*The birth of Izola Ware Curry in 1916 is celebrated ion this date. She is the African American woman domestic who tried to kill Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1958.
learn more*The American Great Migration is affirmed on this date in 1916. Sometimes known as the Great Northward Migration or the Black Migration, this episode came in two chapters. The first Great Migration (1916–40) saw about 1.6 million people move from mostly rural areas in the South to northern industrial cities. The Second Great Migration (1940–70) […]
learn more*The birth of Odell Waller is celebrated on this date in 1917. He was a Black sharecropper, executed for the fatal shooting of his white landlord. Odell Waller was born in Gretna, Virginia, to Dollie Jones and an unknown father, who died shortly after his birth. Jones gave the boy to her sister Annie Waller and […]
learn more*The East Saint Louis Race Riot occurred on this date in 1917. This bloody outbreak of violence in East St. Louis, Ill., stemmed specifically from the employment of Black workers in a factory holding government contracts. It was the worst of many incidents of American racial hostility during World War I that were directed especially […]
learn more*On this date 1917, the NAACP staged its first silent protest rally against lynching. Nearly fifteen thousand African Americans marched down Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue demonstrating their support for a government stoppage of lynching, race riots, and the denial of rights.
learn moreOn this date in 1917 Black soldiers in Houston, TX, retaliated against white racism.
The hostile racial climate in Houston after Reconstruction was a constant reminder to Blacks of their second-class citizenship. When a battalion of the 24th Infantry arrived there, the soldiers resented the racial epithets of whites working on a nearby National Guard camp, the segregation on local streetcar lines, and the violence the police used against them. Many of the older, more steady, noncommissioned black officers had been reassigned elsewhere as the country prepared for World War I.
learn moreOn this date in 1917, the first Black enlistees from West Point graduated from military duty at Fort Des Moines, Iowa.
learn moreOn this date in 1917, the U.S. Supreme Court conceded that states cannot restrict and officially segregate African Americans in residential districts.
The decisions (Buchanan v Warley) struck down a (then) Louisville, Ky., ordinance requiring blacks & whites to live in separate areas.
learn more*On this date, 1918, the Minnesota Home Guard was formed. This was formed in St. Paul, Minnesota, in two all-Black Sixteenth Battalion Companies, A and B., and C and D. These Black men, led by Cap Wigington, met at the old state capitol building. Wigington became captain of Company A. Orrington C and gave an address after […]
learn more*The start of the Pan-African Congresses is celebrated on this date in 1919. The Pan-African Congress was a series of eight meetings from 1919 to 2014. They addressed the issues facing Africa because of the Berlin Conference. The Pan-African Congress was a peacemaker. One of the group’s significant demands was to end colonial rule and racial […]
learn more*Isaac Woodard Jr. was born on this date in 1919. He was a decorated Black World War II veteran and hate crime victim. Woodard was born in Fairfield County, South Carolina, and grew up in Goldsboro, North Carolina. He attended local segregated schools, often underfunded for Blacks during the Jim Crow years. On October 14, 1942, the 23-year-old Woodard enlisted in the U.S. Army at Fort Jackson in Columbia, […]
learn more*On this date in 1919, the National Conference on Lynching took place in Carnegie Hall, New York City. The goal of the two-day conference was to pressure Congress to pass the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill. It was a project of the new NAACP, which released a report, Thirty Years of Lynching in the United States, 1889-1918. […]
learn more*The Longview race riot occurred on this date in 1919. This was a weak episode of violent incidents in Longview, Texas. From July 10 to July 17, whites attacked Black areas of town, killed one Black man, and burned down several properties, including the houses of a black teacher and a doctor. It was one […]
learn more*On this date in 1919, The Chicago Race Riot occurred. This was a week-long violent American racial conflict provoked by whites against blacks. It began on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois, until August 3, 1919. During the riot, thirty-eight people died (23 black and 15 white). Over the week, injuries attributed to the episodic confrontations stood at 537, with two-thirds of the injured […]
learn more*The Omaha race riot occurred on this date in 1919. This was a race riot episode in Omaha, Nebraska. It resulted in the lynching of Will Brown, a Black citizen, and the death of two white rioters. Three weeks before the riot, federal investigators had noted that “a clash was imminent owing to ill-feeling between […]
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