People, Locations, Episodes

Mon, 05.02.1927

Buck v. Bell (Supreme Court Case) is Decided

*On this date in 1927, the Supreme Court ruled Buck v. Bell, 274 U.S. 200.  This episode followed the Virginia Racial Integrity Act of 1924 and channeled race into an unmonitored deciding factor of sterilization in America.   Buck v. Bell was the United States Supreme Court ruling that a state statute permitting compulsory sterilization of the unfit, including the intellectually disabled, “for the protection and health of the state” […]

learn more
Wed, 05.04.1927

Another Black Man is Lynched in America (Image may not be suitable for children)

*On this date in 1927, another Black man was lynched in Little Rock, Arkansas.  This murder and the rioting that followed is one of the most notorious incidents of racial violence in the state’s history. The experienced and wave of mob violence culminated in the lynching of John Carter.  This event reveals much about the […]

learn more
Tue, 08.16.1927

William Thompson, Soldier born

*William Thompson was born on this date in 1927.  He was a decorated Black soldier in the United States Army.   Born in Brooklyn, New York, to an unmarried mother, little is known of William Henry Thompson’s early life, but he grew up in an impoverished tenement house neighborhood. He dropped out of school young and spent his teen years wandering the […]

learn more
Sat, 12.10.1927

Juanita Milam, Murder Defendant born

*Juanita Milam was born on this date in 1927.  She was a white-American clerk and the widow of one of Emmett Till’s killers.    Born Mary Juanita Thompson in Greenville, MS, she was the fifth of six children of Albert and Myrtle Thompson. She married World War II veteran John William Milam on Dec. 10, […]

learn more
Mon, 12.19.1927

The Crockett State School of Texas is Founded

*The founding of the Crockett State School is celebrated on this date in 1927. This was a Texas Youth Commission juvenile correctional facility. Located in Crockett, Texas, students at the state school had committed various crimes, including truancy, property crimes, and crimes against persons. The Crockett State School was located on a 125-acre farm about […]

learn more
Sat, 03.10.1928

James Earl Ray, Murderer born

*On this date, in 1928, James Earl Ray was born.  He was a white-American fugitive and felon.   Ray was born on March 10, 1928, in Alton, Illinois, the son of Lucille and George Ellis Ray. He had Irish, Scottish, and Welsh ancestry and a Catholic upbringing. Ray was the firstborn of nine children, including John Larry Ray, Franklin Ray, Jerry William Ray, Melba Ray, Carol Ray Pepper, […]

learn more
Sun, 12.02.1928

The Conant Gardens Community is Formed

*Conant Gardens is celebrated on December 2, 1928.  This is a Black neighborhood in northeast Detroit, Michigan.  The community was not very densely populated until the 1920s due to the automobile industry boom. Named after reluctant abolitionist Shubael Conant, Conant Gardens was to be developed for white-collar Ford workers, but there was a lack of interest. However, the industrial boom […]

learn more
Mon, 04.01.1929

The Hallie Q. Brown Center, (St. Paul) Opens

The Hallie Q. Brown Center of St. Paul, MN, was incorporated on this date in 1929.

The center is one of the oldest African American community service organizations in Minnesota. The Hallie Q. Brown Center’s story started in 1908 when Black members of the Odd Fellows and Masons fraternal lodges of St. Paul, purchased six lots on Aurora Street between Kent and Mackubin located within St. Paul’s largely African American Rondo neighborhood. There the organization began to serve the unmet needs of the Black community and create better relationships with the white community.

learn more
Thu, 04.18.1929

Sarah Keys, Army Nurse born

*Sarah Keyes was born on this date in 1929.  She is a retired Black nurse’s aide and WAC Army officer. From Washington, N.C., Sarah Louise Keyes was the daughter of David Artist Keyes and Curley Vivian Wooten.  One of seven children, she graduated locally from Mother of Mercy School in 1948.  After graduation, Keyes worked in New Jersey […]

learn more
Wed, 02.26.1930

The Green Pastures Debuts on Broadway

*On this date in 1930, The Green Pastures debuted on Broadway. This is a play written in 1930 by Marc Connelly and adapted from Ol’ Man Adam and His Chillun (1928), a collection of stories by Roark Bradford. The play was the winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1930. It had the first all-Black Broadway […]

learn more
Sun, 03.02.1930

Douglass Hospital, (Kansas City, MO.) Opens

“On this date in 1930, Douglass Hospital of Kansas City, MO, opened.  The original building was housed in Kansas City General Hospital No. 2, serving the indigent Black population of the city.  When the new building opened, national public health experts joined the local communities in considering the new facility the finest Black public hospital […]

learn more
Thu, 06.05.1930

The New York Cubans Baseball Team is Formed

*The New York Cubans baseball team is celebrated this date in 1930.  They were a Negro League baseball team that played during the 1930s and from 1939 to 1950. Operating in the Negro leagues, the team occasionally employed white-skinned Hispanic baseball players as well because Hispanics, in general, were largely ignored by the major league […]

learn more
Fri, 06.20.1930

Bobby Frank Cherry, American Domestic Terrorist born

*Bobby Frank Cherry was born on this date in 1930. He was a white-American white supremacist and terrorist who played a pivotal role in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in 1963.   Bobby Frank Cherry was born in Mineral Springs, a neighborhood of Clanton, Alabama.  He joined the United States Marine Corps as a […]

learn more
Mon, 06.30.1930

The Northeasterners Club Begins

*This date in 1930 marks the first meeting of The Northeasterners Inc. The Northeasterners Inc. was a Black woman’s social club started in Harlem, NYC that still exists today.

learn more
Thu, 08.07.1930

The Lynching of J. Thomas Shipp, and Abraham S. Smith Occurs

*On this date in 1930, the lynching of J. Thomas Shipp and Abraham S. Smith occurred.  They were two young Black men murdered by a mob of thousands in Marion, Indiana. Three suspects had been arrested the night before, charged with robbing and murdering a white factory worker, Claude Deeter, and raping his girlfriend, Mary […]

learn more
Prev Page Next Page

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.
Read More