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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:
Fri, 7 May 2021 01:43:49 -0400
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*		Today in Black History - May 7		        *

1867 - African American demonstrators stage a ride-in to protest 
	segregation on New Orleans streetcars. Similar 
	demonstrations occur in Mobile, Alabama, and other cities.

1878 - J.R. Winters receives a patent for the fire escape ladder.

1884 - Henrietta Vinton Davis performs scenes from Shakespeare 
	with Powhatan Beaty at Ford's Opera House in Washington, 
	D.C., site of the assassination of President Abraham 
	Lincoln.  Vinton's career will span a total of 44 years 
	and will include her involvement with Marcus Garvey's 
	UNIA, including a vice-presidency of Garvey's Black Star 
	Line.

1885 - Dr. John E. W. Thompson, a graduate of the Yale University 
	Medical School, is named minister to Haiti.

1931 - Literary critic and editor Darwin Theodore Troy Turner is born 
	in Cincinnati, Ohio. He will be admitted to the University of 
	Cincinnati at the age of 13. He will receive a bachelor's 
	degree three years later, earn a master's in English from 
	Cincinnati at the age of 18 and a doctorate from the 
	University of Chicago when he was 25. He will begin his 
	teaching career at Clark College in Atlanta in 1949. He will
	teach at Morgan State College and Florida A&M University and 
	will be chairman of the English department at North Carolina 
	A&T College before joining the Iowa faculty in 1972. At the 
	time of his transition, he will be the University of Iowa 
	Foundation Distinguished Professor of English. His major works 
	will include "Black American Literature: Essays, Poetry Fiction 
	and Drama" (1969) and "Voices from the Black Experience: African 
	and Afro-American Literature" (1972). He will join the ancestors 
	on February 11, 1991, after succumbing to a heart attack.

1936 - Jimmy Lee Ruffin, Sr. is born in Collinsville, Mississippi. The 
	older brother of the Temptations' lead singer David Ruffin, he 
	will become a singer on the Motown label and will best 
	known for the hit "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted."  He 
	will also record "Hold on to My Love," "There Will Never be
	Another You," and "I'll Say Forever My Love." He will join
	the ancestors on November 17, 2014.

1941 - "Natural Man," a play by Theodore Browne, premieres in New 
	York City. It is a production of the American Negro 
	Theatre, founded by Abram Hill and Frederick O'Neal.

1945 - Baseball owner Branch Rickey announces the organization of 
	the United States Negro Baseball League, consisting of six 
	teams. 

1946 - William Hastie is inaugurated as the first African American 
	governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands.

1959 - 93,103 fans pack the Los Angeles Coliseum for an exhibition 
	game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the New York 
	Yankees. It is "Roy Campanella Night."  The star catcher 
	for the Dodgers, paralyzed in an automobile accident, is 
	honored for his contributions to the team. "Campie" will continue 
	to serve in various capacities with the Dodger organization for 
	many years.

2020 - Andre Harrell, the music executive who founded the influential 
	Uptown Records, joins the ancestors at the age of 59. A native of 
	New York, Harrell started his career in music as an artist, one-
	half of the early rap duo Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde, whose single 
	“Genius Rap” was a minor hit in 1981. In 1983 Harrell teamed with 
	Russell Simmons, the founder of Def Jam Records, and had one of 
	his early experiences in the business working as a vice president 
	and later GM of the label. He left to start his own record company, 
	Uptown Records, in 1986. Stylish, sophisticated and fashion-forward, 
	the label played a key role in the development of the New Jack 
	Swing style of R&B, courtesy of acts like Guy (featuring the hugely 
	influential producer-performer Teddy Riley), Al B. Sure and Jodeci, 
	as well as crossover hip-hop via Heavy D and the Boyz and Father MC. 
	Harrell also signed the teenage Mary J. Blige in the late ’80s, 
	though her career at the label didn’t fully take off until the early 
	’90s, with help from Harrell’s enterprising former intern, Sean 
	“Puffy” Combs, who was quickly elevated to an A&R position at Uptown.

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