This Week In Black History May 22-28, 2024

PAMELA SUZETTE GRIER

  • MAY 22

1863—The War Department es­tablishes the Bureau of Colored Troops and began to aggres­sively recruit Blacks for the Civil War. The Black troops would play a major role in turning the tide of battle against the rebellious Southern slave states.

1959—Benjamin O. Davis Jr. becomes the first African Ameri­can general in the U.S. Air Force. His father, Benjamin O. Davis Sr., had been the first Black general in the U.S. Army.

  • MAY 23

1921—“Shuffle Along”—the first of a succession of widely popu­lar Black musicals performed for White audiences—opened at the 63rd Street Theatre in New York City, becoming the first African American Broadway musical. The musical comedy combined the talents of the legendary team of Eubie Blake and Noble Sis­sle. “Shuffle Along” produced a long list of hits including “Shuffle Along,” “I’m Just Wild about Har­ry,” “Gypsy Blues” and “Love Will Find A Way.”

1981—Legendary Reggae artist Bob Marley is given an official state funeral in his homeland of Jamaica. He had died of cancer on May 11 in Miami. Marley and his band “The Wailers” had made Reggae popular worldwide with such hits as “Stir It Up” and “No Woman, No Cry.” He was consid­ered the first third world super­star and a prophet of the Rasta­farian religion. He was only 36 when he died. His body now lies in a mausoleum in Jamaica.

  • MAY 24

1854—Anthony Burns, one of the most celebrated fugitive slaves in American history, is captured by deputy U.S. Mar­shals in Boston. But at the time anti-slavery feeling was running high in Boston and it was one of the cities which had vowed not to obey the Fugitive Slave Act—a federal law that required even those opposed to slavery to help slave owners capture run-away slaves. For fear that Boston res­idents would help Burns escape to Canada, the U.S. government sent 2,000 troops to Boston to assist in returning Burns to Virginia. Thousands lined the streets as Burns was marched to a ship on June 3 for a trip back South. However, a Black Boston church raised the money to pur­chase Burns and within a year of his capture, he was back in Bos­ton a free man.

1856—The so-called Pottawat­omie Massacre takes place. A force of men led by famed ab­olitionist John Brown attacks a pro-slavery settlement in Franklin County, Kan., leaving at least five men dead. The attack was part of a period known as “Bleeding Kan­sas” when pro and anti-slavery forces battled one another in a bid to determine whether Kansas would be a slave or free territo­ry. The “Pottawatomie Massacre” was also one of the events which made the Civil War unavoidable.

1944—Legendary singer Patti LaBelle is born Patricia Louise Holte in Philadelphia, Pa.

  • MAY 25

1878—World renowned danc­er Bill “Bojangles” Robinson is born in Richmond, Va. Robinson was one of the best and best-known dancers in America up until the 1940s. He was known for his sensational footwork and speed. He once set a world re­cord running the 75-yard-dash backwards in 8.2 seconds. But his “Bojangles” style—designed to please White audiences—an­gered some Blacks. However, he became a wealthy man appear­ing in 15 motion pictures after the 1930s.

Madame-CJ-Walker.jpg

1919—Wealthy cosmetics em­pire owner, Madame C.J. Walker, dies on this day at her estate on Irvington-on-the-Hudson in New York. Walker is generally believed to have been the first Black mil­lionaire in American history.

MilesDavis

1926—Famed Jazz trumpeter and composer Miles Davis was born on this day in 1926.

1943—One of the largest White riots of the 1940s takes place in Mobile, Ala. The Whites were outraged because the owners of a local shipyard company had upgraded the status and pay of 12 Black workers.

  • MAY 26

1799—The famous Black Rus­sian writer Alexander Sergeyev­ich Pushkin is born in Moscow, Russia. Pushkin was of Russian and Ethiopian parentage. He was well educated and went on to become a prolific writer. Indeed, he is generally credited with be­ing the “Father of Russian Liter­ature.”

1949—Pamela Suzette Grier is born in Winston-Salem, N.C. Pam Grier becomes one of the pre­mier Black actresses and one of the top sex symbols of the 1970s, playing in a host of so-called “Black exploitation movies.” She starred in Quentin Tarantino’s film “Jackie Brown,” for which she received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress. Her more recent work includes “The L Word”, “Smallville”, “Larry Crowne” and “This Is Us”.

  • MAY 27

1958—Ernest Green graduates from Little Rock, Ark.’s Central High School, becoming the first Black to do so. Green was a mem­ber of the “Little Rock Nine”— the group of Black students who first integrated the high school with the aid of federal troops.

2010—The Institute on Assets and Social Policy at Brandeis University releases a stunning study showing that the typical White household had accumu­lated 20 times as much wealth as the typical Black household. According to the study, medi­an White family wealth stood at roughly $100,000 while median Black family wealth was estimat­ed at $5,000.

  • MAY 28

1936—Betty Shabazz, the wid­ow of Black nationalist leader Malcolm X, was born on this day in Detroit, Mich. Shabazz was born Betty Jean Sanders and raised by foster parents. She at­tended Tuskegee Institute (now university) and became a regis­tered nurse. In 1994, she created a national controversy when she linked Nation of Islam leader Min. Louis Farrakhan to the assassina­tion of Malcolm X. However, she and Farrakhan reconciled in 1995 and she spoke at the historic Mil­lion Man March. She died June 23, 1997 as a result of injuries re­ceived in a house fire set by her grandson.

2010—A book is released re­vealing that during the mid-1970s when much of the world was lin­ing up to help overthrow racist White minority rule in South Af­rica, Israel was attempting to aid the racist regime up to the point of providing it with chemical and nuclear weapons for possible use against the country’s majority Black population. The documents were discovered by American scholar Sasha Polakow-Suran­sky while researching the book “The Unspoken Alliance: Israel’s Secret Relationship with Apart­heid South Africa.” Though sel­dom mentioned by American me­dia, it was an open secret during the 1970s that Israel was one of the Apartheid regime’s closest allies. Apartheid is what the mi­nority White government called its system of racial oppression

About Post Author

Comments

From the Web

Skip to content