A group of students wore black armbands to school to protest the war in Vietnam. The school board got wind of the protest and passed a preemptive ban.
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The "civil war" in El Salvador officially ended, but other struggles followed, including to protect the land and water from gold mining.
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The first 10 amendments to the U.S. Constitution, known as the United States Bill of Rights, were ratified.
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Wilma Mankiller took office as Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma.
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U.S. peace activist and suffragist Kate O'Hare was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for a speech denouncing WWI.
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Ella Baker was a civil rights and human rights activist beginning in the 1930s whose career spanned more than five decades.
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A meeting was held in New York of abolitionists to address the injustice of continued slavery in Cuba.
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Joseph H. Rainey, from South Carolina, was the first African-American to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives.
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More than 800 civilians were massacred by the U.S.-backed Salvadoran Army in El Mozote.
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"The primary cause of the Houston riot was the habitual brutality of the white police officers of Houston in their treatment of colored people." —The Crisis magazine.
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The Treaty of Paris was signed, ending the Spanish-American War. None of the countries that had fought for decades for their freedom were represented at signing of the treaty.
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P. B. S. Pinchback of Louisiana became the second Black governor in the United States.
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The Georgia Constitutional Convention was held with 33 African Americans and 137 whites.
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People who had escaped from slavery and were following the Union Army, were blocked from crossing the Ebenezer Creek, leading to their death.
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Congresswoman Jeannette Rankin was the only member of Congress to vote against declaring war on Japan after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
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Whites attacked and killed many Black citizens who had organized for a Black sheriff to remain in office during the Vicksburg Massacre.
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In Les Cayes, Haiti, one of the worst massacres of civilians took place on December 6, 1929, during the nineteen-year American occupation of Haiti, an occupation that began in 1915.
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The 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, officially ended the institution of slavery.
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The Montgomery Bus Boycott is one of the most powerful examples of organizing and social change in U.S. history.
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Black Panther Party members Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were assassinated by police.
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After the Civil War, representatives from states recently in rebellion were blocked from being sworn-in at the 39th Congress.
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Frederick Douglass and Martin Delany launched the abolitionist North Star newspaper.
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Three nuns and a lay worker were killed in El Salvador by members of the U.S. backed National Guard.
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Abolitionist John Brown was executed by the state of Virginia for leading the infamous Harpers Ferry Raid.
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Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama.
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Shaw University was established as a co-ed campus with support from private donors and the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands. It is the second oldest HBCU in the South.
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Shirley Chisholm was the first Black woman elected to the U.S. Congress
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A Colorado Cavalry unit, on orders from Colorado's governor and ignoring a surrender flag, brutally attacked Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes. White abolitionist Silas Soule was assassinated for reporting on the event.
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132 enslaved Africans were thrown overboard and killed by British crew during the Zong Massacre.
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The Palmer Raids began in November of 1919 and targeted suspected radical leftists, especially anarchists, and deported them from the US.
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The Ex-Slave Mutual Relief, Bounty, and Pension Association was founded with a dual mission to organize mutual aid for its members and to pass federal pension legislation that would compensate every formerly enslaved person.
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Rosa Parks attended a mass meeting about Emmett Till days before her refusal to give up her seat on the bus.
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Joseph James Ettor, Arturo Giovannitti, and Joseph Caruso were acquitted after one of the most important labor trials.
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Sean Bell was murdered by New York City police on the day before his wedding.
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Sixty people were arraigned on charges of disorderly conduct stemming from a sit-in to block CIA campus recruiting at UMass-Amherst, an act of protest of the CIA’s role in Central America.
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The murder of the Mirabal sisters — who clandestinely opposed the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo in the Dominican Republic and were then brutally killed — has become an international symbol of resistance to violence against women.
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Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, a Black abolitionist and writer, wrote to John Brown as he awaited his execution.
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The "Hollywood 10" directors, producers, and writers who refused to testify at HUAC were held in contempt of Congress.
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Between 30-60 striking Black Louisiana sugarcane workers were massacred.
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The Bogalusa Labor Massacre was an attack on interracial labor solidarity.
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The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that, in the case of nine-year old Chinese-American Martha Lum, her exclusion on account of race from school was justified.
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A Boston judge stopped the extradition of George Latimer, who had escaped enslavement in Virginia, and allowed him to raise funds for his own manumission.
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Native Americans took over and held Alcatraz Island as Indian Land during the Alcatraz Occupation.
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Radical abolitionists organized to liberate kidnapped Black New Yorkers and fight racist police violence in the decades after New York abolished slavery.
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The state of Utah executed Joe Hill, labor organizer, songwriter, and member of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).
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President William Howard Taft ordered U.S. warships to Nicaragua to defend U.S. corporate profits.
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The Albany Movement engaged multiple civil rights organizations and students in the fight for desegregation and voting rights.
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Six Jesuit scholars/priests and two staff members were murdered by the U.S. backed military in El Salvador.
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The second anti-war Moratorium occurred with over 500,000 marching in D.C. and demonstrations throughout the country and the world.
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Twenty women were subjected to beatings and torture at Occoquan Workhouse, a prison in Virginia, in what became known as the “Night of Terror.”
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The Slave Revolt of 1842 — when dozens of enslaved Black people in Webbers Falls, Oklahoma fought back and briefly escaped from their Cherokee overseers — was the largest rebellion of enslaved people in Indian Territory history.
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The Battle of Ia Drang began between regulars of the United States Army and regulars of the People's Army of Vietnam.
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SCOTUS ruled 9-0 that redrawing city boundaries in Tuskegee, Alabama to exclude African-American voters violates the 15th Amendment.
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Pioneering journalist Nellie Bly began a successful attempt to travel around the world in less than 80 days.
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A group of students were suspended at Southwest Texas State University for peacefully protesting the Vietnam War.
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Mrs. White of the Indiana Textbook Commission called for a ban of Robin Hood in all school books for promoting communism.
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A disaster in the Cherry Mine in Cherry, Illinois, killed 259 boys and men.
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U.S. armed Indonesian troops fired on peaceful procession in East Timor, 270+ killed.
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After 10 years of organizing and protesting, the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation of Arizona won the struggle when Interior Secretary James Watt announced that Orme Dam would not be built.
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On Veterans Day, we share a collection of stories about African American veterans who fought in various wars and upon their return to the U.S., were murdered in the fight for democracy and human rights. We also share resources for teaching about the veterans who speak out against war.
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The Ogoni Nine were executed by the Nigerian military government for campaigning against the devastation of their homeland by oil companies.
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The interracial, elected Reconstruction era local government was deposed in a coup d’etat in Wilmington, North Carolina.
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Violent anti-Jewish demonstrations in Europe in which hundreds of synagogues were destroyed, 7,500 Jewish-owned businesses, homes, and schools were plundered; 91 Jews were murdered; and 30,000 Jewish men were arrested and sent to concentration camps.
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Thousands of Okinawan protesters on the island of Okinawa demanded the removal of the U.S. base there.
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30,000 factory and dock workers staged the 1892 New Orleans general strike.
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U.S. District Court Judge handed down his decision to free Rubin "Hurricane" Carter who had been wrongfully accused of murder.
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The Union Army occupied the Sea Islands off the coast of South Carolina, freeing approximately 10,000 people who had been enslaved, starting what became known as the Port Royal Experiment.
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Madison Washington and eighteen other enslaved people rebelled onboard the Creole, a ship involved in the U.S. slave trade.
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Minister, journalist, newspaper editor, and abolitionist Elijah Parish Lovejoy was murdered by a pro-slavery mob.
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Delegates gathered in Montgomery, Alabama, to draft a new state constitution during Reconstruction.
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Nicaragua held its first democratic elections in more than 50 years in 1984.
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Ash-Shiraa reported that the U.S. gov't. had been secretly selling arms to Iran in a hostage release deal.
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Five people were killed when the Ku Klux Klan and Nazis fired on an anti-Klan rally in Greensboro, North Carolina.
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Protesters from the Trail of Broken Treaties Caravan occupied the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) offices in D.C. for six days.
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Salvador Allende became president of Chile and adopted policies for the social good such as raising minimum wage and increasing access to health care and education.
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African Americans voters were threatened after the Danville Riot, leading to their loss of political power in this majority African American city in Virginia.
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Robert Smalls was elected to Congress from South Carolina during Reconstruction.
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Deadly election "riots" took place in Barbour County, Alabama against African American politicians and voters.
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Eugene V. Debs received one million votes in the U.S. presidential election while in prison on the Socialist Party ticket.
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More than 50 African Americans killed in the Ocoee Massacre after going to vote in Florida.
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Mississippi adopted a state constitution with poll tax and literacy tests to roll back the gains of the Reconstruction era.
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During the Coal Creek War, there was a labor uprising to protest convict leasing.
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Luther Jackson was murdered by Philadelphia, Mississippi policeman Lawrence Rainey.
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The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas Corpus Christi Division found a South Texas school district guilty of discriminating against Mexican-American students. This was one of the first cases that directly applied the ruling made in Brown v. Board of Education to Mexican-American students.
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Reconstruction era protest of racist discrimination on streetcars.
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The Supreme Court ruled that schools had to desegregate "immediately," instead of the previous ruling of "with all deliberate speed."
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U.S. officials denied any involvement in the bombing of North Vietnam.
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Two hate crime shootings in one week, one of African Americans in Kentucky and the other of Jews in Pittsburgh.
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The U.S. Justice Department announced that the prison population topped one million for the first time in U.S. history.
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President George W. Bush signed the USA PATRIOT Act, which rolled back civil liberties for U.S. citizens and immigrants.
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The Malcolm X Liberation University in Durham, North Carolina opened.
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A. Philip Randolph, Jackie Robinson, Coretta Scott King, Harry Belafonte, Bayard Rustin, and more led a Youth March for Integrated Schools in Washington, D.C.
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The St. Bernard Parish (Louisiana) massacre of African Americans was carried out by white men to terrorize the recently emancipated voters.
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A lynch mob of 500 Anglo and Latino Los Angelinos rioted and murdered at least 17 Chinese residents after a white civilian died in a shootout.
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The NAACP sent to the U.N. a document titled “An Appeal to the World,” to redress human rights violations the United States committed against its African-American citizens.
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The Chicago Public School Boycott, also known as Freedom Day, was a mass boycott and demonstration against the segregationist policies.
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In an effort to stop the implementation of Brown v. Board through terrorism, 16-yr-old John Earl Reese was killed in Mayflower, Texas.
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In this speech, Frederick Douglass denounced the Civil Rights Cases of 1883, in which the Supreme Court held that the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments did not empower Congress to outlaw racial discrimination by private individuals.
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Successful African American entrepreneur, landowner, and community leader Anthony P. Crawford was murdered by a lynch mob.
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The Southern Conference on Race Relations (SCRR) was held in Durham, NC to address dichotomy between African American soldiers fighting overseas in the name of democracy while in the U.S. they were facing racial violence and being denied basic human rights.
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For the first time, African Americans were elected to the House of Representatives in 1870.
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The Persons Case, a legal milestone in Canada, established the right of women to sit in the Senate of Canada.
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Filipino American History Month is celebrated in the United States during the month of October.
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Fourteen Black football players at the University of Wyoming were fired when their coach learned they wanted to wear black armbands during a game against Brigham Young University.
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The local chapter of the International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers went on strike to protest their segregated housing and unfair wages and living conditions.
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Marie Equi entered San Quentin prison to serve a one-year term for her anti-war protests.
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The first general convention of African American Ohioans met in Columbus and pledged to continue raising their voices in order to repeal the Black Codes.
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Tommie Smith and John Carlos made a symbolic protest while the U.S. national anthem was played in the Olympics.
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An abolitionist raid against a federal armory in Harpers Ferry, WV -- in an attempt to start an armed revolt against the institution of slavery.
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At the XIX Olympic Games in Mexico City in 1968, Wyomia Tyus became the first person to win gold medals in the 100-meter sprint in two consecutive Olympics. She was also participating in Olympic Project for Human Rights (OPHR) protest.
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The Black Panther Party sought justice for African Americans and other oppressed communities through a combination of revolutionary theory, education, and community programs.
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The Clayton Antitrust Act sought to end practices that limited competition throughout the economy.
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The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Civil Rights Act of 1875, forbidding discrimination in hotels, trains, and other public spaces, was unconstitutional and not authorized by the 13th or 14th Amendments of the Constitution.
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As a sophomore, Paul Robeson was excluded from the Rutgers Football team because another team refused to play against a Black player.
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The White House cornerstone was laid. Among those who constructed the building were African Americans, both free and enslaved.
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A small band of striking coal miners in southern Illinois called out Chicago coal barons and stood their ground at Virden.
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Aleut women from the Pribilof Islands Program wrote a petition about the dangerous internment camp conditions.
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Philadelphia Black educator, baseball player, and civil rights activist Octavius V. Catto was murdered by a white supremacist on election day.
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Che Guevara was killed by U.S. military backed-Bolivian forces, working with the CIA.
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Wangari Maathai was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her work on the environment and founded the Greenbelt Movement.
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The United States and United Kingdom began the war in Afghanistan.
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Matthew Shepard, a gay student at the University of Wyoming, was beaten, robbed, and left to die.
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Henry E. Hayne was the first Black student to be accepted to the University of South Carolina’s medical school, a bold act which encouraged other Black students to apply. By 1875, Black men comprised the majority of the student body.
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Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer, a civil rights activist, was born in Montgomery County, Mississippi.
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The cover-up of the Iran-Contra scandal began to unravel when Eugene Hasenfus was captured by Nicaraguan troops.
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Burglund students walked out in response to the expulsions of their classmates and the murder of Herbert Lee.
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The New Orleans Tribune was launched and published daily in French and English by Louis Charles Roudanez.
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Student demonstrators and other civilians were killed by the military and police in Mexico in advance of the 1968 Olympic Games.
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Under the orders of U.S.-backed Dominican dictator President Rafael Trujillo, the execution of more than 20,000 Haitians began in what is now known as the Parsley Massacre at Massacre River.
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Abolitionists freed a man captured under Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 in Syracuse, New York.
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Black farmers were massacred in Elaine, Arkansas for their efforts to fight for better pay and higher cotton prices. A white mob shot at them, and the farmers returned fire in self-defense. Estimates range from 100-800 killed, and 67 survivors were indicted for inciting violence.
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A decade before the March on Washington, a group of Black women known as the Sojourners for Truth and Justice gathered in Washington D.C. to advocate for their rights.
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Conscientious objectors began a hunger strike at Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary.
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A white mob of between 5,000 to 15,000 lynched African American Will Brown. The Army arrested mob ringleaders. Even though photographs identified them, all of the suspects were eventually released.
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Encampments of Comanches, Kiowas, Kiowa Apaches, Cheyennes, and Arapahos were attacked by the U.S. military.
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In response to the promotion of voter registration, a KKK like group massacred hundreds of people, most who were African American.
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David Walker published one of the most important documents of the 19th century.
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Local 25 of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU) declared a strike.
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Herbert Lee, a farmer who helped voting rights activists, was murdered by a state legislator in broad daylight.
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Fourteen people removed 10,000 draft cards from the Milwaukee draft board.
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The Young Lords were established in Chicago in 1968, led by a street activist named Cha Cha Jiménez, who organized the group to fight local gentrification, police brutality, and racism.
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John Coltrane was born. Also born #tdih: Mary Church Terrell (1863), Ray Charles (1930), and Bruce Springsteen (1949).
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Abraham Lincoln issued the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation.
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Orlando Letelier and Ronni Moffitt were killed in Washington, D.C. by a U.S.-backed Augusto Pinochet regime car bomb.
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Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico as a major Category 4 storm.
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James Meredith attempted to register at the University of Mississippi.
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Forty African Americans, elected by communities in nine states, met in Philadelphia in 1830 to organize for improving the lives of Black people in North America. That week, they founded the National Colored Conventions movement and held its first official series of formal meetings.
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As African Americans marched peacefully in response to their expulsion from elected office, more than a dozen were massacred near Albany, Georgia.
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William Whipper published "An Address on Non-Resistance to Offensive Aggression."
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The 16th Street Baptist Church was bombed in an act of terrorism in Birmingham, Alabama.
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Jonathan Ferrell was killed by police in Charlotte, North Carolina.
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Four marches from different points in the city of Washington, D.C. got underway, against police brutality.
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El Primer Congreso Mexicanista (First Mexicanist Congress) met in Laredo, TX in order to discuss social, labor, educational, and economic issues facing Mexicans and Mexican Americans in the United States.
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Eighteen-year-old John Price was arrested by a federal marshal in Oberlin, Ohio under the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.
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Orval Faubus closed all Little Rock, Arkansas public schools for one year rather than allow integration.
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Orlando and Phyllis Rodriguez spoke out against using September 11, 2001 as a pretext for war.
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Anthropologist Myrna Mack Chang was murdered in Guatemala by U.S. backed military due to her outspoken criticism of the Guatemala government's treatment of the indigenous Maya.
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Chile’s democratically elected president, Salvador Allende was killed in a U.S. backed coup.
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A community of armed Black men and women successfully defended four Black people from capture, serving as a catalyst for further armed self-defense within the abolitionist movement.
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Nineteen mineworkers were killed and dozens were wounded in the Lattimer Massacre.
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The South Carolina Constitutional Convention convened to disenfranchise Black voters.
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ASALH was established by Carter G. Woodson and Jesse E. Moorland.
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Treaties were signed to turn over control of the Panama Canal from the U.S. to Panama.
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The Virgin Islands were hit by Hurricane Irma. Also, on #tdih in 1928, Hurricane Okeechobee formed and hit Puerto Rico and Florida soon in mid-September.
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A white family (the Heffners) in McComb, Mississippi, left after a campaign of harassment, ostracism, and economic retaliation for having spoken to civil rights workers.
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Federal agents seized records, destroyed equipment and books, and arrested hundreds of activists involved with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).
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Tasunka Witko (Chief Crazy Horse) was murdered by the U.S. military.
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Benefit concert for the Civil Rights Congress with Paul Robeson was held in Peekskill, New York.
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Sept. 4 marks the end of fighting at the Battle of Blair Mountain, which was the largest example of class war in U.S. history.
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Nearly 50 African-Americans were killed by white mobs during the Clinton Riot.
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Chicken plant workers died when a preventable workplace "accident" trapped them in a burning building.
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Henry McNeal Turner addressed the Georgia Legislature on its decision to expel all Black representatives.
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The Grenada, Mississippi school board shuttered school instead of opening its doors to registered Black students.
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White coal miners in Rock Springs, Wyoming, brutally attacked the Chinese workers.
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S. Brian Willson's legs were amputated by a train during a nonviolent protest.
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The Klan shot into the home of Freedom Library organizer Pattie Mae McDonald and her family to terrorize them.
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The White Citizens Council and Klan launched full-scale rioting in Clinton, Tennessee in response to school desegregation.
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The Battle of Blair Mountain was the climax of two mine wars fought in the West Virginia coalfields.
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Julius Taylor founded and ran Broad Ax, a Utah-based Black newspaper which challenged commonly accepted beliefs about politics and religion at the end of the twentieth century.
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People’s Tribunal on killing of three young men at Algiers Motel in Detroit.
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In Tennessee, a group of whites rioted after forming a mob to lynch Maurice Mays, a Black man in custody on for the alleged (with no evidence) murder of a white woman.
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The National Chicano Moratorium March was held to protest the Vietnam War and Latino journalist Ruben Salazar was killed.
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Two African American men were burned at the stake in Sulphur Springs, Texas.
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Massachusetts farmers arm themselves, rebel against taxation under the Articles of Confederation.
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Hundreds of thousands of civil rights activists marched on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
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White Floridians respond to lunch counter demonstrations with violence.
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Colin Kaepernick, quarterback for the San Francisco 49'ers, draws attention to his quiet protest against police brutality during an NFL pre-season game.
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The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters was launched in New York.
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Howard Zinn, a historian, author, professor, playwright, and activist, was born in Brooklyn.
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When the “Fort Hood 43” refused to board a plane to Chicago for riot-control duty against fellow African Americans, their non-violent act became one of the largest demonstrations of dissent in U.S. military history.
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Italian-born immigrants, workers, and anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti were executed in Boston.
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Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer, and the other members of the MFDP at the Democratic National Convention, questioned the nation about the lack of "one person, one vote" in the United States.
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Elizabeth Mumbet Freeman, won her freedom. She had secured an attorney and filed a "freedom suit” under the 1780 state constitution for Massachusetts.
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Twenty anti-war protesters were arrested for breaking into selective service offices and destroying draft records.
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Five Black men were arrested for staging a peaceful sit-in at the Alexandria "public" library that denied access to African Americans, making this the anniversary of one of the earliest instances of this form of non-violent protest that became popular in the mid-20th century.
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Nathaniel Turner launched one of the most historic revolts to end enslavement.
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Jonathan Myrick Daniels was shot dead in broad daylight in Lowndes County after being released from jail for picketing stores that denied entry to African Americans.
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On or about Aug. 20, 1619, the documented arrival of Africans—stolen from their homelands and brought to British North America—occurred at Point Comfort.
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Clara Luper and the NAACP Youth Council began sit-ins to desegregate lunch counters.
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Democratically elected Iranian Premier Mohammad Mossadegh was removed from power in a coup.
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Anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko was arrested at a police roadblock.
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Two striking United Farm Workers (UFW) were killed on Aug. 15 and 17, 1973, while picketing.
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Paul Robeson lost his court appeal to have the U.S. State Department grant him a passport.
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Nine volunteers were arrested for sharing food and literature at Golden Gate Park.
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Joan Little was acquitted, using the defense that she used deadly force to resist sexual assault.
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Starting on August 15, 1829, white mobs in Cincinnati, Ohio, rioted for a week to assault the city's Black residents and destroy their property .
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Freedom fighter Takiyah Thompson looped a bright yellow strap around the neck of a Durham monument to Confederate soldiers, and a crowd of other activists pulled it down, inspiring other communities to take direct action in removing public symbols that glorify white supremacy, and to raise up new stories that celebrate all people.
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The Social Security Act was passed, one of the results of the strength of organized labor and other mass movements of the 1930s.
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Springfield Massacre was committed against African Americans by a mob of about 5,000 white people in Springfield, Illinois.
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Lamar Smith, 63-year-old farmer and WWI veteran, was shot dead in Brookhaven, Mississippi, for urging African Americans to vote.
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A group of more than 150 ministers from Washington, D.C. wrote to President William Taft about the Slocum massacre.
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Mae Bertha and Matthew Carter enrolled their children in schools in Sunflower County, Mississippi that had been illegally denied to African Americans. In retaliation, they were evicted from the land they sharecropped and their home was riddled with bullets.
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Hip hop's origins began at a dance party where DJ Kool Herc used two turntables to create a "break beat."
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August 10 is recognized internationally as Prisoners’ Justice Day (PJD), a day of solidarity and organizing with the incarcerated, and remembrance of those who died behind bars, living in inhumane conditions.
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Nearly 500 white men destroyed the Noyes Academy (an integrated school) in Canaan, New Hampshire.
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Michael Brown was fatally shot by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.
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Nine Black activists were arrested in London and charged with inciting a riot when they led over 150 protestors in a march against police harassment.
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The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution was passed without a single dissent in the House of Representatives, and only two no votes in the Senate.
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The MFDP held a State Convention with 2,500 people in Mississippi.
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The U.S. dropped an atomic bomb for the first time in war over the city of Hiroshima.
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On election day, in Louisville, Kentucky, Protestant mobs attacked German and Irish Catholic neighborhoods.
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A white supremacist shot and killed six members of the Sikh Temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin.
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White workers murdered Black workers in Arkansas who were coming to work on the railways.
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The bodies of three lynched civil rights workers (James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman) were found.
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The Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) declared a strike.
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Reagan appealed to the “George Wallace-inclined voters” and to white supremacy in his stump speech at the Neshoba County Fair, mere miles away from where three civil rights workers were murdered by the Klan in 1964.
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J. C. Farmer, a 19-year-old African American WWII veteran, was killed by a mob of 20 white men.
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The first “Redeemer” government is established in Tennessee after conservatives gain control of the state’s General Assembly, ushering in an era of Jim Crow segregation laws.
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Sarah Keys refused to give up her seat on a state-to-state charter bus, prompting the landmark court case, Sarah Keys v. Carolina Coach Company.
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IWW labor organizer Frank Little was lynched from a railroad trestle.
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August First Day became a symbol of hope for enslaved people and abolitionists in the United States when Britain passed the Slavery Abolition Act on August 1, 1834, abolishing slavery throughout its colonies around the world.
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The unified Native warriors, who fought with Odawa Chief Pontiac, defeated 250 British soldiers during their siege at Fort Detroit during Pontiac's War.
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Dozens of high school and university students in a peaceful protest were killed and injured by the U.S. backed Salvadoran police and National Guard.
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Sergeant Edgar Caldwell was hanged before a crowd of spectators in the yard of the Calhoun County jail.
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The New Orleans Massacre occurred when white residents attacked Black marchers near the reconvened Louisiana Constitutional Convention.
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Citizens in the small, predominately African American town of Slocum, Texas, were massacred.
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Late night raid on the Charleston post office by a mob of white supremacists and the burning of abolitionist mail.
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The U.S. government attacked an encampment of Black and white WWI veterans with tanks, bayonets, and tear gas.
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W. E. B. Du Bois and the NAACP organized a silent march in NYC to protest the massacres and lynchings of African Americans.
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Sparked by a white police officer's refusal to make an arrest in the murder of a Black teenager, Chicago's Red Summer violence lasted almost a week. At least 38 people were killed and thousands of Black homes were looted and damaged.
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A fort on the Apalachicola River in Florida was fire bombed by the U.S. Army.
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During the No Gun Ri Massacre, the U.S. Army ordered that all Korean civilians traveling and moving around the country must be stopped.
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Two young African American couples were lynched near the Moore's Ford Bridge. One of the men was a WWII veteran.
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Twelve-year-old Santos Rodriguez and his 13-year-old brother David were pulled from their home in Dallas, Texas, handcuffed, and put inside a police car. Santos was killed when one of the officers played Russian roulette to try to force the boys to confess to a crime.
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F. M. B. “Marsh” Cook, a white man, was killed for standing up against the white supremacist 1890 Mississippi Constitutional Convention.
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US District Judge issued an injunction ordering police in Grenada, Mississippi to stop interfering with lawful protest. This ruling followed weeks of arrests and beating of demonstrators who had been attempting to desegregate businesses in the town.
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Rail workers and residents of St. Louis, Missouri briefly took over the city as part of the wider Great Railroad Strike of 1877.
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In early Colonial Virginia, Elizabeth Key became the first woman of African descent in the North American colonies to sue for her freedom and win.
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The National Conference on Black Power was a gathering of more than 1,000 delegates representing 286 organizations and institutions from 126 cities in 26 states, Bermuda, and Nigeria.
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Ron Walters and Carol Parks-Haun, and other leaders in the NAACP Youth Council, organized a sit-in.
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White mobs, incited by the media, attacked the African American community in Washington, D.C., and African American soldiers returning from WWI. This was one of the many violent events that summer and it was distinguished by strong and organized Black resistance to the white violence.
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Black women in Atlanta who washed clothes for a living organized an effective Reconstruction era strike — with clear demands, strategic timing, and door-to-door canvassing.
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Protest and civil unrest broke out in Cleveland following years of escalation of racial tension.
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WWII veteran Maceo Snipes was murdered after casting his vote in the Georgia Democratic Primary.
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On this day, a volunteer infantryman performed an act of courage that was the earliest event to earn an African American soldier the Medal of Honor.
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A deadly munitions explosion occurred at the Port Chicago Naval Magazine in Port Chicago, California. When the surviving African Americans sailors demanded safer conditions before returning to work, they faced court martial and jail.
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Irene Morgan refused to change her seat on a segregated bus in Virginia.
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Schoolteacher Elizabeth Jennings Graham successfully challenged racist streetcar policies in New York City.
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The Longest Walk, a transcontinental trek for Native American justice, ended.
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WWII vet Ozell Sutton was denied service at the Arkansas Capitol cafeteria after visiting the building to collect voter registration materials.
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The Young Lords occupied Lincoln Hospital’s major administrative building in response to deplorable treatment of people of color.
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In 1969, a brief war broke out between Honduras and El Salvador.
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The NYC Draft Massacre ("Riots") were the largest civil insurrection in U.S. history besides the Civil War itself. White mobs attacked the African American community — committing murder and burning homes and institutions (including an orphanage.)
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The bodies of Charles Eddie Moore and Henry Hezekiah Dee, were found in the Mississippi River. They had been tortured and murdered by the Klan two months earlier.
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The Bisbee Deportation was the illegal deportation of more than 1,000 striking mine workers (IWW-led strike), their supporters, and citizen bystanders by 2,000 vigilantes.
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Athens-area Ku Klux Klan members shot and killed WWII veteran and DCPS assistant superintendent Lemuel Penn.
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Thousands of white people rioted after a young Black couple moved into an apartment in Cicero, Illinois, west of Chicago. They firebombed the building, overturned police cars, and threw stones at firefighters who tried to put out the fire.
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A camp warden and guards shot dead seven prisoners being held at the Anguilla Prison in Georgia. The Anguilla Prison Massacre Quilt Project tells that story, drawing on records from the NAACP.
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Miners in Coeur d'Alene held a strike and took on the Pinkertons.
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Greenpeace's Rainbow Warrior was bombed by two French agents and Dutch photographer Fernando Pereira was killed.
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Shirley Chisholm was an historic candidate at the 1972 Democratic National Convention.
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The Longview Riot is one example of white mob violence during the period known as "Red Summer." Photo: Daniel Hoskins at gun repository required by U.S. Marshall to undermine African Americans' ability to engage in self-defense.
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Nicolás Guillén, Cuban poet of social protest and a leader of the Afro-Cuban movement was born.
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The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was adopted.
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A Black militia was accused of blocking a road and punished with the Hamburg Massacre. This was Reconstruction era voter suppression.
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When WWII veteran Edna Griffin was denied service at a Des Moines drug store, she took the company to court and the lawsuit became a test case.
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Mary Harris "Mother" Jones began the "March of the Mill Children."
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Elias Thomson, an African American who lived in Spartanburg, South Carolina, bravely shared testimony detailing violence inflicted against him because he voted for the Republican ticket in the local election.
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Philando Castile, an African American, was shot to death by a police officer at a traffic stop. Castile had worked as a nutritional supervisor at an elementary school.
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While stationed at Camp Hood in Texas, Lieutenant Jackie Robinson refused to give up his seat on the bus and was court-martialed.
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Spies from the Pinkerton Detective Agency and striking steelworkers engaged in a major battle as part of the Homestead Strike.
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Inmates at United States Penitentiary (USP) Marion staged a hunger strike on the U.S. bicentennial in protest of inhumane treatment by the prison administration.
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On July 4, 1965, gay and lesbian activists on the east coast protested in front of Independence Hall in Philadelphia to demand equitable treatment and respect.
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Hundreds of civil rights demonstrators amassed on Gwynn Oak Amusement Park in Baltimore, Maryland, to protest the park’s segregation policy.
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Clyde Kennard (June 12, 1927–July 4, 1963) bravely and righteously tried to pursue higher education in Mississippi. He faced the fatal wrath of the state as a result of his efforts to challenge white supremacy.
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Hubert Harrison urges armed self-defense at Harlem protest rally in the wake of two white supremacist pogroms against African Americans in East St. Louis.
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African American heavyweight champion Jack Johnson successfully defended his title by knocking out James J. Jeffries, who had come out of retirement "to win back the title for the White race" in Reno, Nevada.
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Members of the National Woman Suffrage Association crashed the Centennial Celebration at Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to present the “Declaration of the Rights of Women.”
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A battle between Black soldiers and the local white law enforcement who targeted them in Bisbee, Arizona during Red Summer.
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In Paterson, New Jersey, 2,000 workers went on strike from 20 textile mills.
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Africans on the Cuban schooner Amistad rose up against their captors, seizing control of the ship, which had been transporting them to chattel slavery.
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Over three dozen young doctors bucked prestige and embraced justice in the summer of 1970 when they began work at Lincoln Hospital, a run-down, underfunded public hospital in the South Bronx that also the site of an occupation by the Young Lords.
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More than 1,000 streetcar workers went on strike in New Orleans.
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The Fort Hood Three issued a public statement about their refusal to be sent to Vietnam.
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The Virginia Division of Motion Picture Censorship, which racists used to promulgate white supremacy and negative stereotypes of African Americans since 1922, ceased operations.
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Edward Alexander Bouchet graduated from Yale University as the sixth person to receive a Ph.D. in physics in the United States.
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281 Africans aboard the Antelope ship were brought to Savannah by the U.S. Treasury.
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The Stonewall Riots occurred when police arrived at the Stonewall Inn to arrest any individuals found to be cross-dressing. This was a milestone in a long history of LGBTQ+ activism.
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While politicians debated the implications of taking down the Confederate flag after the white supremacist murder of nine African Americans at Emmanuel AME Church, Bree Newsome scaled the South Carolina state flag pole and took the flag down.
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Democratically elected Guatemalan president Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán was deposed in a CIA-sponsored coup.
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Helen Keller worked throughout her long life to achieve social justice.
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Rather than desegregate, the Prince Edward County, Virginia Board of Supervisors refused to appropriate money from the County School Board to the public schools.
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At the height of the anti-Communist Red Scare, Massachusetts second-grade teacher Anne P. Hale Jr. was removed from her position because of her prior membership in the Communist Party and her lack of “perception, understanding, and judgment necessary in one who is to be entrusted with the responsibility for teaching the children of the Town.”
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Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Arapaho defended their land in the battle of the Greasy Grass (Battle of Little Big Horn).
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The largest LGBTQ massacre in U.S. history (until the Orlando Massacre) occurred at the UpStairs Lounge in New Orleans.
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NASA scientist James Hansen testified to Congress stating the greenhouse effect had been detected.
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The permit for the Poor People's Campaign expired, ending the month long encampment.
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President Roosevelt signed the Servicemen's Readjustment Act (USA), known as the GI Bill, to provide financial aid to veterans returning from WW II. White supremacy prevented equal access to those benefits.
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James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman were tortured and murdered by the KKK in Neshoba County, Mississippi.
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The Wichita Monrovians bested a squad fielded by the white-supremacist Ku Klux Klan terrorist organization at the height of Jim Crow apartheid.
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Muhammad Ali was convicted for refusing induction in the U.S. armed forces.
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In Detroit, Michigan, Vincent Chin, a Chinese American, was beaten to death in a hate crime by two white auto workers who blamed Chin for the massive lay-offs occurring in the auto industry. The judge gave the murderers three year's probation.
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Juneteenth — June 19th, also known as Emancipation Day — Juneteenth — is one of the many commemorations of people seizing their freedom in the United States.
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Black and white protesters attempted to desegregate a pool in St. Augustine, Florida.
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Nine African American churchgoers were gunned down inside a church in an act of white supremacist terrorism.
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Five-year-old Anthony Quinn and his mother and siblings protested against the election of five Mississippi Congressmen from districts where Black people were not allowed to vote. Refused admittance, they sat on the steps and police instigated mayhem ensued.
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High school student-led protests in South Africa that began in response to the introduction of Afrikaans as the medium of instruction in local schools.
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Eugene V. Debs made his famous anti-war speech protesting World War I which was raging in Europe.
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When the Civil Defense Administration attempted to hold a drill simulating a nuclear attack, 27 activists in New York refused to take cover. They handed out pamphlets reading: "We will not obey this order to pretend, to evacuate, to hide... We refuse to cooperate."
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The United States announced the end to its bombing exercises in Vieques, Puerto Rico after decades of protests from activists.
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On Flag Day 1943, the Supreme Court invalidated a compulsory flag salute law in public schools and established that students possess some level of First Amendment rights.
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The 14th Amendment to the constitution was passed, granting citizenship to "all persons born or naturalized in the United States."
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The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Mildred and Richard Loving in the historic Loving v. Virginia case.
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Medgar Evers, WWII veteran and civil rights activist, was murdered by a white supremacist in Jackson, Mississippi.
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Paul Robeson testified before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, where he was questioned about his political speech, associations, and party affiliation.
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African Ameican residents of Diamond, Louisiana won their relocation fight with Shell Oil.
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More than 100,000 students stayed out of school to protest inequality and segregation in Chicago.
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Students for a Democratic Society held its founding convention in Michigan and issued the Port Huron Statement.
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Along the “Trail of Tears” in Neligh, Nebraska, a farmer signed a deed to return ancestral land to the Ponca Tribe. In 1877, the Ponca Nation was forced by the federal government to leave their home of Nishu’de ke (also known as Missouri) to relocate 600 miles south into present-day Oklahoma.
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Ben Chester White, caretaker on a farm, was brutally murdered by the Klan in Natchez, Mississippi.
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Joseph N. Welch confronted Sen. Joseph McCarthy about allegations of communists in the U.S. Army.
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Freedom Riders traveling from New Orleans to Jackson were arrested in 1961.
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Homer Plessy was arrested for violating Louisiana's Separate Car Act.
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Air Force veteran James Meredith began the March Against Fear from Memphis, Tennessee to Jackson, Mississippi.
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Approximately ninety-six Africans held captive on the British slave ship Little George revolted against the ship’s captain and crew, eventually taking control of the entire ship.
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The CDC published a medical study about five gay men, plagued by a mysterious autoimmune disease (AIDS), in June 1981.
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The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs in three cases that weakened the structure of legalized segregation.
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The Colored Monitor Union Club organized and released their address for equal rights in Norkfolk, Virginia, soon after the Civil War ended.
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Approximately 10,000 Haitian farmers protested the donation of 475 tons of Monsanto hybrid seeds.
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African American athletes gathered to support Muhammed Ali's refusal to serve in Vietnam.
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The 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution was passed by Congress.
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SCOTUS ruled against Jim Crow segregation on interstate commerce in Morgan v. Commonwealth of Virginia, leading to Journey of Reconciliation Freedom Rides.
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Racism led to the "zoot suit riots," during which white U.S. servicemen and police entered a majority-Mexican American neighborhood in East Los Angeles where they attacked and detained hundreds of young people.
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Harriet Tubman planned and guided a significant armed raid (becoming the first woman to do so in the Civil War) against Confederate forces, supply depots, and plantations along the Combahee River in coastal South Carolina.
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First opened in 1968, Drum and Spear was the first endeavor of the Afro-American Resources, Inc. founded by SNCC organizers Charlie Cobb, Courtland Cox, and others. The bookstore quickly became a central hub of knowledge to “disseminate information by and about Black people in the African Diaspora.”
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The Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) was founded in New York.
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In what became known as the Tulsa Massacre, white supremacists destroyed a thriving Black community in Oklahoma. This is one of countless white supremacist massacres in U.S. history.
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Fred Korematsu was arrested on a street corner in San Leandro, California for resisting Executive Order 9066, in which all people of Japanese descent were incarcerated in U.S. concentration camps.
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On Memorial Day, Chicago Police Department shot and killed ten unarmed demonstrators in Chicago.
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Learn about the people's history of Decoration Day (Memorial Day).
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A group of college students and professor held a sit-in at the Woolworths in Jackson, Mississippi.
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The first African Liberation Day was held on May 27, 1972, and drew some 60,000 demonstrators in cities across the U.S. and Canada, including one on the National Mall in Washington D. C.
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Ernest Green became the first African-American to graduate from Little Rock Central High School in 1958.
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Future Mississippi Supreme Court Justice Tom P. Brady delivered a defiant speech called “Black Monday” in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education decision, inspiring many white leaders to join the White Citizens’ Council.
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Wilhelmina Jakes and Carrie Patterson sparked a city-wide boycott in Tallahassee when they were arrested for refusing to move from the whites-only seats of a segregated bus.
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The Battle of the Overpass occurred when union members were beaten by Ford Motor Co. reps for distributing leaflets.
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Hundreds of Pequot villagers were massacred by the Puritans in Mystic, Connecticut.
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The Minneapolis Teamsters Strike of 1934 reached a settlement with union recognition and reinstatement for all fired workers.
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On election day in Norfolk, African Americans tested their right to vote and when denied, cast their own "freedom ballots."
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Earthfirst! activist Judi Bari's car was blown up by a bomb in Oakland, California.
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Henry Dumas, a critically acclaimed author, was fatally shot by the New York Transit police.
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Nearly 400 South Asian immigrants — many of whom were Sikh — steamed into Vancouver's harbor on the Japanese ship Komagata Maru in search of a new home, but were blocked from docking and disembarking due to racist immigration policies.
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The forcible removal of Native American tribes, the Trail of Tears, began.
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The United Nations proclaimed May 22 the International Day for Biological Diversity (IDB) to increase understanding and awareness of biodiversity issues.
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The "Great Emigration" of the Oregon Trail began and thousands of Native Americans were displaced.
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Blanche K. Bruce became Register of the Treasury, which placed his name on all U.S. currency.
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Ona Judge escaped enslavement by U.S. President George Washington.
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Medgar Evers made a 17-minute speech on WLBT in a rare and historic exception to the white supremacist only voice on Mississippi radio and television.
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The Battle of Attu was fought between U.S. and Japanese forces and Attu villagers were taken as prisoners of war.
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Virtually every shop and factory in Chinatown was closed, with signs posted windows and on doors reading “Closed to Protest Police Brutality" to protest the beating of Peter Yew.
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In a personal essay about the longest-running, largest annual event to celebrate the legacy of Malcolm X, Charles Stephenson describes the celebration's founding and impact of that day in history.
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Lorraine Hansberry was an author and activist who wrote "A Raisin in the Sun."
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Political activist Yuri Kochiyama was born in San Pedro, California.
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Mary Turner, a young African American woman who was eight months pregnant, was lynched in Lowndes County, Georgia.
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Charles Sumner delivered a speech denouncing slavery and the need for Kansas to become a free state.
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Plessy v. Ferguson upheld the constitutionality of racial segregation laws for public facilities.
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Nine people entered the Selective Service Offices to remove and burn draft records in protest of the Vietnam War.
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After decades of organizing and strategic efforts by parents, teachers, lawyers, and more — the U.S. Supreme Court issued the unanimous decision in Brown v. Board of Education on school segregation.
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The Sedition Act of 1918 was enacted to extend the Espionage Act of 1917. It forbade the use of "disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive language" about the U.S. government.
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Studs Terkel was an author, activist, historian, and broadcaster.
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Kalief Browder was arrested at the age of 16 for allegedly stealing a backpack weeks before in the Bronx.
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Howard Zinn gave the commencement address at Spelman University, at the invitation of President Beverly Daniel Tatum.
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College student Phillip Lafayette Gibbs (21) and high school student James Earl Green (17) were killed by the police during an anti-war protest at Jackson State College.
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Peaceful protesters formed a picket line at the House on Un-American Activities Committee hearings.
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More than four thousand Philadelphia longshoremen, organized by African American IWW leader Ben Fletcher, went on strike and shut down one of the busiest ports in the United States.
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The Philadelphia Police Department dropped a C-4 bomb on the home of the MOVE organization, killing eleven people (including five children) and wiping out half a city block and .
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U.S. Congress overwhelmingly voted in favor of President James K. Polk's request to declare war on Mexico.
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The Poor People's Campaign was a multiracial effort to gain economic justice for poor people.
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The Michigan Supreme Court ruled in favor of school desegregation in the case of Joseph Workman v. the Detroit Board of Education, almost 90 years before the United States’ landmark Brown v. Board of Education.
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Judge Byrne in the Pentagon Papers trial dismissed all charges against Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo.
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Army Captain Howard Levy was imprisoned three years for refusing to train U.S. Special Forces soldiers for Vietnam.
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White sailors ignited violent rioting in Charleston, South Carolina during the Red Summer of 1919. African Americans fought back, in self-defense.
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Lee Yick won a Supreme Court case that said that all people — citizens and non-citizens — had equal protection under the law.
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Teachers went on strike for seven months, against community control, after Black and Puerto Rican parents organized for better schools for their children in New York City.
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Helen Keller wrote a letter to the students who planned on burning all books deemed "un-German."
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Starting in the spring of 1934, longshoremen across every port on the West Coast struck against the unfair hiring tactics that they experienced daily.
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Mother's Day began as a call to action for healthcare and against war. Activism continues today with #FreeBlackMamas and more.
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Palo Verde, La Loma, and Bishop were close-knit Mexican American communities that were destroyed in the 1950s to make way for the Dodger Stadium.
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John Brown, Martin Delany, and others gathered for a Constitutional Convention in Chatham, Canada.
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Rev. George W. Lee, one of the first African Americans registered to vote in Humphreys County since Reconstruction and head of the Belzoni, Mississippi NAACP, was murdered.
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The Viet Minh scored their final victory over the French at Dien Bien Phu.
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The 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act was signed which prohibited Chinese immigration.
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Robert Sengstacke Abbott founded the highly influential newspaper, the Chicago Defender, with the tagline: American Race Prejudice Must Be Destroyed.
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Cinco de Mayo is actually the Battle of Puebla Day, commemorating the defeat of Napoleon III in 1862.
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During an anti-war protest at Kent State University, the Ohio National Guard shot unarmed college students at Kent State University, killing four. Students were also killed at Jackson State (May 15, 1970), and Orangeburg (February 8, 1968).
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A peaceful demonstration in Chicago for the eight-hour day ended in tragedy when the police barge in, and a bomb is thrown and explodes.
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Educator and civil rights organizer Septima Clark was born in South Carolina.
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In disciplined groups and singing freedom songs, students “ditch” class to march for justice and fill the jails.
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International Workers' Day began as a commemoration of the 1886 Haymarket massacre in Chicago.
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White civilians and police killed 46 African-Americans and injured many more while burning houses, schools, and churches in Memphis, Tennessee.
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. made a speech criticizing the Vietnam War and praising Muhammad Ali.
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The Bristol Bus Boycott began in England, inspired by the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
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Nobel Prize-winner Linus Pauling and Ava Helen Pauling joined a march in front of the White House to protest the resumption of U.S. atmospheric nuclear testing.
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Ben Linder, a volunteer U.S. engineer, was killed by the U.S. CIA funded Contras.
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Between April 5 and April 28, 1977, hundreds of disabled and handicapped activists organized, protested, and occupied government buildings around the country to pressure the U.S. Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, Joseph Califano, to enact Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and publish regulations to guide its enforcement.
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Harriet Tubman helped to rescue Charles Nalle, a fugitive from slavery in Virginia, in Troy, New York.
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Lifelong gay rights and anti-war activist Kiyoshi Kuromiya held a demonstration while in college against the use of napalm in Vietnam by announcing that a dog would be burned alive with napalm in front of the university library.
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During the Spanish Civil War, the Nazis tested their new air force on the Basque town of Guernica in northern Spain.
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Today’s border with Mexico is the product of invasion and war. Grasping some of the motives for that war and some of its immediate effects begins to provide students the kind of historical context that is crucial for thinking about the line that separates the United States and Mexico.
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500,000 people demonstrated against the Vietnam War in Washington, D.C.
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African Americans in Richmond, Virginia organized protests against segregated streetcars.
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Students for a Democratic Society, Student Afro-American Society and others began a nonviolent occupation of campus buildings at Columbia University.
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William Lewis Moore, a white postal worker from Baltimore, was murdered on the road in Alabama during a one-person march for racial justice.
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Barbara Johns (16-years-old) led her classmates in a strike to protest the substandard conditions in Prince Edward County, Virginia.
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William Beverly Nash and several others asked the federal government to intervene to ensure equal medical treatment for all.
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Football star and soldier Pat Tillman was killed in Afghanistan. The U.S. government used his death in pro-war propaganda.
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Illinois congressman Arthur W. Mitchell was ordered to move to the Jim Crow car of the train once it entered Arkansas.
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Three hundred twenty-two inmates were killed in a fire at the Ohio State Penitentiary.
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Stonemasons and other construction workers protested for an eight-hour workday.
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The Virginia Interscholastic Association (VIA) was established to provide African American high school students in Virginia with athletic, artistic, academic, and leadership opportunities unavailable to them in segregated schools.
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The National Guard fired on striking miners and their families in Ludlow, Colorado.
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President Ulysses S. Grant signed into law the third of the Enforcement Acts, a Reconstruction-era bill that empowered the Federal government to intervene where the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments are violated.
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The New York Police falsely accused four African American teenagers and one Latino teenager who became known as the "Central Park Five."
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The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising began, on the eve of Passover, when Nazi forces attempted to clear out the Jewish ghetto in Warsaw, Poland, to send them to concentration camps.
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Benjamin Berry Manson and Sarah Ann Benton White, formerly enslaved in Tennessee, receive an official marriage certificate from the Freedmen’s Bureau.
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26,000 high school and college students came to Washington, D.C. to demand the end of segregated schools.
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Six Black Kansans and a white developer created the Nicodemus Town Company. With the goal of establishing an all-Black settlement on the Great Plains, W. H. Smith and W. R. Hill advertised the town as a haven for Black migrants.
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Brazil's military police gunned down 19 peasant farm workers in the Via Campesina movement who were marching for land sovereignty in 1996.
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One of the largest anti-war protest was held in Washington, D.C.
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Prompted by South Carolina’s all-white political primary system, civil rights advocate Modjeska Monteith Simkins wrote a letter to Governor Olin D. Johnston of South Carolina challenging him to a debate on white supremacy.
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Charlotte Brown was forcibly removed from a horse-drawn streetcar in San Francisco.
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The federal government compensated the "owners" of enslaved people for their "loss of property." The people whose labor and families were stolen for generations were not compensated nor given any assistance for the transition to freedom.
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Amidst growing opposition to the U.S. war in Vietnam, large-scale anti-war protests were held in New York, San Francisco, and many other cities.
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Founding of the youth-led Civil Rights Movement organization, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
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The Real Estate and Homestead Association helped organize travel and settlement for African Americans, “Exodusters,” who fled the South because of racial violence and “bulldozing” by white supremacist groups.
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Seventy-seven enslaved people attempted to flee Washington, D.C. by sailing away on a schooner called the Pearl.
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When Gonzalo and Felicitas Mendez, two California farmers, sent their children to a local school, their children were told that they would have to go to a separate facility reserved for Mexican American students.
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Frances Ellen Watkins Harper spoke in Philadelphia at the Centennial Anniversary of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, urging African Americans to continue organizing for justice.
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A riot ensued after Louis Ruffin, an Army veteran, pulled out his gun to defend his family during an altercation between his father and two police officers.
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The KKK carried out the Colfax Massacre in response to a Republican victory in the 1872 elections.
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Confederate troops massacred over 500 surrendering Union soldiers, majority African American, at the Civil War Battle of Fort Pillow.
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The Free African Society was a benevolent organization grounded in Christian religious faith and operating outside denominational differences to serve the social needs of Black Philadelphians.
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The 1968 Fair Housing Act, was signed into law after years of struggle and grassroots organizing.
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Thaddeus Stevens gave a speech in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in defense of the Free Schools Act of 1834, which moved the state House to vote against repeal and the Senate to take another vote in support of free public schools.
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During a Spring filled with pro-immigrant activism, on this day the largest number of people gathered in over 100 cities in the United States to protest new anti-immigrant legislation.
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The first freedom ride, the Journey of Reconciliation, left Washington, D.C. to travel through four states of the upper South.
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Paul Robeson was one of the most important figures of the 20th century. He was a “renaissance man” — an acclaimed athlete, actor, singer, cultural scholar, author, lawyer, and internationally-renowned political activist.
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The U.S. Civil War ended when the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia surrendered to U.S. General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House in south-central Virginia.
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An explosion at the Banner Mine in Alabama killed 128 men, almost all of them African American prisoners of the state who were forced to work in the mine under the convict leasing system.
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A successful boycott of the Norfolk Tars by Black sports fans leads the team to desegregate both the players and stadium seating.
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Billie Holiday was a legendary jazz singer and songwriter. Also born today, Harry Hay and Daniel Ellsberg.
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Twenty-four enslaved Africans launched a rebellion in Manhattan, New York.
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Little Bobby Hutton (age 17) of the Black Panther Party (BPP) was shot dead by the Oakland police.
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The Tuskegee Student Uprising of 1968 was one of many instances when Black students fought to expand educational opportunities and create more equity on college campuses.
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Boston University refused to approve negotiated contract, so the faculty union called a strike, with Howard Zinn as co-chair of strike committee. Other staff and librarians also went on strike that spring.
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated while in Memphis to support the striking sanitation workers.
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Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his speech in opposition to the Vietnam War, calling for a "revolution of values."
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In April 1917, soldiers entered the sugar town of Jobabo in eastern Cuba and, according to eyewitnesses, executed several British West Indian men.
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In the face of white supremacists' threats, a Black Detroit judge upheld the law and acted for equal justice for Black churchgoers detained unlawfully after a deadly police shoot-out.
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The Southern Tenant Farmers Union broke away from a larger organization and became a racially integrated workers union.
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Jeannette Rankin took her seat in the U.S. House of Representatives as the first woman ever elected to the U.S. Congress.
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The Standing Rock Sioux and allies founded a Spirit Camp along the proposed route of the bakken oil pipeline, Dakota Access to protest the route's construction and to raise awareness of its threat.
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The civil rights suit of Blackwell v. Issaquena Board of Education was filed on behalf of 300 African-American students from several schools across Issaquena County in Mississippi who had been suspended for wearing and distributing “freedom” buttons.
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The African National Congress called on parents to withdraw their children from schools to resist the 1953 Bantu Education Act.
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Frank S. Emi was interrogated about his protest of the draft during Japanese American incarceration.
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California newspaper owner and anti-Klan activist Charlotta Spears Bass became the first African American nominated to be a U.S. political party's vice-presidential candidate.
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The West Point Cemetery in Norfolk, Virginia was established to provide a burial area for Black soldiers and sailors who fought to preserve the Union.
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The 15th Amendment to the United States Constitution was formally adopted.
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The last U.S. combat troops left South Vietnam, ending direct U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam War.
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The U.S. Supreme Court issued its landmark decision in United States v. Wong Kim Ark.
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Staged ride-ins during Reconstruction in South Carolina were among the first (recorded) organized protests of segregation on a streetcar.
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Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X met briefly by chance as they were waiting for a press conference.
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The Trail of Tears removed Cherokee Indians from their ancestral home in the Smoky Mountains to the Oklahoma Territory.
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The Selma marches were three protest marches about voting rights, held in 1965.
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Viola Liuzzo (April 11, 1925 – March 25, 1965), Civil Rights activist, was murdered in 1965 by the KKK after the Selma to Montgomery March.
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Nine young African Americans, were falsely charged with rape and collectively served more than 100 years in prison.
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A network of religious congregations that became known as the Sanctuary Movement started with a Presbyterian church and a Quaker meeting in Tucson.
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Archbishop Óscar Romero of El Salvador assassinated by U.S.-backed death squads.
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A U.S. Supreme Court decision bans poll taxes for state and local elections.
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Mary Ann Shadd Cary published the first edition of "The Provincial Freeman," Canada's first anti-slavery newspaper.
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The Selma to Montgomery marchers traveled into Lowndes County, working with local leaders to organize residents into a new political organization: the Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO).
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Nine protesters smashed glass, hurled files out a fourth floor window, and poured blood on files and furniture at the Dow Chemical offices in Washington, D.C.
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Community on the Move for Equality called for a march in Memphis in solidarity with sanitation workers.
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Police shot peaceful protesters, killing 19 and wounding over 200 others in Ponce, Puerto Rico.
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Entrepreneur Claude Albert Barnett launched the Associated Negro Press, or ANP, a nationwide and international news service that focused on current events, feature stories, opinions and other information important to African Americans but usually ignored by or unknown to white-owned mainstream media.
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It's worth pausing to note how profoundly corporate textbooks mis-educate our students on the years of warfare in Iraq.
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Mexican-American youth walked out of school to protest racial discrimination in Denver, Colorado.
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Howard University students seized the Administration Building, demanding changes in the discipline policy, the addition of courses in African American history, and more.
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The first mass work stoppage in the 195-year history of the Postal Service began with a walkout of letter carriers in Brooklyn and Manhattan who were demanding better wages.
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The ruling of Gideon v. Wainwright required states to provide counsel in criminal cases to represent defendants who are unable to afford to pay their own attorneys.
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The Carroll County Courthouse Massacre left 23 Black people dead when an armed white mob attacked an ongoing trial.
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With escalating escapes of the formerly enslaved, the Virginia General Assembly responded to lobbying from slaveholders and human traffickers by making it harder for enslaved African Americans to escape on ships and by increasing penalties for anyone helping such freedom-seekers.
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Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli military bulldozer while undertaking nonviolent direct action to protect the home of a Palestinian family from demolition.
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Hugh Thompson tried to defend Vietnamese villagers during Mỹ Lai Massacre.
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Freedom’s Journal was the first African American owned and operated newspaper in the United States.
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South Carolina college students in a peaceful protest against segregation are attacked by police with firehoses and placed in a stockade. Their NAACP lawyer is sent to jail by the judge for "pursuing his case vigorously."
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More than 1,300 Norwegian teachers were arrested by the German Nazi-installed government.
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Two U.S. merchant seamen mutinied against the captain and crew aboard the SS Columbia Eagle, as it crossed the Pacific during the Vietnam War.
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave the speech titled "The Other America" focusing on economic inequalities and white complicity in the North.
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The film Salt of the Earth premiered at the 86th Street Grande Theatre, the only theater in New York City that would show the film.
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A mob lynched 11 Italians in New Orleans for the killing of the New Orleans police chief.
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Louisville police officers opened fire in the home of 26-year-old Breonna Taylor, shooting and killing her.
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Grenada's prime minister Eric Gairy was ousted in a coup organized by the New Jewel Movement and led by Maurice Bishop.
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Dozens of disabled Americans abandoned their mobility aids and climbed and crawled up the U.S. Capitol steps to raise awareness of threats to the proposed ADA. It worked.
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Most of the demands of labor unions were met in the 1912 Lawrence textile strike.
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The populist Las Gorras Blancas published a human rights declaration.
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In early March 2020, the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 threat to be great enough to warrant labeling it a pandemic.
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Rev. James Reeb died as a result of being severely beaten by a group of white men during Bloody Sunday in Selma two days earlier.
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The Constitution of the Confederate States of America was adopted a month before the Civil War started.
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Thousands of Black leaders gathered to create a cohesive political strategy at the National Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana.
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African Americans in Little Rock organized a boycott and "we walk" league to protest the Streetcar Segregation Act.
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A white mob seized three African American business men in Memphis and lynched them without trial.
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The Lowry Band helped guide General Sherman on his march to end the Civil War.
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In 1975, the United Nations began celebrating International Women's Day on March 8.
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A cab driver, a day care provider, and two professors broke into an FBI office in Media, Pennsylvania, and stole more than 1,000 classified documents.
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To protest the police murder of Jimmie Lee Jackson and for voting rights, more than 600 people began a peaceful march from Selma to Montgomery.
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The Supreme Court declared in horrific Dred Scott v. Sandford ruling that "Any person descended from Africans, whether slave or free, is not a citizen of U.S."
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The impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson began in the Senate.
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Crispus Attucks was the first person shot to death by the British during the Boston Massacre.
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Frances Perkins became Secretary of Labor. She was the first woman appointed to the U.S. Cabinet.
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Rutherford Hayes became the 19th President of the U.S. with a devastating impact on Reconstruction.
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The Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands was established within the War Department to undertake the relief effort and social reconstruction after the Civil War.
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President Thomas Jefferson put his signature on the law known as the Insurrection Act.
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At age 15, Claudette Colvin refused to give up her bus seat to a white woman in Montgomery, Alabama.
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Milwaukee representative Victor Berger introduced House Resolution 409 to conduct hearings into the Lawrence strike and the workings of the American Woolen Company.
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Congress overrode President Andrew Johnson’s veto and passed the first of four statutes known as the Reconstruction Acts, which outlined the process of readmission to the Union.
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Five students from Indiana University at Bloomington (IU) started the Green Feather Movement to protest censorship.
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A group of Confederate veterans in Louisiana formed the White League with the goal of using terrorism to undermine Reconstruction.
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"Granny D" Haddock completed a 3200 miles walk from California to Washington, D.C. to call for reform of the U.S. system of campaign finance.
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Nadine and Patsy Cordova were targets of a white supremacist campaign after teaching ethnic studies through resources like 500 Years of Chicano History and sponsoring the school's first chapter of MEChA (Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlán).
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Korean War veteran Clifton Walker was murdered by the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan while on his way home from his late work shift at the International Paper plant in Mississippi.
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About 250 Sioux Indians, led by members of the American Indian Movement, converged on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Reservation, launching the famous 71-day occupation of Wounded Knee.
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Wharlest Jackson (1930–1967), treasurer of the Natchez, Mississippi branch of the NAACP, was assassinated with a car bomb.
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Trayvon Martin, a Black teenager, was murdered. The death of Martin and acquittal of the man who shot him sparked the national and global Movement for Black Lives.
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Jimmie Lee Jackson was beaten and shot by an Alabama state troopers during a peaceful voting rights march on Feb. 18. and died eight days later.
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Immigration agents raided La Placita Park where they arrested and deported dozens of Mexican Americans.
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Wyatt Outlaw, a Union veteran who became first Black town commissioner of Graham, North Carolina, was seized from his home and lynched by members of the Ku Klux Klan known as the White Brotherhood, which controlled the county.
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Muhammad Ali (then Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr.) won the heavyweight boxing championship title at the age of 22.
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A general strike was called in Amsterdam to protest Nazi persecution of Jews under the German Nazi occupation.
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Hiram Revels was sworn into office as senator from Mississippi, becoming the first African American to serve in the U.S. Senate.
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The Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in Tinker v. Des Moines that students do not “shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.”
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President Andrew Johnson was impeached by the House of Representatives.
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W. E. B. Du Bois, sociologist, historian, Pan-Africanist, author, and editor, was one of the most important scholars of the 20th century.
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Sam Lovejoy, slipped onto the Montague Plains and sabotaged the 500 foot weather tower Northeast Utilities had erected to test wind direction at the site.
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Student activists Sophie Scholl, Hans Scholl, and Christoph Probst were executed for urging students to rise up and overthrow the Nazi government.
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Frazier Baker, first Black postmaster in South Carolina, and his baby daughter were shot and killed when they attempted to flee their burning home.
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El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X) was assassinated, just weeks after speaking in Selma.
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Patricia Stephens Due was arrested for a sit-in in Florida and refused to pay bail.
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Princeville, North Carolina originated as a resettlement community for the formerly enslaved and became oldest incorporated city chartered by Blacks in the U.S.
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The Indian Industrial School of Genoa, Nebraska, the fourth non-reservation boarding school established by the Office of Indian Affairs, was established to educate and forcibly assimilate Indigenous students to Christianity and “European-American culture.”
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Teachers and administrators from the Florida Education Association (FEA) walked out in what is reported to be the first statewide teachers' strike.
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Executive Order 9066 issued by President Roosevelt authorized the incarceration (internment) of U.S. citizens of Japanese descent.
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The courts ruled in favor of the Mendez family and their co-plaintiffs in California, finding segregated schools to an unconstitutional.
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The Union Army moved into Charleston, S.C., the the city where the Civil War had begun four years earlier.
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Hercules, the head cook at George Washington’s Mount Vernon estate and slave labor camp, escaped to freedom in Pennsylvania.
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Huey P. Newton was co-founder of the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense.
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Rubber workers began a sit-down strike at Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. in Akron, Ohio.
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U.S. Marshals arrested Shadrach Minkins, who had escaped from slavery in Norfolk, Virginia.
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Benjamin Roberts, African American, filed the first school desegregation suit after his daughter Sarah was barred from a public school because of her race in Boston, Massachusetts.
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The Wisconsin Workers strike involved as many as 100,000 protesters opposing the 2011 Wisconsin Act 10.
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Belinda Sutton petitioned the Massachusetts legislature for a pension as reparations for the wealth she produced and was stolen from her while she was enslaved.
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Activists circled the White House to protest the Keystone Pipeline, an oil system that transports crude oil from Canada to various locations in the U.S.
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The first Southern Negro Youth Conference (SNYC) conference was held in Richmond, Virginia.
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Over 1,100 sanitation workers strike and march for better wages, conditions, and safety with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis.
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Harris told the bus driver she would accept a refund and get off the bus, but the driver refused to accept her terms and had her arrested for breaking segregation law.
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"Lift Every Voice and Sing" was first publicly performed by 500 school children.
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Nelson Mandela was released from prison in South Africa after 27 years.
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Howard Zinn debated Fulton Lewis III, a journalist and member of the House Un-American Activities Committee, on the question of “Shall the House Committee on Un-American Activities Be Abolished?”
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Russian Jewish anarchist, Emma Goldman arrested for distributing materials about birth control in violation of the Comstock Act.
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Paul Cuffee and other free Blacks petitioned the Massachusetts government to give African and Native Americans the right to vote.
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Senator Joseph McCarthy delivered a speech at the McLure Hotel during which he claimed to hold a list of known communists in the U.S. State Department.
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In one of the more spectacular demonstrations for women's voting rights, the National Woman’s Party burned President Woodrow Wilson in effigy in front of the White House during the campaign for the 19th Amendment.
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Two years before the Kent State murders, 28 students were injured and three were killed in Orangeburg, South Carolina — most shot in the back by the state police while involved in a peaceful protest.
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Timothy Hood, a veteran of the U.S. Marines, was killed for removing a Jim Crow sign.
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An employee of the U.S. Senate, Kate Brown found political support from Sen. Charles Sumner and others in Congress when she was violently removed from the ladies' car, which was segregated illegally.
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Carter G. Woodson initiated the first celebration of Negro History Week which led to Black History Month.
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The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) sent four volunteers to Rock Hill, South Carolina to sit-in.
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In 1951, the Commonwealth of Virginia executed seven Black men despite a national campaign in their defense.
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Two African American brothers — Charles and Alphonso Ferguson — were shot and killed by a white police officer in the segregated Freeport neighborhood of Long Island, New York.
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Congressman Thaddeus Stevens offered an amendment to the Freedmen's Bureau Bill to authorize the distribution of public land.
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When the United States refused to recognize Philippine independence, Philippine Republic president Emilio Aguinaldo declared war.
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More than 450,000 New York City school children boycotted school as part of a protest for quality schools for Black and Latino students.
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The 15th Amendment to the United States Constitution officially granted African American men the right to vote.
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Walter H. Williams was the first Black teacher appointed to a Freedmen's Bureau School in Lafayette Parish, Louisiana during Reconstruction.
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The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was signed, ending the U.S. Mexico War and extending the boundaries of the United States west to the Pacific Ocean.
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Hatuey was a freedom fighter in the early 1500s who mobilized Caribbean islanders against invasion, theft, and murder by European conquistadors.
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Four African-American North Carolina A&T University students, began a sit-in protest at a Woolworth's whites-only lunch counter.
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Louis Allen, a WWII veteran who witnessed and was willing to testify about the murder of a voting rights worker in Mississippi, was murdered.
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Tenayuca was known as “La Pasionaria de Texas” for her commitment to justice for Mexican American laborers.
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During the Reconstruction Era, people emancipated from slavery searched for their loved ones throughout the United States and Canada. They often used "last seen" ads. This is one case of successful reunification.
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U.S. Senator Cragin spoke against delaying the expansion of suffrage. He countered the statements by white Democrats, saying the real reason they were opposed to Black suffrage was because they could not control the votes.
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President Andrew Jackson used federal troops to suppress worker organizing.
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Fifteen Mexican-Americans were killed by Texas Rangers during the Porvenir Massacre.
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A protest of the toxic chemical "baths" required for all workers coming across the U.S.-Mexico border, led by 17-year-old Carmelita Torres.
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Several hundred citizens of Marshall, Michigan, helped Adam and Sarah Crosswhite escape slavery and kidnapping and flee to Canada.
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Angela Davis, born on Jan. 26, 1944, is a civil rights activist, writer, professor, and a founding member Critical Resistance, a national organization dedicated to the dismantling of the prison industrial complex.
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The U.S. War Department authorized the governor of Massachusetts to recruit Black troops to the Union Army in the Civil War.
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Shirley Chisholm, the first Black woman elected to Congress, opened her historic campaign for President.
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A. Philip Randolph, president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters union, made the official call for a march on Washington, with the demand to end segregation in defense industries.
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Arturo Alfonso Schomburg, bibliophile, collector, writer, who spent his life championing Black history.
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The 24th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States was ratified.
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Patricia Stephens Due was arrested in the segregated lobby of the Florida Theater in Tallahassee.
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Mr. Willie Edwards Jr., a 24-year-old African American man, was murdered by members of the Alabama KKK.
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Lifelong organizer in SNCC and with the Algebra Project, Robert Parris Moses, was born on January 23, 1935, in Harlem, New York.
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The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) voting rights campaign held a Freedom Day in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
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The government of El Salvador launched a murderous, anti-indigenous and anti-leftist campaign that led to the deaths of 30,000 Salvadorans.
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Four African Americans (including one minister and three farmers; one of the farmers was a woman) were lynched in Hamilton, Georgia.
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The North Star published an editorial against the U.S. war with Mexico. Listen to an excerpt read by Benjamin Bratt.
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Hiram Rhodes Revels was the first African American to be elected to serve in the U.S. Senate.
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The Georgia State House of Representatives refused to seat elected state representative Julian Bond due to his public statements against the Vietnam War.
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When asked at a White House luncheon about "juvenile delinquency," Eartha Kitt responded by talking about the root causes of rebellion, including the Vietnam War and the draft.
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Jews in the Warsaw ghetto organized armed self-defense units to oppose deportations to forced-labor camps and to the Treblinka extermination camp.
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Prime minister of the Republic of the Congo, Patrice Lumumba, was executed with the assistance of the governments of Belgium and the United States.
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Queen Lili`uokalani of the independent kingdom of Hawai`i was overthrown as she was arrested at gunpoint by U.S. Marines.
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Demands by Black ministers after the Ebenezer Creek Massacre led to the short-lived land distribution during Reconstruction known as Special Field Order No. 15.
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Nearly 3,000 African American men met at the Bethel A.M.E. Church and denounced the American Colonization Society’s proposal to resettle free African Americans in West Africa.
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The South Carolina constitutional convention met with a majority of Black delegates, adopting a constitution that provided for all people regardless of race, economic class, or gender.
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The New York City Tompkins Square Riot occurred during a devastating economic depression.
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A group of African Americans presented a petition for freedom to the Massachusetts Council and the House of Representatives.
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Haiti was hit with a devastating earthquake that took the lives of thousands and displaced even more.
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Vernon Dahmer was killed when the Ku Klux Klan fired bombed his home. This was one day after Dahmer offered to pay the election poll tax for anyone who could not afford it.
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A judge in Norfolk, Virginia, sentenced a white woman, Margaret Douglass, to one month in jail for teaching free Black children to read.
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Julian Bond was finally sworn in as a member of the Georgia House of Representatives.
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During Reconstruction, Delaware’s Convention of Colored People gathered in Dover to discuss and demand state provisions to educate their children.
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Sgt. Walker was convicted of mutiny and killed, one of nineteen Union soldiers executed by the Union army for mutiny during the Civil War, fourteen of whom were Black.
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The German Coast Uprising was a strategic military assault against white supremacy by hundreds of enslaved Africans.
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Zora Neale Hurston, an folklorist, anthropologist, and author, was born in Alabama.
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The Mississippi Constitution was one of the first pieces of legislation that provided a uniform system of free public education for children regardless of race.
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Rep. Robert B. Elliott gave speech to advocate for Civil Rights Act which passed a year later.
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The New England Anti-Slavery Society was founded at the African Meeting House in Boston.
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Born in Massachusetts on January 6, 1811, Charles Sumner was outspoken against slavery, for full recognition of Haiti, against the U.S.-Mexico War, for true reconstruction with land distribution, against school segregation, and much more.
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In 2021, two new Democratic lawmakers from Georgia were elected to the U.S. Senate, one of whom is only the 11th African American senator in our history.
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The song Rapper's Delight by the Sugarhill Gang (and reportedly Grandmaster Caz) became the first hip hop single ever to reach the Billboard Top 40.
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Mexican-American students were barred from attending their local elementary school. The parents took the school district to court.
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Hundreds of Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party supporters went to support the Challenge to the seating of the Mississippi delegation.
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Adelbert Ames become the elected governor of Mississippi during the Reconstruction era.
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Samuel Younge Jr., Navy vet, Tuskegee student, activist was killed in Alabama for using "whites-only" bathroom. SNCC issued a powerful statement about his murder and in opposition to the Vietnam War.
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The Weavers had their scheduled appearance on the NBC Jack Paar Show cancelled when they refused to sign an oath of political loyalty.
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John Hope Franklin, born this day in Rentiesville and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was one of most important historians of the 20th century.
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South Carolina NAACP held Greenville Airport Protest in support of Jackie Robinson.
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The Rosewood Massacre was the white supremacist destruction of a Black town and the murder of many of its residents.
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The teacher, scholar, and Pan-Africanist intellectual leader was born in Alabama.
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The Emancipation Proclamation took effect in 1863. Who did it "emancipate"? And who gets credited?
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Tunis Campbell, who assisted in the Port Royal Experiment to assist Blacks during Reconstruction, became a Black Abolitionist, state Senator, and Justice of the Peace, and never stopped fighting for the rights of African Americans.
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Haiti became a free republic after a revolution, declaring independence for ALL people.
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Puerto Rican Roberto Clemente died in a plane crash while traveling at great risk in response to urgent requests to deliver help to earthquake devastated Nicaragua.
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African Americans across the United States, free and enslaved, in the North and South, held watch meetings.
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Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony J. "Tony" Russo Jr. were indicted for releasing the Pentagon Papers.
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The Flint sit-down strike represented a shift in union organizing strategies from craft unionism (organizing white male skilled workers) to industrial unionism (organizing all the workers in an industry). The sit-down strike changed the balance of power between employers and workers.
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The Catcher "Race Riot" began, leading to the creation of another sundown town.
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A Lakota encampment on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation was attacked by the U.S. Army and close to 300 Native Americans were murdered near Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota.
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Black sharecroppers were evicted by white landowners simply for exercising their right to register to vote.
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The Yavapai people's shelter of Skeleton Cave in Arizona was attacked by the U.S. Army, trying to force them to reservations.
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Harriet Elizabeth Brown, a teacher from Maryland, sued for equal pay for Black teachers and won the case.
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Months of organizing work by 16-year-old Pauline Newman culminated in the start of the largest rent strike in New York City's history.
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The mass execution of 38 Dakota Indians was ordered by President Abraham Lincoln.
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The home of teachers and labor/voting rights activists Harry T. Moore and Harriette Moore was bombed by the Klan — killing them both.
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Africans and Native Americans formed Florida’s Seminole Nation and defeated a heavily armed U.S. invading army.
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Aaron Henry (Mississippi state NAACP president, pharmacist, drugstore owner) and the Coahoma County NAACP organized an effective Christmas shopping boycott in Clarksdale, Mississippi.
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The Italian Hall disaster killed 73 people, 59 of them children, from families of striking copper miners.
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Gen. Dwight Eisenhower endorsed the finding of a court-martial in the case of Eddie Slovik.
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Henry Highland Garnet, abolitionist and minister, called for a militant slave revolt.
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Adults and children, members of the organization Las Abejas (The Bees), were massacred while praying in a church in Chiapas, Mexico.
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Abolitionist and suffragist Harriet Tubman, perhaps the most famous conductor for the Underground Railroad, engineered her first rescue mission in Dec. 1850.
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Kansas reservist Dr Yolanda Huet-Vaughn refused orders to serve in the first Gulf War (Desert Storm).
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After a 381-day boycott, a federal ruling declared the Alabama laws requiring segregated buses to be unconstitutional.
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Tim DeChristopher of Peaceful Uprising protested a Bureau of Land Management auction of public land in Utah's redrock country.
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Richard Nixon initiated a massive "carpet bombing" campaign in Northern Vietnam, mainly Hanoi.
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The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Korematsu v. United States that the denial of civil liberties based on race and national origin was legal.
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Secretary of State William H. Seward declared the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution to have been adopted.
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Paul Robeson and William Patterson submitted a petition from the Civil Rights Congress (CRC) to the United Nations, signed by almost 100 U.S. intellectuals and activists.
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