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The Munirah Chronicle <[log in to unmask]>
Sun, 6 Dec 2020 03:53:14 -0500
text/plain (106 lines)
*                Today in Black History - December 6           *  

1806 - The African Meeting House is dedicated in Boston, 
	Massachusetts and will become the oldest African 
	American house of worship still standing in the United 
	States. This house of worship will be constructed 
	almost entirely by African American laborers and 
	craftsmen, but funds will be contributed by the white 
	community. Because of the leadership role its 
	congregation takes in the early struggle for civil 
	rights, the African Meeting House will become known as 
	the Abolition Church and Black Faneuil Hall. Frederick 
	Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison will be speakers 
	there.

1849 - Harriet Tubman escapes from slavery in Maryland. She 
	will return to the South nineteen times and bring out 
	more than three hundred slaves.

1865 - Ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the U.S. 
	Constitution, abolishing slavery is completed. The 
	proclamation of its acceptance will take place on 
	December 18, 1865. 

1869 - The National Black labor convention meets in Washington, 
	DC.

1870 - Joseph H Rainey becomes the first African American in 
	the House of Representatives. He is a congressman from 
	the state of South Carolina.

1871 - P.B.S. Pinchback is elected president pro-tem of the 
	Louisiana Senate and acting lieutenant governor. He is 
	the first African American to serve in these positions 
	in state government.

1875 - The Forty-Fourth Congress of 1875-1877 convenes with a 
	high of eight African Americans taking office. They are 
	Senator Blanche K. Bruce of Mississippi and congressmen 
	Jeremiah Haralson of Alabama, Josiah T. Walls of Florida, 
	John Roy Lynch of Mississippi, John A. Hyman of North 
	Carolina, Charles E. Nash of Louisiana,; and Joseph H. 
	Rainey and Robert Smalls of South Carolina.

1892 - Theodore K. Lawless is born in Thibodeaux, Louisiana. He 
	will receive his medical degree from Northwestern 
	University, hold a fellowship at Massachusetts General 
	Hospital and receive further training at the University 
	of Paris's premier Dermatology program. He will become a 
	dermatologist, medical researcher, and philanthropist. 
	He will known for his work related to leprosy and 
	syphilis. He will also be involved in various charitable 
	causes including Jewish causes. He will create the 
	Lawless Department of Dermatology in Beilison Hospital, 
	Tel-Aviv, Israel, the T. K. Lawless Student Summer 
	Program at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, 
	Israel; the Lawless Clinical and Research Laboratory in 
	Dermatology of the Hebrew Medical School, Jerusalem;
	Roosevelt University's Chemical Laboratory and Lecture 
	Auditorium, Chicago; and Lawless Memorial Chapel, 
	Dillard University, New Orleans. His philantrophy in
	Israel was in gratitude for the support received from 
	Jewish doctors in obtaining his appointment to his 
	position at the University of Paris. A shrewd investor 
	and businessman, he will have a remarkable business 
	career. He will be director of both the Supreme Life 
	Insurance Company and Marina City Bank. He will also be
	a charter member, associate founder, and president of 
	Service Federal Savings and Loan in Chicago. He will 
	become a self-made millionaire. He will join the
	ancestors in Chicago, Illinois on May 1, 1971.

1949 - Blues legend Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbetter joins the 
	ancestors in New York City.

1956 - Nelson Mandela and 156 others are jailed for political 
	activities in South Africa. 

1960 - 500 store owners sign pledges of nondiscrimination in 
	Tucson, Arizona.

1961 - Dr. Frantz O. Fanon, noted author of "Black Skins, White 
	Masks" and "Wretched of the Earth", joins the ancestors 
	in Washington, DC. He succumbs to leukemia at the National 
	Institutes of Health.

1977 - South Africa grants Bophuthatswana its independence. The 
	constitution, in effect after South Africa's first all-race 
	elections in April 1994, will abolish this black homeland, 
	which will be reabsorbed into South Africa.

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