Showing posts with label Paul Cuffe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Cuffe. Show all posts

January 17


Michelle Obama (born January 17, 1964) is the wife of the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama, and is the first African American First Lady of the United States.

Muhammad Ali (born Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr.; January 17, 1942 - June 3, 2016) was one of the most significant and celebrated sports figures of the 20th century. He began training as an amateur boxer when he was 12 years old. At age 18, he won a gold medal in the light heavyweight division at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, and as a professional won the title in 1964, 1974 and 1978. He is the only boxer to be named The Ring magazine Fighter of the Year six times. In 1964 he converted to Islam and changed his name from Cassius Clay, which he called his "slave name", to Muhammad Ali. He set an example of racial pride for African Americans and resistance to white domination during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. In 1966 he refused to be drafted, citing his religious beliefs and opposition to American involvement in the Vietnam War. He was eventually arrested, found guilty of draft evasion charges and stripped of his boxing titles. He successfully appealed in the U.S. Supreme Court, which overturned his conviction in 1971, by which time he had not fought for nearly four years—losing a period of peak performance as an athlete. In 1984 he was diagnosed with Parkinson's syndrome, which his doctors attributed to boxing-related brain injuries.

Birthdays

Paul Cuffee (January 17, 1759 – September 9, 1817) was a Quaker businessman, sea captain, patriot, and abolitionist. He was of Aquinnah Wampanoag and West African Ashanti descent and helped colonize Sierra Leone. Cuffe built a lucrative shipping empire and established the first racially integrated school in Westport, Massachusetts. He became involved in the British effort to resettle freed slaves, many of whom had moved from the US to Nova Scotia after the American Revolution, to the fledgling colony of Sierra Leone and helped establish The Friendly Society of Sierra Leone, which provided financial support for the colony.

Abram Lincoln Harris, Jr. (January 17, 1899 – November 6, 1963) was an economist, academic, anthropologist and a social critic of blacks in the United States. Considered by many as the first African American to achieve prominence in the field of economics, he was also known for his heavy influence on black radical and neo-conservative thought in the United States. As an economist, he is most famous for his 1931 collaboration with political scientist Sterling Spero to produce a study on African-American labor history titled The Black Worker and his 1936 work The Negro as Capitalist, in which he criticized black businessmen for not promoting interracial trade.

Jewel Plummer Cobb (born January 17, 1924) was president of California State University, Fullerton from 1981 to 1990. She received her M.S. degree from NYU in 1947 and her Ph.D. degree in cell physiology in 1950. Her dissertation “Mechanisms of Pigment Formation” examined the way melanin pigment granules could be formed in vitro using the enzyme tyrosinase. In 1949 she was appointed an independent investigator at Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory. She also held post-doctoral positions at the Harlem Hospital Cancer Research Foundation, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and the National Cancer Institute.

Eartha Mae Kitt (January 17, 1927 – December 25, 2008) was best known for her highly distinctive singing style and her 1953 recordings of "C'est si bon" and the enduring Christmas novelty smash "Santa Baby", which were both US Top 10 hits. She starred in 1967 as Catwoman, in the third and final season of the television series Batman. began her career in 1943 and appeared in the 1945 original Broadway theatre production of the musical Carib Song. She later received Tony Award nominations for Timbuktu! (1978) and The Wild Party (2000).

James Earl Jones (born January 17, 1931) is known for being the voice of Darth Vader in Star Wars and of Mufasa in The Lion King as well as for over fifty years as a stage and film actor. He won Tony awards in 1969 for The Great White Hope and in 1987 for Fences, and has also portrayed Lennie in Of Mice and Men and the title roles in Othello and King Lear. His  first film role was as Lt. Lothar Zogg, the B-52 bombardier in Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb in 1964, and his first starring film role was as boxer Jack Jefferson in 1970's The Great White Hope.

Lawrence Douglas Wilder (born January 17, 1931) was the first African American to be elected as governor of Virginia and first African American governor of any state since Reconstruction, serving as the 66th Governor of Virginia from 1990 to 1994. When earlier elected as Lieutenant Governor, he was the first African American elected to statewide office in Virginia. His most recent political office was Mayor of Richmond, Virginia, which he held from 2005 to 2009. He served in Korea, winning the Bronze Star during the battle of Pork Chop Hill, and is a 1959 graduate of Howard Law School.
Michelle Obama (January 17, 1964) is the wife of the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama, and was the first African American First Lady of the United States. She graduated from Princeton University and Harvard Law School before returning to Chicago to work at the law firm Sidley Austin where she met her future husband when he was an intern at the firm, and they were married on October 3, 1992. She also worked for the City of Chicago, as as associate dean of student services for the University of Chicago, and as vice president for community and external affairs at the University of Chicago Medical Center before taking a leave of absence to campaign for her husband. As First Lady she was known for her commitment to education and childrens' fitness.

Events

On January 17, 1961, Congolese Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba was executed by Katangan secessionists. Belgium, the United Kingdom, and the United States have all been accused of involvement in Lumumba's death, the latter due to American commercial interests in the Congo and as part of Cold War rivalry with the Soviet Union, a country the Americans were determined should not gain access to Congo's uranium riches used to make nuclear bombs.

On January 17, 1969, "Bunchy" Carter and fellow Panther John Huggins were shot to death in UCLA’s Campbell Hall by members of the rival black radical group Us. Their deaths were actual set up by the FBI and its COINTELPRO program. Both were founders of the Los Angeles chapter of the BPP the previous year.

On January 17, 1991, Wilhelmina Delco became the first woman to serve as Speaker Pro Tempore of the Texas House. Delco was also the first African American elected to the board of the Austin Independent School District and the first African American elected to represent Travis County in the Texas House of Representatives.

On January 17, 1996, U.S. Representative Barbara Jordan passed away from Multiple Sclerosis at the age of 60. She was the first African American elected to the Texas Senate after Reconstruction and the first southern black female elected to the United States House of Representatives. She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, among numerous other honors. On her death she became the first African-American woman to be buried in the Texas State Cemetery.




Photo Gallery

Gen. Thomas-Alexandre Dumas, fighting off the Austrian army, at the bridge of Clausen in Tyrol, on 17 January 1797.

Huey Newton: “The racist dog policemen must withdraw immediately from our communities, cease their wanton murder and brutality and torture of black people, or face the wrath of the armed people.” January 17, 1969

Publications

Jet Magazine, January 17, 1952

SOUL — America's Most Soulful Newspaper, January 17, 1977 — George Clinton of Parliament, Gil Scott-Heron & LaBelle
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November 16


Lisa Bonet (born November 16, 1967) is best known for her role as Denise Huxtable on the long-running NBC sitcom The Cosby Show, and originally starring in its spinoff A Different World.

William Christopher (W. C.) Handy (November 16, 1873 – March 28, 1958) was a composer and musician widely known as the "Father of the Blues". Although not the first to publish music in the blues form, he took the blues from a regional music style to one of the dominant national forces in American music. In 1896 he became the bandmaster of Mahara's Colored Minstrels, then taught at Alabama A&M for two years before becoming the director of a band organized by the Knights of Pythias, living first in Clarksdale, Mississippi and then in Memphis. The publication of sheet music to his "Memphis Blues" brought him national recognition, as did the advent of recording later in the decade. In 1926 Handy wrote and edited a work entitled Blues: An Anthology -- Complete Words and Music of 53 Great Songs, possibly the first work to record, analyze and describe the blues as an integral part of the South and the history of the United States.

Birthdays

Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe (November 16, 1904 - May 11, 1966) became the first president of Nigeria in 1960. He graduated from historically black Lincoln University in Pennsylvania in 1930, where his classmates were Thurgood Marshall, Cab Calloway, and Langston Hughes. He received a masters degree in political science from the University of Pennsylvania in 1933 and a masters degree in Anthropology from Columbia in 1934.

Chinua Achebe (November 16, 1930 - March 22, 2013) is considered by many to be the father of African literature. He is best known for his first novel, Things Fall Apart (1958) - and for creating the Conrad controversy with his 1975 lecture, An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness,” and its criticism of Joseph Conrad as “a bloody racist”. He is the winner of the Booker International Prize, 2007.
Hubert Charles Sumlin (November 16, 1931 – December 4, 2011) played guitar in Howlin' Wolf's band until Wolf's death in 1976. He continued to play with other members of the band as well as record as a solo artist. He was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 2008 and was ranked number 43 in Rolling Stone's "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time"

Clive Callender (born November 16, 1936) is one of the foremost specialists in organ transplant medicine in the United States. The Howard University Hospital surgeon has focused much of his career on transplant medicine among minority segments of the population, along with the unique health and social issues relevant to them as potential donors. During a campaign to increase the number of donors among African Americans he was able to triple the donorship rate.

John Earl Warren, Jr. (November 16, 1946 – January 14, 1969) Served in the Viet Nam War in the United States Army as a First Lieutenant in Company C, 2nd Battalion Mechanized), 22nd Infantry, 25th Infantry Division. He was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his bravery at Tay Ninh Province, Republic of Vietnam, on January 14, 1969. While commanding a platoon, the unit came under attack and 1LT Warren fell on an enemy-thrown grenade to shield others from the blast. The action cost him his life.The Medal was posthumously awarded to his family by President Richard Nixon on August 6, 1970.
Zina Garrison (born November 16, 1963, Houston, Texas) was a women's singles runner-up at Wimbledon in 1990, a three -time Grand Slam mixed doubles champion, and a women's doubles gold medalist with Pam Shriver at the 1988 Olympic Games. After retirement in 1996 she has been a television commentator, served as U.S. Federation Cup captain, and founded the Zina Garrison All-Court Tennis Program, which supports inner-city tennis in her native Houston.

Lisa Bonet (born November 16, 1967) is best known for her role as Denise Huxtable on the long-running NBC sitcom The Cosby Show, and originally starring in its spinoff A Different World. She also starred in the controversial 1987 film Angel Heart. Bonet was married to singer Lenny Kravitz from 1987 to 1993 and the couple has one child, a daughter Zoe. She is currently married to actor Jason Momoa.


Events

On November 16, 1780, Paul Cuffe petitioned the council of Bristol County, Massachusetts claiming taxation without representation and demanding the right to vote. The petition was denied, but his suit was one of the influences that led the Legislature in 1783 to grant voting rights to all free male citizens of the state. At the time Cuffe operated a cargo ship from New Bedford to Nantucket. He went on to own a large fleet of ships, becoming most likely the wealthiest African American in the United States.

On November 16, 1875, Ethiopia won the Battle of Gundet over Egypt. This conflict was carefully observed by African American due to a growing Black Nationalist idealism led by people such as Edward Blyden and Martin Delany. The Ethiopian forces were led by Ras Alula Engida, who the next year was made governor of Mereb Mellash and Midri Bahri (today part of Eritrea).

On November 16, 1875, Alabama’s Constitution of 1875 is ratified. The "Bourbon" Democrats, having claimed to “redeem” the Alabama people from the Reconstruction rule of carpetbaggers and scalawags, wrote a new constitution to replace the one of 1868. It was a conservative document that gave the Democrats, and especially Black Belt planters, a firm grip on their recently reacquired control of state government.


On November 16, 1972, the Louisiana National Guard was mobilized after Baton Rouge police officers killed two students, Denver A. Smith and Leonard Douglass Brown, in a confrontation between African American students and the police during demonstrations on the campus of Southern University.

On November 16, 2004, President George W. Bush nominated Condoleezza Rice to replace Colin Powell as secretary of state. They were respectively the first African American woman and man in that office.



Photo Gallery

"The first vote" - African American men, in dress indicative of their professions, in a queue waiting their turn to vote. 1867 November 16 by Alfred R. Waud.

Lady Bird Cleveland, mother of legendary model Pat Cleveland photographed by Carl Van Vechten on November 16, 1954 with her painting in oil of Eartha Kitt.

This photograph from November 16, 1961, shows a “White only” laundromat in Tallahassee. 

Novelist Toni Morrison won the “Elmer Holmes Bobst Award” in Arts and Letters for her book, Beloved, on November 16, 1988.'  - CARTER Magazine

On November 16, 2000 Oprah Winfrey received the 85th NAACP Spingarn Medal for her achievements and contributions as an actress, producer, educator, publisher, and humanitarian.

Princess Ruth Komuntale of Toro/Uganda, who married her American fiancĂ© Christopher Thomas on 16 November 2012. Her brother is the current King Rukidi IV. 

A thin dusting of snow that fell overnight lays on items that make up a memorial at the site where Michael Brown was shot in Ferguson, Missouri, November 16, 2014.

Publications

Jet Magazine. November 16, 1967.

"Revolutionary or Police Agent?" The Black Panther - November 16, 1974

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