberia since
    1944.

1998 - James Earl Ray, who confessed to assassinating the Rev.
    Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 and then insisted he was
    framed, dies at a Nashville hospital at age 70.

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