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This Week In Black History March 26-April 2, 2025

  • MARCH 26

1831—The founder of the Afri­can Methodist Episcopal Church Church, Richard Allen, dies at age 71 in Philadelphia, Pa. As its first bishop, Allen set the AME Church on the path to becoming the first Black religious denomination in America to be fully independent of White control. He, in effect, chartered a separate religious identity for African Americans. He also founded schools throughout the nation to teach Blacks. This includes Allen University in Colum­bia, S.C.

1944—Singer/Actress Diana Ross is born in Detroit, Mich. She headed the most popular female signing group of the 1960s—The Supremes.

1950—Singer Teddy Pender­grass is born in Philadelphia, Pa. For a period, Pendergrass was the leading sex symbol in R&B music. However, an automobile accident on March 18, 1982 left him para­lyzed from the chest down. Pend­ergrass died Jan. 13, 2010.

  • MARCH 27

1924—The sensational Jazz sing­er Sarah Vaughn was born on this day in Newark, N.J.

1970—Mariah Carey was born on this day in Long Island, N.Y. Her par­ents are of Irish/African-American/ Venezuelan background. Carey came to prominence after releas­ing her self-titled debut studio al­bum “Mariah Carey” in 1990; it went multiplatinum and spawned four consecutive number one singles on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart. Under the guidance of Columbia Records executive and later hus­band Tommy Mottola, she contin­ued booking success with followup albums “Emotions” (1991), “Music Box” (1993), and “Merry Christmas” (1994), Carey was established as Columbia’s highest-selling act. In 1998, she was honored as the world’s best-selling recording art­ist of the 1990s at the World Music Awards. She married actor/comedi­an Nick Cannon in 2008. She lists Aretha Franklin and Stevie Wonder as her favorite singers.

  • MARCH 28

1900—The British demand the Ashanti Golden Stool. Ironically, the Ashanti had been one of the tribes which had actually benefited from slavery by capturing and sell­ing their fellow Africans. But when the slave trade ended, the British turned on the Ashanti in a bid to colonize the Gold Coast (now Gha­na). In an apparent attempt to de­moralize and humiliate the Ashan­ti, the British demanded that they turnover one of their greatest sym­bols—the Golden Stool. The de­mand led to war. The Ashanti were led by Queen Yaa Asantewa. Her fighters kept the British at bay for several months. But with superior fire power, the British eventually prevailed.

1972—The two surviving Soledad Brothers are found not guilty by an all White jury in the alleged killing of a White guard at the California prison. The other Soledad Brother, revolutionary writer George Jack­son, had been killed during an Au­gust 1971 Marin County Courthouse escape attempt, which also led to charges against college professor and communist Angela Davis. Da­vis was also eventually acquitted.

1984—Dr. Benjamin Mays dies. The president of Atlanta’s More­house College had been one of the leading Black educational figures in America during the 20th century.

  • MARCH 29

1981—Dr. Eric Williams, prime minister of Trinidad and Tobago, dies in Port of Spain at the age of 79. Williams was a historian and his classic work was “Capitalism and Slavery.”

  • MARCH 30

1870—The 15th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is ratified giving Blacks the right to vote. Ac­tually, it gave Black males the right to vote. It would take the Suffrage Movement and another 50 years before women (Black and White) had full voting rights. But even in the case of Black males, the “right” to vote only lasted briefly. With the end of Reconstruction, “Jim Crow” laws were passed throughout the South, which in effect took away the right of Blacks to vote despite the Constitutional guarantee. Afri­can Americans did not achieve full voting rights in this country until the mid-1960s.

  • MARCH 31

1741—Black rebellion hysteria grips New York. A series of mys­terious fires and reports of slaves plotting rebellion sweep New York. The hysteria lasts through April. Thirty-one alleged slave plotters and five White sympathizers were hanged.

1931—Cab Calloway recorded “Minnie the Moocher”—the first jazz album to sell more than one million copies.

1948—Labor leader A. Phillip Randolph issues a threat before the Senate Armed Services Commit­tee. He declares that unless more is done to end segregation and dis­crimination in the military, he would launch a campaign encouraging Black youth to employ civil disobe­dience to resist the draft. His threat helps to bring an end to a host of discriminatory practices in the U.S. armed forces.

1980—Olympic legend Jesse Owens dies at 66 in Tucson, Ariz. Owens won four track and field gold medals at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, Germany, embarrassing German leader Adolph Hitler and undermining his ideology of White Aryan superiority.

  • APRIL 1

1868—Hampton University is founded during Reconstruction in Hampton, Va. The school is now one of the leading Black education­al institutions in America.

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1950—Surgeon Charles Drew dies at 45 in an automobile accident near Burlington, N.C. Drew devel­oped the concept of a blood bank for storing large amounts of plas­ma. Anyone who has ever received a blood transfusion is indebted to Dr. Drew. He had dedicated his life to insuring that increased scientific knowledge actually led to the bet­terment of human life. One of his most frequently repeated quotes: “There must always be the continu­ing struggle to make the increasing knowledge of the world bear fruit in [the form of] increased understand­ing and the production of human happiness.”

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1984—Sensational, Washing­ton, D.C., born R&B singer Marvin Gaye is shot and killed by his fa­ther during an argument. Gaye was 38—just one day short of his 39th birthday. The senior Gaye later died of pneumonia. Gaye helped to shape the sound of Motown Re­cords in the 1960s with a string of hits, including “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)” and “I Heard It Through the Grapevine”, and duet recordings with Mary Wells and Tammi Terrell, later earning the ti­tles “Prince of Motown” and “Prince of Soul.”

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