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BLACK FACTS

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black facts

MAR 3 - 9, 2022

SOURCE: BLACK AMERICA WEB

MARCH 6

1857 – The U.S. Supreme Court issues a decision in the Dred Scott case, affirming the right of slave owners to take their slaves into the Western territories.

MARCH 7

1539 – Estevanico, one of the first native Africans to reach the present-day continental United States, sets out to explore what is now the southwestern part of the U.S. 1927 – In the U.S. Supreme Court case Nixon v. Herndon, the court strikes down a Texas law forbidding Blacks from voting in the state Democratic Party primary. 1942 – The first class of African American pilots at

Tuskegee Army Air Field completes advanced pilot training. 1965 – The Selma to Montgomery marches (below), held to champion voting rights for African Americans and in protest of segregation, begin in Selma, Alabama.

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MARCH 3

1821 – Thomas L. Jennings patents a dry-cleaning process, becomes the first Black American to receive a patent. 1865 – The Freedmen's Bureau, a federal government agency that aided freed slaves in the South during the Reconstruction era, is established. 1991 – Black motorist Rodney King is beaten by Los Angeles Police Department officers following a highspeed car chase. The incident is captured on video and incites a massive riot in

MARCH 4

1954 – J. Ernest Wilkins Jr. is appointed assistant secretary of labor by President Eisenhower, becoming the first African American to hold a sub-Cabinet position in the federal government.

MARCH 5

1770 – Crispus Attucks, widely considered to be the first American casualty in the American Revolutionary War, is killed in the Boston Massacre. 1939 – Acclaimed playwright Charles Fuller, best known for his Pulitzer-winning play "A Soldier's Play," is born in Philadelphia. 1985 – The U.S. Postal Service issues the eighth stamp in its Black Heritage series, honoring Mary McLeod Bethune.

MARCH 8

1825 – Alexander Thomas Augusta, the first Black professor of medicine in the United States and the Army's first African American physician, is born in Norfolk, Virginia. 1876 – PBS Pinchback, the nation's first Black governor, is denied by Congress a U.S. Senate seat he won four years earlier. 1993 – Famed jazz singer Billy Eckstine dies in Pittsburgh at 78 from complications following a heart attack.

MARCH 9

1841 – The U.S. Supreme Court rules that the African slaves who seized control of the Amistad slave ship had been illegally forced into slavery, and thus are free under American law. 1961 – African American corporate executive, educator and philanthropist Clifton R. Wharton is sworn in as U.S. ambassador to Norway. 1966 – Andrew F. Brimmer is sworn in as the first Black governor of the Federal Reserve Board. 1997 – Famed rapper The Notorious B.I.G. is shot and killed in Los Angeles at age 24. WI

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BY SARAFINA WRIGHT

On Feb. 25, President Joe Biden announced his nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court to replace Justice Stephen Breyer – keeping a campaign promise. If confirmed, Brown will be the first Black woman to serve on the high court. What are your thoughts?

ALEXIS CUMMINGS /

CLEVELAND, OHIO I'm so sick of this empty, hollowed-out symbolism! I could just scream. This late into the 21st century, and the story is still the first Black this, that. The elephant in the room is reparation for the descendants of American slavery!

JACQUI GREENE /

WASHINGTON, DC This is Biden's strategy to get the Black vote again in 2024. I'll do my research on this lady before I get excited.

YOLANDA K /

WASHINGTON, DC I am AKA proud.

EMBERT EMMANUEL /

NEW YORK, NEW YORK Congratulations. Ketanji Brown Jackson will make the world proud.

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March is Women’s History Month and as always, we can expect to hear unending conversations about or analyses of the lives of women who have made a difference in our homes, communities and the world.

Some of these women bear names that are well known, even to children in elementary school who find themselves searching for a woman who inspires them and about whom they can write in that obligatory essay.

It’s easy to call the roll: Mae Jemison, Shirley Chisholm, Marian Anderson, Rosa Parks, Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Coretta Scott King, Oprah Winfrey, Althea Gibson, Phillis Wheatley and Michelle Obama. In fact, it’s safe to say that teachers will grow red-eyed and weary after reading version upon version of first-time compositions about the accomplishments these women achieved in their lives despite the odds they faced being Black women in America.

But most of the women who have really mattered in our lives — or at least in my life — have rarely made the evening news with Walter Cronkite or Peter Jennings.

Few, if any of the women integral to our development and instrumental in our own successes have been showcased on the front page of The New York Times. Even the local newspapers cussed — particularly among children. I say them carry the scars. And yet, they always loved the children in their midst fiercely and without reservation.

Others would survive multiple miscarriages — desperately attempting to make their husbands proud by becoming fathers but unable to bring a child to term. And their men would seek companionship elsewhere — deflated or discouraged — as if their wives wanted to lose their children. I didn’t understand.

Some would face frequent abuse and discouragement by the men in their world who believed that women were second-class citizens, there to serve their needs and desires. And I wondered, didn’t those women have needs and desires — dreams — of their own?

And yet, these women, the women who sheltered me from the storms, who wiped my tears when mental or physical pain was at its highest and who walked with me when I felt most alone, seemed to do so almost instinctively. Somehow, my mother, my grandmothers, my mother-in-law, my aunts and older cousins, my adopted sister — even my longtime babysitter and my favorite piano teacher — all knew what I was feeling in my soul. And they poured out their love to help me make it, one day at a time.

I’m sure most of us have watched achievement programs like the Grammy Awards or sports championships like the Super Bowl and heard entertainers and athletes, one after another, thank God and then thank their mothers. Sometimes, they haven’t even mentioned God. But Mom was certainly saluted.

I must admit, for a long time every time someone would give a shout-out to their mother, I would experience a tinge of jealousy.

Why didn’t they thank their fathers, or uncles, or brothers, or grandfathers? Why were the women of their lives always given such thanks, love, praise and gratitude for all the world to see and hear?

Now I understand the many reasons why. WI

in the cities where these “phenomenal women” made their mark, or in some cases continue to make a difference, have given these women their just due.

Yet, the older I become, the more I understand that stardom and praise was never the motivation for why the special women in my life did the things they did.

In fact, with the death of my own mother almost two years ago, which coincided with an unprecedented health pandemic and a surge in domestic violence and heated partisan politics that still threaten to topple our republic, I am amazed at how the ordinary women in my life did such extraordinary things.

While I could easily compile a list of the “sheroes” in my life, I find it more prudent to talk about the things they did, the difficult roads they traveled and the little miracles they accomplished. In this way, I believe that they serve as reflections of the kinds of women that others may remember from their own journeys as well.

Turning back the clock 50 years ago when I was little Black boy often teased by other children because I was a bookworm, intellectually astute and preferred reading books or playing piano over shooting hoops or tossing footballs, I could always count on my mother’s encouragement.

She would say they’re simply jealous. They wish they had the gifts that God has given you. They don’t want you to be the “you” that you’re meant to be.

It isn’t easy to go against the grain or to refuse to yield to the normative boxes in which society seeks to place little boys and girls. In my case, however, my mother helped me find my own voice, secure my own path and develop my own sense of self. I learned to love who I was.

This is what phenomenal mothers — phenomenal women — have done for ages.

Some of the women in my life experienced pain, disappointment and anguish that I cannot fathom. Several of my aunts and adopted mothers were victims of domestic violence in an age when those things simply weren’t dis-

Remembering ‘Bloody Sunday’ and the March from Selma to Montgomery

Vice President Kamala Harris to Mark Historic Event with Visit to Alabama

WI Staff Report

In 1965, at the height of the modern civil rights movement, activists organized a march for voting rights, from Selma, Alabama, to Montgomery, the state capital.

On March 7, 1965, Alabama state troopers beat and tear-gassed hundreds of demonstrators. The confrontation set the stage weeks later for the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. to lead the massive Selma-to-Montgomery march for voting rights. The events galvanized support for the passage of the Voting Rights Act later that year.

On that day, some 600 people assembled at a downtown church, knelt briefly in prayer and began walking silently, two-by-two through the city streets.

With Hosea Williams of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference [SCLC] leading the demonstration, and John Lewis, chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee [SNCC], at his side, the marchers were stopped as they were leaving Selma, at the end of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, by some 150 Alabama state troopers, sheriff ’s deputies and posse men, who ordered the demonstrators to disperse.

One minute and five seconds after a two-minute warning was announced, the troops advanced, wielding clubs, bullwhips and tear gas.

Lewis, who suffered a skull fracture, was one of 58 people treated for injuries at the local hospital. The day has since been known in history as “Bloody Sunday.”

This year, Vice President Kamala Harris will travel to commemorate this critical moment which occurred during the Civil Rights Movement.

Harris will speak in Selma at an event marking the 57th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday” – the day in 1965 when white police attacked Black voting rights marchers. She will also take part in the annual event’s symbolic march across the bridge.

Other members of President Joe Biden’s administration will also attend the event, including Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Marcia Fudge, Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg and Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan.

WI

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Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich is joined by Montgomery County Councilmember Will Jawando, Montgomery County Public Libraries Director Anita Vassallo, Montgomery County Department of General Services Director David Dise, the Montgomery County Commission on Veterans Affairs, the National President of the Tuskegee Airmen, members of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., family members of Brig. Gen. Charles E. McGee, and others in a ceremony signing an executive order renaming the Silver Spring Library to the Brigadier General Charles E. McGee Library. (Robert R. Roberts/The Washington Informer)

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Claudette Colvin Refused to Get Up Before Rosa Parks

D. Kevin McNeir Senior Editor

Before Rosa Parks, there was Claudette Colvin, now 72, who at the age of 15, refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, nine months before Parks. Colvin’s book, “Twice Toward Justice,” shares her thoughts including why Parks would become the symbol for the Montgomery Bus Boycott campaign’s battle against segregation and Jim Crow. Colvin said the NAACP and all the other Black organizations felt Parks would be a good icon because “she was an adult.”

“They didn't think teenagers would be reliable. Her skin texture was the kind that people associate with the middle class – she fit that profile,” Colvin said, adding, “she had the right hair – the right look.”

As for why she refused to get up: “All I remember is that I was not going to walk off the bus voluntarily," Colvin said. "We couldn't try on clothes. You had to take a brown paper bag and draw a diagram of your foot and take it to the store. Can you imagine?”

ELLERBE from Page 1

the city’s fire department from 2011 to 2014 under D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray. Before that, he had a stint as the fire chief in Sarasota, Fla., from August 2009 to December 2010.

Ellerbe graduated from Calvin Coolidge High School in the District in 1978 and then went on to earn both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in public administration from the University of the District of Columbia.

Current Ward 7 D.C. Councilmember Gray, spoke soberly about Ellerbe’s demise.

“This past weekend, former D.C. Fire and EMS Chief Kenneth Ellerbe passed away,” Gray said in a statement.

“My thoughts and prayers are with his family, friends and former colleagues. Chief Ellerbe served our city and led FEMS through a period of fundamental change that improved emergency response and created a safer District of Columbia for every resident. It was my honor to appoint [him] to lead FEMS and a great pleasure to work with him. Ken retired to Ward 7, where he was a pillar of our community. We will all miss Ken and will honor his memory with our gratitude for his service,” Gray said.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, on Twitter, praised Ellerbe for his dedication to the District.

“Today we send our prayers and love to the family and friends of former D.C. Fire and EMS Chief Kenneth B. Ellerbe,” Bowser tweeted Sunday. “Chief Ellerbe was a native Washingtonian and a graduate of Coolidge and UDC who believed in young D.C. residents and who served our city for three decades.”

D.C. Councilmember Robert White (D-At Large), a candidate for mayor in the June 21 Democratic Party primary, also expressed his thoughts on Twitter.

“I’m deeply saddened to learn of the death of former fire chief Ellerbe,” White said. “I had the privilege of getting to know him over the past several years. I send my deepest condolences to the Ellerbe family.”

Lon Walls, a longtime public relations entrepreneur in the city and a close friend of Ellerbe’s, expressed sadness over his death.

“On Sunday morning, February 27, I lost one of my best friends in life – an Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity brother and Bando martial arts colleague and student – former D.C.

5 Current Ward 7 D.C. Councilmember Gray (left) with Kenneth Ellerbe. (Courtesy photo)

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Fire & EMS Chief Kenneth Ellerbe,” Walls said on Facebook. “I have no words to describe my feelings of loss and sadness. In all he did, he truly tried to ‘represent.’ RIP my brother and fellow warrior. You will be truly missed.”

Donnelly said the fire department’s cadet program will serve as Ellerbe’s lasting legacy.

“This is the program for young people who wish to become firefighters and work for the department,” the chief said. “He was always advancing youth in the city and made it a point to mentor young people.”

Donnelly said he has communicated with the Ellerbe family and there will be a ceremony honoring him with full honors from the fire department.

At press time, no date had been set for his funeral.

WI

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