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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:
Wed, 7 Apr 2021 08:27:15 -0400
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*               Today in Black History - April 7                *

1712 - A slave uprising in New York City results in the death of 
	nine whites. This is one of the first major revolts of 
	African slaves in the American colonies. After the 
	militia arrives, the uprising will be suppressed. As a 
	result of the action, twenty one slaves will be executed 
	and six others will commit suicide.

1867 - Johnson C. Smith University is founded in Charlotte, North 
	Carolina.

1872 - William Monroe Trotter is born in Chillicothe, Ohio. Editor
	of the Boston "Guardian," he will also be a militant civil 
	rights activist and adversary of Booker T. Washington and 
	his moderate politics.

1915 - Eleanora Fagan is born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She will
	become a jazz singer who will influence the course of 
	American popular singing, better known as Billie Holiday or 
	"Lady Day." She will be best known for her songs, "Strange
	Fruit," "Lover Man," and "God Bless the Child." Although she 
	will enjoy limited popular appeal during her lifetime, her 
	impact on other singers will be profound. Troubled in life 
	by addiction, She will join the ancestors as a result of
	drug and alcohol abuse on July 17, 1959.

1922 - Ramon "Mongo" Santamaria is born in Havana, Cuba. He will 
	drop out of school to become a professional musician, 
	playing gigs at the legendary Tropicana Club in Havana. In 
	1950, Santamaria will move to New York, where he will hook 
	up with such Latin jazz greats as Perez Prado, Tito Puente 
	and Cal Tjader. In 1963 Santamaria will score his first Top
	10 hit with the single "Watermelon Man," written by then 
	bandmate Herbie Hancock. Santamaria will perform and record 
	steadily throughout the '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s. In 1977, 
	he will be awarded a Grammy for his album "Amancer." In 
	1999, Rhino Records will release a double-CD retrospective 
	of Santamaria's music, "The Mongo Santamaria Anthology 
	1958-1995," culling his greatest work during those five 
	decades. He will be considered one of the most influential
	percussionists of his generation. He will join the ancestors
	in Miami, Florida on February 1, 2003.

1934 - William Monroe Trotter joins the ancestors in Boston, 
	Massachusetts at the age of sixty-two.

1938 - Trumpeter Frederick Dewayne "Freddie" Hubbard is born in 
	Indianapolis, Indiana. From a musical family, he will play 
	four instruments in his youth and will later play with "Slide"
	Hampton, Quincy Jones, and Art Blakey. A leader of his own
	band starting in the 1960's, he will record the noteworthy 
	albums "Red Clay," "First Light," and the Grammy Award-winning
	"Straight Life." He will join the ancestors on 
	December 29, 2008.

1940 - The first U.S. stamp ever to honor an African American is
	issued bearing the likeness of Booker T. Washington. His
	likeness is on a 10-cent stamp.

1954 - Anthony Drew "Tony" Dorsett is born in Rochester, Pennsylvania. 
	He will become a star football player at the University of 
	Pittsburgh, where he will win the Heisman Trophy in 1976.  
	He will then become the number one pick in the 1977 NFL 
	draft by the Dallas Cowboys. He will play in two Super Bowls,
	five NFC championship games, four Pro Bowls, will be All-NFL 
	in 1981, and NFC rushing champion in 1982. His career totals
	include 12,739 yards rushing, 398 receptions for 3,544 yards,
	16,326 combined net yards, 90 touchdowns, and a record 99 
	yard run for a touchdown against the Minnesota Vikings in 
	1983. He will end his career with the 1988 Denver Broncos.  
	He will be enshrined in the NFL Hall of Fame in 1994.

1994 - Civil war erupts in Rwanda, a day after a mysterious plane 
	crash claims the lives of the presidents of Rwanda and 
	Burundi. In the months that follow, hundreds of thousands of
	minority Tutsi and Hutu intellectuals will be slaughtered. 

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