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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 18 Nov 2017 02:38:14 -0500
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*            Today in Black History - November 18          *

1797 - Abolitionist and orator, Sojourner Truth, is born a 
	New York slave on the plantation of Johannes 
	Hardenberghn in Swartekill, New York.  Her given name 
	is Isabella VanWagener (some references use the name 
	Isabella Baumfree). She will walk away from her last 
	owner one year prior to being freed by a New York law 
	in 1827, which proclaimed that all slaves twenty-eight 
	years of age and over were to be freed. Several years 
	later, in response to what she describes as a command 
	from God, she becomes an itinerant preacher and takes 
	the name Sojourner Truth. Among her most memorable 
	appearances will be at an 1851 women's rights conference 
	in Akron, Ohio. In her famous "Ain't I a woman?" speech 
	she forcefully attacks the hypocrisies of organized 
	religion, white privilege and everything in between.
	She will join the ancestors on November 26, 1883.

1900 - Howard Thurman is born in Daytona Beach, Florida. A 
	theologian who will study at Morehouse with Martin L. 
	King, Sr., he will found the interracial Church of 
	Fellowship of All Peoples. The first African American 
	to hold a full-time faculty position at Boston 
	University (in 1953), Dr. Thurman will write 22 books 
	and become widely regarded as one of the greatest 
	spiritual leaders of the 20th century. He will join the 
	ancestors on April 10, 1981.

1936 - John Henry Kendricks is born in Detroit, Michigan. He will 
	become a prolific songwriter as well as a major rhythm 
	and blues singer better known as Hank Ballard. He will 
	perform with his group, The Midnighters, and make the 
	following songs popular: "There's A Thrill Upon The Hill"
	(Let's Go, Let's Go, Let's Go), "The Twist"(made famous 
	later by Chubby Checker), "Finger Poppin' Time", "Work with 
	Me Annie", "Sexy Ways", and "Annie Had a Baby". He will be
	enshrined in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. He 
	will join the ancestors on March 2, 2003. 

1949 - Jackie Robinson, of the Brooklyn Dodgers, is named the 
	National League's Most Valuable Player.

1956 - Harold Warren Moon is born in Los Angeles, California. He will
	become a professional football player (Minnesota Vikings, 
	Houston Oilers, and Seattle Seahawks quarterback). He will
	also be the first undrafted quarterback and first African 
	American quarterback to be elected to the Football Hall
	of Fame in 2006.

1964 - The head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, J. Edgar 
	Hoover, describes Martin Luther King as a "most 
	notorious liar".  This statement is indicative of the 
	agency head's dislike of the civil rights leader.

1969 - The National Association of Health Services Executives is 
	incorporated.  NAHSE's goal is to elevate the quality of
	health-care services rendered to poor and disadvantaged
	communities. 

1975 - Calvin Murphy of the Houston Rockets, ends the NBA free 
	throw streak at 58 games.

1977 - Robert Edward Chambliss, a former KKK member, is 
	convicted of first-degree murder in connection with the 
	1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in 
	Birmingham, Alabama, that killed four African American 
	teenage girls. 

1978 - The NAACP's Spingarn Medal is presented to Ambassador 
	Andrew J. Young "in recognition of the deftness with 
	which he has handled relations between this nation and 
	other countries" and "for his major role in raising the 
	consciousness of American citizens to the significance 
	in world affairs of the massive African continent."

1980 - Wally "Famous" Amos' signature Panama hat and embroidered 
	shirt are donated to the National Museum of American 
	History's Business Americana collection. It is the 
	first memorabilia added to the collection by an African 
	American entrepreneur and recognizes the achievement of 
	Amos, who built his company from a mom-and-pop 
	enterprise to a $250 million cookie manufacturing 
	business. 
       
1983 - "Sweet Honey in the Rock," a capella singers, perform
	their 10th anniversary reunion concert in Washington, DC.

1994 - Bandleader Cab Calloway joins the ancestors in Hockessin, 
	Delaware, at age 86.

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