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Monthly Archives: April 2018
This day in history — April 30, 1992 — Los Angeles Police Officers Acquitted in Rodney King Beating, Sparking Riots
In March 1991, Los Angeles, California, police officers stopped Rodney King for driving under the influence and evading arrest and severely beat him with batons, causing broken bones and other significant injuries. A bystander recorded the violent assault on video … Continue reading
This day in history — April 29, 1963 — United States Supreme Court Outlaws Segregated Courtroom Seating
In April 1962, Ford T. Johnson, Jr. appeared in a Richmond, Virginia, city traffic court and was convicted of contempt because he refused to sit in the segregated courtroom’s “Negro” section. Mr. Johnson was unaware of the segregated seating and … Continue reading
This day in history — April 28, 1936 — Lint Shaw Lynched in Georgia Eight Hours Before Trial
On April 28, 1936, a 45-year-old black farmer named Lint Shaw was shot to death by a mob of forty men in Colbert, Georgia – just eight hours before he was scheduled to go on trial for an attempted criminal … Continue reading
This day in History — April 1, 1875 — United States Supreme Court Hears Argument in United States v. Cruikshank and Later Invalidates Convictions for Participating in Colfax, Louisiana Massacre
On April 13, 1873, in Colfax, Louisiana, hundreds of white men clashed with freedmen at the Grant Parish courthouse. While only three white men died, it is estimated that nearly 150 black people died in the ensuing struggle – many … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged 1872 Louisiana gubernatorial election, black voters, Colfax Louisiana, Colfax Louisiana Massacre, Easter Sunday, Enforcement Act of 1870, Equal Justice Initiative, John McEnery, Ku Klux Klan, massacre, racially-motivated violence agaisnt black citizens, Reconstruction, United States v. Cruikshank, white terrorist groups, William Kellogg
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This day in history — April 25, 1959 — Mack Charles Parker Lynched in Mississippi
In what some historians call the “last classic lynching in the United States,” Mack Charles Parker was killed on April 25, 1959, after he was accused of raping a pregnant white woman in Mississippi. Parker, a black man, denied the … Continue reading
This day in history — April 24, 2013 — Alabama Man Sentenced to Jail for Consensual Homosexual Sex
On April 24, 2013, a Dallas County, Alabama, trial judge sentenced DeWayne Williams to one year incarceration for violating a state law that criminalizes certain types of consensual sex between unmarried partners. Mr. Williams had originally been charged with 1st … Continue reading
This day in history — April 10, 1956 — Nat King Cole Attacked by White Men While Performing in Birmingham, Alabama
On April 10, 1956, African American singer and pianist Nat King Cole was performing before a white-only audience of 4000 at the Municipal Auditorium in Birmingham, Alabama, when he was attacked and knocked down by a group of white men. … Continue reading
This day in history — April 27, 2015 — States Continue to Celebrate Confederate Memorial Day
In 2015, several Southern states continued to celebrate Confederate Memorial Day in memory of the surrender of Confederate General Joseph Johnston and his army on April 26, 1865. In Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia, the last Monday of the month is … Continue reading
Posted in Justice Chronicles, Lest We Forget, race, Slavery, Uncategorized
Tagged Caroline E. Janney, Civil War, Confederate General Joseph Johnston, Confederate General Robert E Lee, Confederate Memorial Day, Confederate President Jefferson Davis, Constitution of the Confederate States, Erle Banks, KKK, racism, Slavery, United Dixie White Knights
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This day in history — April 26, 1960 — Whites Attack Black Protesters at Segregated Mississippi Beach
The Biloxi beach wade-in was a locally-organized nonviolent protest that turned into what the New York Times called the “worse race riot in Mississippi history.” The protesters walked onto Biloxi beach in order to hold a “wade-in” in the waters … Continue reading
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This day in history — April 24, 2013 — Alabama Man Sentenced to Jail for Consensual Homosexual Sex
On April 24, 2013, a Dallas County, Alabama, trial judge sentenced DeWayne Williams to one year incarceration for violating a state law that criminalizes certain types of consensual sex between unmarried partners. Mr. Williams had originally been charged with 1st … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
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