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The Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
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The MUNIRAH Chronicle of Black Historical Events & Facts <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 10 Apr 2021 00:42:28 -0400
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*               Today in Black History - April 10               *

1816 - Richard Allen is elected Bishop of the A.M.E. Church, one day
	after the church is organized at its first general convention.

1872 - The first National Black Convention meets in New Orleans,
	Louisiana. Frederick Douglass will be elected president.

1877 - Federal troops withdraw from Columbia, South Carolina. This
	action will allow the white South Carolina Democrats to take
	over the state government.

1926 - Johnnie Tillmon (later Blackston) is born in Scott, Arkansas. A
	welfare rights champion, Tillmon will become the founding
	chairperson and director of the National Welfare Rights
	Organization. She will join the ancestors on November 22, 1995.

1932 - The James Weldon Johnson Literary Guild announces the winners of
	its first annual nationwide poetry contest for children. The
	judges - Jessie Fauset and Countee Cullen, among others - select
	in the teen category a 16-year-old Liberian youth and Margaret
	Walker of New Orleans, who receives an honorable mention for her
	poem "When Night Comes."

1938 - Nana Annor Adjaye, Pan-Africanist, joins the ancestors in West
	Nzima, Ghana.

1943 - Arthur Robert Ashe, Jr. is born in Richmond, Virginia. He will 
	become a professional tennis player and will be one of the first
	African American male tennis stars. He will be the first African
	American to win a spot on the American Davis Cup tennis team,
	the first to win the U.S. Open and the men's singles title at
	Wimbledon, in 1975. Over his 11-year career he will play in 304 
	tournaments, winning 51, including the 1970 Australian Open and 
	Wimbledon in 1975. He will be the number one ranked player in the 
	world in 1975. A life-threatening heart condition will force him 
	to retire in 1980 and he will continue to serve as the non-playing 
	captain of that year's U.S. Davis Cup team. In 1985 he will become 
	the second African American inducted into the International Tennis 
	Hall of Fame. The first was Althea Gibson in 1971. After his career 
	in tennis, he will become an eloquent spokesperson against racial 
	intolerance and a critic of South Africa's racist system of 
	apartheid. In the United States, he will create tennis programs to 
	benefit inner-city youth. He will write a three-volume history of 
	the African American athlete entitled "A Hard Road To Glory" (1988).
	Suffering complications from AIDS, contracted from a blood 
	transfusion during a heart bypass operation, he will join the 
	ancestors in New York on February 6, 1993.

1958 - W.C. Handy, composer and musician, joins the ancestors at the 
	age of 84 in New York City.

1959 - Kenneth Brian Edmonds is born in Indianapolis, Indiana. He will 
	become a professional musician known as "Babyface" and will 
	begin work in the business producing music, with his friend 
	Antonio Reid, for Carrie Lucas, The Whispers, and Dynasty. 
	Since then, they've produced hits for many others. During the 
	1990s, his dominance will extend beyond the production arena 
	and into the performing circle. His hit "Tender Lover" crossed 
	him over into pop territory and eventually sold more than two 
	million copies. The singles "Whip Appeal" and "It's No Crime" 
	were Top Ten R&B and pop hits. He will hit his peak in 1995, 
	producing hits for artists like Boyz II Men, Madonna and 
	Whitney Houston and coordinated the "Waiting to Exhale" 
	soundtrack. In the fall of 1996, he will released "Day," his 
	first solo album since 1993 to strong reviews. He will 
	successfully produce the film "Soul Food" in 1997.

1968 - U.S. Congress passes a Civil Rights Bill banning racial 
	discrimination in the sale or rental of approximately 80 per cent 
	of the nation's housing. The bill also made it a crime to 
	interfere with civil rights workers and to cross state lines to 
	incite a riot.

1975 - Lee Elder becomes the first African American to tee off as an 
	entrant in the Masters' Tournament in Augusta, Georgia. 

1983 - Baltimore's Eddie Murray hits his 1,000 career hit.

2003 - Eva "Little Eva" Boyd, singer, joins the ancestors at age 59 
	after succumbing to cancer. She recorded the 1960s pop hit,
	"The Locomotion."

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