*Charles Douglass was born on this date in 1844. He was a Black soldier, journalist, government clerk, real estate developer, secretary, and treasurer. He was the third and youngest son of Frederick Douglass and his first wife, Anna Murray Douglass. Charles Remond Douglass was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, and named after a friend of his father and anti-slavery […]
learn moreThe birth of Cathy Williams in 1844 is celebrated on this date. She was a Black domestic worker and a soldier.
Born in Independence, MO, she worked as a house slave for William Johnson, a wealthy planter in Jefferson City, until his death. About that time, the Civil War broke out and she was freed by Union soldiers. Thereafter, Williams worked for the Army as a paid servant.
learn more*On this date in 1944, Steele v. Louisville & N. R. Co. was decided by the Supreme Court. In this case, B. W. Steele, a member of the IARE executive, argued that an agreement between the railway and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen (BLFE) was illegal. A whites-only railroad union could not exclude Blacks and deny them better jobs […]
learn more*William Hemings was born on this date in 1845. He was a Black soldier, farmer and relative of Sally Hemings.
learn more*Moorfield Storey was born on this date in 1845. He was a white-American lawyer, anti-imperial activist, and civil rights, leader. Moorfield Storey was born in 1845 in Roxbury, Massachusetts. His family descended from the earliest Puritan settlers in New England and had close connections with the abolitionist movement. His father was a Boston lawyer. Young Storey went to the […]
learn more*It was on this date in 1845, Macon B. Allen and Robert Morris Jr. contracted their law firm and became the first Blacks to practice law in America.
They opened their practice on May 3rd of that year in Massachusetts.
learn more*The birth of George Lawrence Mabson is celebrated on this date in 1845. He was a Black soldier, lawyer, and politician. His father was George W. Mabson, a prominent white-American in Wilmington, North Carolina. His mother was Eliza Moore, a Black woman. During the American Civil War, on February 15, 1864, he enlisted in the 5th […]
learn more*On this date in 1846, African American Registry celebrates St. Patrick’s Day by honoring the Saint Patrick’s Battalion.
learn more*On this date in 1846 the Mexican American War, also known as the Mexican War began. African American Registry briefly writes about this conflict.
learn more*On this date in 1846, Jeremiah Haralson was born. He was a Black politician who served in the House of Representatives.
Born a slave near Columbus, Georgia, he was taken to Alabama and kept in bondage until 1865. After attaining his freedom, Haralson taught himself how to read and write. According to records he then became a farmer and a clergyman, a powerful orator and debater. In 1870 he ran for Congress as an independent and defeated the republican candidate.
learn more*On this date, in 1846, Norris Cuney was born. He was a Black politician, businessman, union leader, and activist in Texas. Norris Wright Cuney was born near Hempstead, Texas, in the Brazos River valley. He was the fourth of eight children of Adeline Stuart, a mixed-race slave of (African, European, and Native) American ancestry. Their father was Adeline’s white master, Confederate Colonel Philip Cuney, a wealthy farmer. All his mixed-race children were born […]
learn more*John Wesley Cromwell was born on this date in 1846. He was a Black lawyer, teacher, civil servant, journalist, historian, and activist. John Wesley Cromwell was born into slavery in Portsmouth, Virginia. He was the youngest of twelve children. His parents were Willis H. and Elizabeth (Carney) Cromwell. Cromwell’s father worked as a ferryman on […]
learn moreThis date in 1847 marks Independence Day in the Republic of Liberia. Liberia owes its establishment to the American Colonization Society, founded in 1816 to resettle freed American slaves in Africa.
learn moreThis date marks the birth of John Roy Lync, a Black politician, in 1847.
Born a slave in Concordia Parish, LA., Lynch was freed during the American Civil War and settled in Natchez, MS. There he learned the photography business, attended night school, and in 1869 entered public life as justice of the peace for Natchez County. In November 1869, Lynch was elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives, and reelected in 1871.
learn more*Lloyd Wheeler, born on this date in 1848, was a Black attorney, businessman, philanthropist, and political leader. Lloyd Garrison Wheeler was born in Mansfield, Ohio. His father was active in the underground railroad movement, providing secret accommodations for escaping slaves from the South en route to freedom in Canada. With the illegal status of […]
learn more