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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:
Mon, 11 Jan 2021 21:31:17 -0500
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*                 Today in Black History - January 10                *

1663 - King Charles II of England affirms charter of Royal African 
	Company.

1768 - James Varick is born in Orange County, New York. Racism in 
	New York City will lead Varick, a licensed clergyman, and  
	30 other African Americans to leave the famous and 
	predominantly white John Street Methodist Episcopal Church 
	and establish the first African American church in New York 
	City. He will later become the founder and first bishop of 
	the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. He will join
	the ancestors on July 22, 1827. His remains now rest in the 
	crypt of the Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church 
	in the village of Harlem in New York City.

1811 - African Americans in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania hold meetings 
	at Bethel Church to protest The American Colonization 
	Society's campaign "to exile us from the land of our 
	nativity."

1811 - Slaves in Louisiana rebel in two parishes about thirty-five 
	miles from New Orleans. The revolt is suppressed by U.S. 
	troops.

1870 - The legislature in the state of Georgia reconvenes and admits
	African American representatives and senators.

1889 - The Ivory Coast is declared a protectorate of France.

1925 - Drummer Maxwell Lemuel "Max" Roach is born in Newland, North 
	Carolina. He will become an influential figure in the development 
	of modern jazz, playing with Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, 
	and Clifford Brown before forming his own groups in the 
	1950's. He will achieve wide acclaim for his superb musical 
	innovation. He also will be an educator, teaching at 
	Lenox, Massachusetts School of Jazz, Yale University, and 
	Professor of Music at the University of Massachusetts 
	(Amherst). He will join the ancestors on August 16, 2007.

1938 - Willie McCovey is born in Mobile, Alabama. He will become a
	professional baseball player in 1959 for the Giants organization.  
	After more than two decades, he will end his career, and garner 
	an impressive array of baseball's most coveted awards: Rookie 
	of the Year in 1959; MVP in 1969; six times an All-Star and 
	once the All-Star Game MVP; Comeback Player of the Year in 
	1977 and the National League's all-time left-handed home run 
	hitter. He will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 
	1986. It will be his first year of eligibility and he will appear
	on 346 of 425 ballots cast (81.4 percent). In 1999, he will rank
	56th on The Sporting News' list of the "100 Greatest Baseball 
	Players," and be nominated as a finalist for the Major League 
	Baseball All-Century Team. Since 1980, the Giants have awarded 
	the Willie Mac Award to honor his spirit and leadership. The 
	inlet of San Francisco Bay beyond the right field fence of AT&T 
	Park, historically known as China Basin, has been re-dubbed 
	McCovey Cove in his honor. Across McCovey Cove from the park a 
	statue of him will be erected and the land on which it stands 
	named McCovey Point. The Giants will retire his uniform number 44 
	on September 21, 1980, which he wore in honor of Hank Aaron, a 
	fellow Mobile, Alabama native. He will be inducted to the Afro 
	Sports Hall of Fame on February 7, 2009 in Oakland, California.

1949 - George Foreman is born in Marshall, Texas. He will become a
	professional boxer and win the world heavyweight 
	championship in 1973. He will retire from boxing in 1977 
	after a defeat by Jimmy Young. He will enter the ministry 
	and stay away from boxing for ten years. He will return to 
	boxing in 1987 at the age of 37 and become the oldest 
	heavyweight champion at age 45 on November 5, 1994.

1966 - The Georgia House of Representatives refuses to seat African
	American legislator Julian Bond, SNCC communications 
	director, because of his opposition to U.S. involvement in 
	the Vietnam War. He will be seated almost one year later, 
	after a legal battle that will eventually be resolved by the 
	U.S. Supreme Court.

1967 - Edward Brooke, takes his seat as the first popularly elected 
	African American United States Senator.

1976 - Chester Arthur Burnett, better known as "Howlin' Wolf," joins
	the ancestors in Hines, Illinois. He was a blues legend that
	helped to bring the Delta Blues music from Mississippi to 
	Chicago during the 1950's. This music was the basis for the 
	Chicago blues sound.

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