People, Locations, Episodes

Sat, 08.11.1900

An Integrated Baseball Team Wins a Minnesota Amateur Title

*On this date in 1900 the Waseca, Minnesota amateur baseball team won the Minnesota title with a 9-2 win over Saint Paul. Sponsored by Waseca’s EACO Mill, this was the first non-professional integrated baseball team in Minnesota and perhaps America.

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Fri, 11.02.1900

The ‘American Negroes Exhibit’ is Shown at the Worlds Fair Paris Exhibition

*On this date in 1900, The Exhibit of American Negroes was shown at the Paris Exposition. This was a sociological display at the Paris Palace of Social Economy at the 1900 World’s Fair. The exhibition’s goal was to demonstrate progress and commemorate the lives of African Americans at the turn of the century. The exhibit […]

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Fri, 04.05.1901

Parchman Farm (State Prison), a story

*Parchman Farm state prison is briefly written about on this date.  It was opened in 1901 as a maximum-security prison farm located in unincorporated Sunflower County, Mississippi, in the Mississippi Delta region.   Since it was built, it has been part of many American Civil Rights movement episodes.  Officially known as the Mississippi State Penitentiary (MSP), it is the only maximum-security prison for men in Mississippi and is the […]

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Thu, 08.01.1901

Whitesboro, New Jersey is Founded

*Whitesboro, New Jersey was founded on this date 1901.  This is one of many Black towns in America established after the American Civil War.  It was founded by the Colored Equitable Industrial Association, a financial group that had Black investors including Paul Laurence Dunbar, Booker T. Washington, and George Henry White, the leading investor, and namesake. He was a […]

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Tue, 10.08.1901

The Fort Des Moines Provisional Army Officer Training School Opens

*The establishment of Fort Des Moines Provisional Army Officer Training School is celebrated on this date in 1901. The fort was a military base and training facility on the south side of Des Moines, Iowa. There have been three forts called Fort Des Moines. Fort Des Moines No. 1 (1834–1837), a U.S. Army post that […]

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Wed, 07.23.1902

Rose Ingram, Sharecropper Farmer born

*Rose Lee Ingram was born on this date in 1902.  She was a Black farmer (sharecropper) and widowed mother of 12 children, who was at the center of one of the most explosive capital punishment cases in United States history.   Ingram farmed adjoining lots in Georgia with white sharecropper John Ed Stratford. Ingram bred Stratford’s livestock. On […]

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Tue, 01.12.1904

The Herero And Namaqua Genocide Occurs

*On this date, in 1904, the Herero and Namaqua genocide began. This was a white atrocity against a Black community in Africa between 1904 and 1908. The conflict was one of the first colonial rebellions after the Berlin Conference. This was the high point of white European competition for African territory, a process commonly known as […]

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Sun, 05.15.1904

Kappa Boule’ Fraternity is Founded

*On this date in 1904, Sigma Pi Phi Boule’ Fraternity was founded. Kappa Boule’ is one of the most impacting black fraternal organizations in America.

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Wed, 06.21.1905

The Inkwell, a Los Angeles Landmark

*The Inkwell, a public Los Angeles beach is affirmed on this first day of summer in 1905. The Inkwell is a beach where black Californian’s and black visitors to Santa Monica, CA enjoyed the Pacific Ocean.  In the early 20th century a two-block area of Pacific oceanfront in Santa Monica, stretching from the western end […]

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Fri, 07.07.1905

The Harlem YWCA is Founded

*The Harlem YWCA in New York City was founded on July 7, 1905.  The community’s founders were well connected to the networks of religious and practical organizations developed in Harlem, significantly as the number of Black citizens increased. During the Great Migration, this YWCA was essential in developing training and careers for young Black women […]

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Tue, 07.11.1905

The Niagara Movement is Founded

This date marks the founding of the Niagara Movement, the first significant Black organized protest movement of the 20th century in America.

It also represented the attempt of a small yet articulate group of radicals to challenge the then dominant ideals of Booker T. Washington. At the turn of the century there were divisions in African American political life: those who believed in accommodation, led by Booker T. Washington; and the more militant group, led by W.E.B. Du Bois and William M. Trotter.

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Wed, 09.27.1905

The First American Blues Song is Published

On this date in 1905, the first published blues composition became available to the American public.

W. C. Handy’s “Memphis Blues” went on sale in Memphis, TN.

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Sat, 09.22.1906

The Atlanta Race Riot Occurs

*On this date in 1906, The Atlanta race riot occurred. This tragedy was the result of bitter white hostility toward blacks after vague reports of African Americans harassing White women.

Over five days at least ten Black people were killed while Atlanta’s police did nothing to protect black citizens, going so far as to confiscate guns from Atlanta’s Black community while allowing whites to remain armed. It was this and other events of hatred based incidents during what was called the “Red Summers” in the early twentieth century.

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Mon, 10.22.1906

Protest Against The Ku Klux Klan In Philadelphia Occurs

On this date in 1906, 3,000 African American’s demonstrated and rioted in Philadelphia in protest over a theatrical presentation of Thomas Dixon’s “The Clansman,” which claimed to be the true story of the “Ku Klux Klan Conspiracy.” It was the Klan that overturned Reconstruction.

As a result of this protest, 62 blacks were reported lynched.

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Tue, 02.12.1907

Ernest Hendon, Sharecropper, and Landscaper born

*Ernest Hendon was born on this date in 1907. He was a Black landscaper and sharecropper. He also was the last unwitting surviving participant in the infamous Tuskegee Syphilis Study. From Roba, Alabama, Ernest Herndon was the son of North and Mary Reed Hendon, sharecroppers. The family resided in rural Alabama, where Ernest Hendon spent his childhood […]

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New Poem Each Day

Poetry Corner

If the drum is a woman why are you pounding your drum into an insane babble why are you pistol whipping your drum at dawn why are you shooting... IF THE DRUM IS A WOMAN by Jayne Cortez.
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