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A.B. Blackburn patents pail signal

  • Jan 10, 1888
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Blackburn,A.B. patents Railway signal Jan 10,1888

Patent # 375,362

Source: Blackfacts.com
Jones, William B. (1928- )
On July 26, 1977, President Jimmy Carter nominated William B. Jones as the United States Ambassador to Haiti. The U.S. Senate confirmed Jones and soon after he took up his post in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Born on May 2, 1928, to Bill and LaVelle Jones in Los Angeles, California, Ambassador Jones grew
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Source: Black Past
Edward A. Jones
Edward A. Jones received B.A. degree from Amherst College.
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Source: Blackfacts.com
Aug
23
1826
Kelly, Sharon Pratt Dixon (1944- )
Sharon Pratt Dixon was born on January 30, 1944 in Washington, D.C. to parents Carlisle Pratt and Mildred (Petticord) Pratt.  Carlisle was a Washington, D.C. Superior Court Judge.  Mildred Pratt died of breast cancer when Sharon was four years old.  Pratt’s father played a major role in her life by
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Source: Black Past
Jan
30
1944
Waters, Maxine (1938- )
U.S. Congresswoman Maxine Waters has dedicated over thirty years of her life to local and national politics. Born Maxine Moore Carr in St. Louis, Missouri on August 15, 1938, Waters moved to Los Angeles, California in 1961. While working in a garment factory and for a local telephone company, she
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by Diversity In Action
Aug
15
1938
The Tie Breaker Ruling in Perspective: A Plaintiff Looks Back on the Historic U.S. Supreme Court Decision of 2007
In 2000 Kathleen Brose led an organization called Parents Involved in Community Schools which filed a lawsuit against the Seattle School District, challenging its tie-breaker rule in Seattle Public Schools which gave preference to racial minorities in school assignments when all else was
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Source: Black Past
Scott, David (1946- )
David Scott represents Georgia’s 13th district in the U.S. House of Representatives. The 13th district includes portions of Cobb, Clayton, Douglas, Fulton, Henry, and DeKalb
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by Massachusetts Black Lawyers Association (MBLA)
Jul
27
1946
Bush, Dwight L. (1957 - )
Ambassador Dwight Bush had a 35 year career in finance and corporate management before he became a U.S. diplomat. He has served as an executive within numerous financial institutions and sat on the board of directors for several corporate, educational, and non-profit organizations. As of this
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by Illinois Math and Science Academy
James, Charles A. (1922- )
Ambassador Charles A. James was born in 1922 in Washington, D.C. and grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he attended public schools.  After high school, James enrolled at Westchester State Teachers College in Pennsylvania (now Westchester University) where he studied for one year before
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by National Black MBA Association (NBMBAA) Boston Professional Chapter
Sep
16
1976
Schroeder, Galen - Website Indexer
Galen Schroeder is a full-time, professional book indexer located in Fargo, North Dakota. A circuitous path led him from a B.A. in Political Science from Kansas State University in 1964 to a Ph.D. in Agronomy from North Dakota State University in 1981. After 20+ years in agricultural
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by APEX Museum
Shirley Chisholm
Shirley Chisholm , née Shirley Anita St. Hill (born November 30, 1924, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.—died January 1, 2005, Ormond Beach, Florida), American politician, the first African American woman to be elected to the
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Source: Brittanica
Jan
1
2005
Audre Lorde
Audre Lorde , in full Audre Geraldine Lorde, also called Gamba Adisa or Rey Domini (born Feb. 18, 1934, New York, N.Y., U.S.—died Nov. 17, 1992, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands), African American poet, essayist, and autobiographer known for her passionate writings on lesbian feminism and racial
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Source: Brittanica
Sponsored by APEX Museum
Morrow, John Howard (1910-2000)
John Morrow was a teacher, scholar, and diplomat who became America’s first leader at two key postings, the West African country of Guinea, and the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by Association of Latino Professionals For America (ALPFA) Boston Professional Chapter
Jackson-Lee, Sheila (1950 - )
Sheila Jackson-Lee was born on January 12, 1950 in Queens, New York.   She graduated from Jamaica High School in Queens, New York in 1968.  She then graduated from Yale University in Connecticut with a B.A. in political science in 1972 followed in 1975 by a J.D. from the University of Virginia Law
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Source: Black Past
Jan
12
1950
Alexander Lucius Twilight
Alexander Lucius Twilight, who was probably the first Black to graduate from an American college, received B.A. degree at Middlebury College.
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Source: Blackfacts.com
Sep
9
1817
Marjorie Joyner
Marjorie Stewart Joyner was born in Monterey, Virginia on October 24, 1896, the granddaughter of a slave and a slave-owner. In 1912, an eager Marjorie moved to Chicago, Illinois to pursue a career in cosmetology. She enrolled in the A.B. Molar Beauty School and in 1916 became the first Black women
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Source: Black History Resources
Nov
26
2012
Hurston, Zora Neale (1891-1960)
Zora Neale Hurston, known for her audacious spirit and sharp wit, was a talented and prolific writer and a skilled anthropologist from the Harlem (New York) Renaissance to the Civil Rights Era. Born on January 7, 1891 in Notasulga, Alabama, she grew up in the all-black town of
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by Greater Boston Veterans Collaborative
Jan
7
1891
Mary Frances Berry
Mary Frances Berry , (born Feb. 17, 1938, Nashville, Tenn., U.S.), American professor, writer, lawyer, and activist whose public service included work in three presidential administrations. From 1980 to 2004 she was a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, serving as chairwoman from 1993
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Source: Brittanica
Dove, Rita (1952- )
American poet laureate Rita Frances Dove was born August 28, 1952 in Akron, Ohio. Rita’s father, Ray Dove, was the first African American chemist in the tire industry. Rita Dove excelled in school and in 1970 she received the Presidential Scholar Award.  Dove completed a B.A. in English in three
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Source: Black Past
Aug
28
1952
Parker, Darryl - Legal Advisor
Darryl Parker is an employment, civil rights, and personal injury attorney with the Civil Rights Justice Center PLLC in Seattle, Washington. He received his B.A. in Political Science from Fordham University and his J.D. from the University of California at Berkeley. He has considerable trial and
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Source: Black Past
Archer, Dennis (1942- )
Although he has served as a public school teacher, attorney, and Michigan State Supreme Court Justice, Dennis Archer is best know as the Mayor of Detroit and the first African American to become president of the American Bar
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Source: Black Past
Jan
1
1942
Bishop, Sanford Dixon, Jr. (1947--)
Georgia Congressman Sanford Dixon Bishop Jr. was born on February 4, 1947, in Mobile, Alabama to Minnie B. Slade, who was a librarian and Sanford Dixon Bishop, who was the first president of the Bishop State Community College. Bishop attended public schools until his entrance into Morehouse College
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Source: Black Past
Feb
4
1947
How The Death Of The Office Building Can Unlevel The Playing Field For Black Professionals - Blavity
If we make 100% remote work environments part of the work environment forever, it is inevitable that we will become a much more racially divided and classist society, which will increase rather than decrease social unrest and economic disparities in the
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Source: Blavity News
Sponsored by Association of Latino Professionals For America (ALPFA) Boston Professional Chapter
Bullitt, Katherine Muller, Seattle, Washington
Katherine Muller (Kay) Bullitt was born and raised in Massachusetts.  She earned her B.A. (with honors) in Government from Radcliff College and taught in Cambridge, Massachusetts before heading west in 1953.  Shepicked Seattle as the place she wanted to
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by National Black MBA Association (NBMBAA) Boston Professional Chapter
Du Bois, W. E. B.
Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt Du Bois) dəbois´ [key], 1868–1963, American civil-rights leader and author, b. Great Barrington, Mass., grad. Harvard (B.A., 1890 M.A., 1891 Ph.D., 1895). Du Bois was an early exponent of full equality for African Americans and a cofounder (1905) of the
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Source: Fact Monster - Black History
Sponsored by Pride Academy
Gist, Carole Ann-Marie (1969- )
Carole Anne-Marie Gist, the first African American woman to win the Miss USA title, was born on May 8, 1969 in Detroit, Michigan.  Gist, the daughter of Joan Gist and David Turner, is of African American and Cherokee heritage.  Her parents divorced when she was a young child.  Gist graduated from
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Source: Black Past
J.M. Coetzee
J.M. Coetzee , in full John Maxwell Coetzee (born February 9, 1940, Cape Town, South Africa), South African novelist, critic, and translator noted for his novels about the effects of colonization. In 2003 he won the Nobel Prize for
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Source: Brittanica
Feb
9
1940
Avant, Nicole (1968- )
Nicole Avant served a two-year term as U.S. Ambassador to the Bahamas from 2009 to 2011. President Barack Obama nominated her for the position in 2009 and after U.S. Senate confirmation, Hilary Clinton, then Secretary of State, swore her into office on September 9, 2009.  Avant arrived in
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Source: Black Past
Gordone, Charles (1925- )
Charles Gordone was born Charles Edward Fleming on October 12, 1925 in Cleveland, Ohio to parents William and Camille Fleming.  He took his stepfather’s surname of Gordon when his mother remarried when he was five years old.  The family moved to Elkhart, Indiana, his mother’s hometown, when Charles
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Source: Black Past
Sponsored by Illinois Math and Science Academy
Nov
13
1995
Kelly, Samuel Eugene (1926-2009)
Samuel Eugene Kelly, soldier and educator, was born in Greenwich, Connecticut on January 26, 1926 to James Handy Kelly, a minister, and Essie Matilda Allen-Kelly, a homemaker.  Educated at Greenwich public schools, Kelly dropped out of high school in 1943 and joined the United States Army the
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Source: Black Past
Jan
26
1926
Smith, Samuel J. (1922-1995)
Samuel J. Smith, a Washington State Legislator and Seattle City Councilmember was born on July 21, 1922, in Gibsland, Louisiana.  Listening to speeches by Franklin Roosevelt broadcast on radio in the early 1930s persuaded young Smith that he wanted a future in
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Source: Black Past
Jul
21
1922

African American Facts

  • Swanson, Howard (1907-1978)
  • Lincoln University [Jefferson City] (1866- )
  • National Afro-American Council
  • Award-Winning Literary and Scholarly Works by African Americans (to 2013)
  • Freedmen's Town, Houston, Texas (1865- )
  • African American History and Women - Timeline 1950-1959
  • Rev. Richard Allen organies a Society of Free Peopleof Color for Promoting the
  • Adams, Henry [Kentucky] (1802–1872)
  • Stanley Crouch
  • First African Methodist Episcopal Church, Los Angeles, California, (1872- )

Black People Facts

  • (1901) William Hannibal Thomas on the American Negro
  • Rev. Richard Allen organies a Society of Free Peopleof Color for Promoting the
  • Slavery
  • (2008) Senator Barack Obama, "A More Perfect Union"
  • Caetano da Costa Alegre
  • (1981) Audre Lorde, “The Uses of Anger: Women Responding to Racism”
  • Ralph Bunche
  • Left of Black with Eric Deggans
  • Hooper, Sr., Cliff (1917-2001)
  • John H. Johnson (1918-).

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Washington DC Facts

  • I have a dream - Martin Luther King and the March on Washington in full HD
  • Charles Drew, born
  • Adu, Freddy (1989-- )
  • Barack Obama's 923 Executive Orders - Urban Legends
  • Million Man March

New York City Facts

  • Sharpton, Alfred Charles “Al” (1954- )
  • African Americans in Medicine in the Civil War Era
  • Verrett, Shirley (1931-2010)
  • Copeland, Misty (1982- )
  • Smith, Bessie
  • Ellison, Ralph
  • Afro-Caribbean
  • James Baldwin born
  • Angela Davis
  • Nellie Bly
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