March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

US Labor History
Exclusion Act

March 12, 1888: six years after the Exclusion Act (May 6, 1882) the Chinese government agreed to its fundamental principles. Under pressure from the U.S., the Chinese signed a treaty agreeing not to allow any laborers to immigrate to America. Only in 1943, when China became a valuable ally in the war against Japan, did the U.S. finally abandon this policy. (text of act) (LH, see August 29, 1889; IH, see January 1, 1892)

Unaccompanied Minors Permitted

March 12, 2022: following a public health reassessment, the CDC Director terminated with respect to unaccompanied noncitizen children an Order under Title 42 that had suspended the right to introduce certain persons into the United States. In effect, this meant that unaccompanied noncitizen children would no longer be expelled from the United States under CDC’s order.

CDC initially temporarily excepted unaccompanied noncitizen children from expulsion in January 2021, and later formally excepted such children from subsequent orders.  On March 4, 2022, the District Court for the Northern District of Texas issued a preliminary injunction “enjoining and restraining” CDC from enforcing its orders to the extent that they except unaccompanied noncitizen children from the Title 42 procedures based solely on their status as unaccompanied children.  The court found that CDC had not adequately explained its decision to treat unaccompanied noncitizen children differently than other non citizens subject to the CDC orders.  [CDC announcement] (next IH, see Mar 24)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Feminism

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

March 12, 1912: the Lawrence, Mass., “Bread and Roses” textile strike ended when the American Woolen Co. agreed to most of the strikers’ demands, (DPLA article) (LH, see June 4; Feminism, see March 3, 1913)

Oregon Steel Mills, Inc.

March 12, 2004: steelworkers approved a settlement with Oregon Steel Mills, Inc and its CF & I Steel subsidiary, ending the longest labor dispute in the USWA’s history and resulting in more than $100 million in back pay for workers. (see Jul 15)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Cold War

March 12, 1947: in a speech to a joint session of Congress, President Harry S. Truman asked for U.S. assistance for Greece and Turkey to forestall communist domination of the two nations. Historians have often cited Truman’s address, which came to be known as the Truman Doctrine, as the official declaration of the Cold War. (text of speech) (see Mar 21)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

School Desegregation

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

March 12, 1956: ninety-six U.S. congressmen from eleven southern states signed the “Southern Manifesto,” a pledge to resist the Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education decision, which declared segregated schools unconstitutional (May 17, 1954). Notably, three Southern Senate Democrats did not sign the Manifesto: Sen. Estes Kefauver (D–Tennessee); Sen. Albert Gore, Sr. (D–Tennessee), father of future Vice President Al Gore, Jr.; and most important, Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (D–Texas). Historians believe that Johnson’s refusal to sign was an indication of his ambitions to become president of the U.S. and his need to disavow segregation.  (PBS article) (BH, see Mar 13; SD, see February 20, 1958)

Albany Movement

March 12, 1963: in Albany, GA, five Black high school-age girls were turned away from two white theaters by the assistant manager of the chain. “We don’t want your business,” the manager told them. (see Albany for expanded story)

Malcolm X

March 12, 1964: though remaining a Muslim, Malcolm X left the Nation of Islam. (BH, see Mar 20; Malcolm X, see Mar 26)

Mississippi Sovereignty Commission

March 12, 1998: many of the long-sealed records of the Mississippi Sovereignty Commission, a state segregationist spy agency, were opened after a federal judge’s order. The records showed that the commission infiltrated civil rights groups, smeared African Americans and, at times, cooperated with members of the Ku Klux Klan. (Mississippi Department of Archives and History article) (see May 28)

Medgar Evers

March 12, 2019: the home of Medgar and Myrlie Evers became a national monument. The federal government will take over the three-bedroom, ranch-style home from Tougaloo College, a historically black institution that has maintained the Evers home since 1993, when the property was donated to the school by the Evers family. The home was designated a national historic landmark in 2016 and is open by appointment for tours. (see ME for expanded Evers chronology)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

March 12 – April 15, 1966:  SSgt Barry Sadler’s  Ballad of the Green Beret  the Billboard #1 album. (see Mar 25)

Senator Eugene McCarthy

March 12, 1968: Senator Eugene McCarthy (D-Minnesota), an outspoken critic of the Johnson administration’s policies in Vietnam, polled 42 percent of the vote in New Hampshire’s Democratic presidential primary. President Lyndon B. Johnson got 48 percent. A Harris poll later showed that anti-Johnson, rather than antiwar, sentiment provided the basis for McCarthy’s surprisingly strong performance. (see Mar 14)

First Australian Task Force

March 12, 1972: the last remnants of the First Australian Task Force withdrew from Vietnam. The Australian government had first sent troops to Vietnam in 1964 with a small aviation detachment and an engineer civic action team. In May 1965, the Australians increased their commitment with the deployment of the 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (RAR). The formation of the First Australian Task Force in 1966 established an Australian base of operations near Ba Ria in Phuoc Tuy province. The task force included an additional infantry battalion, a medium tank squadron, and a helicopter squadron, as well as signal, engineer, and other support forces. By 1969, Australian forces in Vietnam totaled an estimated 6,600 personnel. (see Mar 30)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

March 12 Music et al

Velvet Underground

March 12, 1967: the Velvet Underground and Nico released first album.

George Harrison and Pattie Boyd

March 12, 1969:  the London drug squad raided George Harrison and Pattie Boyd’s home. Boyd immediately called Harrison who returned to find his home turned upside down. He is reported to have told the officers “You needn’t have turned the whole bloody place upside down. All you had to do was ask me and I would have shown you where I keep everything.”

Without his assistance, the constables, including Sergeant Pilcher who had directed the drug-related arrest of John Lennon the previous year, had already found a considerable amount of hashish. Harrison and Boyd were arrested and as they were being escorted to the police station, a photographer began shooting pictures of the famous couple. Harrison chased after the photographer, with the cops trailing right behind him down the London street. Finally, the man dropped his camera and George stomped on it before the officers subdued him.

Harrison and Boyd were released on bail. A few weeks later, Harrison and Boyd were allowed to plead guilty. Despite the rather large amount of hash recovered from their home, the authorities were satisfied that it was all for their personal use. They were fined 250 pounds each, and even had a confiscated pipe returned to them. 

Sergeant Pilcher, the man behind the raid, was convicted of planting drugs in other cases and went to jail in 1972. 

Paul McCartney married Linda Eastman

March 12, 1969: Paul McCartney married Linda Eastman at Marylebone Register Office. Harrison and Boyd missed the wedding. (see Mar 20)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Independence Day

Mauritius independent from United Kingdom (next ID, see Sept 6)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

ADA

The Capitol Crawl

March 12, 1990: hundreds of people with disabilities gathered at the foot of the Capitol building in Washington to protest the Americans with Disabilities Act bill’s slow movement through Congress. Dozens left behind their wheelchairs, got down on their hands and knees, and began pulling themselves slowly up the 83 steps toward the building’s west entrance, as if daring the politicians inside to continue ignoring all the barriers they faced. Among the climbers was Jennifer Keelan, an eight-year-old from Denver with cerebral palsy. “I’ll take all night if I have to!” she yelled while dragging herself higher and higher. (Mother Jones article) (see July 26)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Church of England

March 12, 1994: the Church of England ordained its first female priests. (next Feminism  see May 22)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Iraq War II

Muntader al-Zaidi

March 12, 2009:  Muntader al-Zaidi, the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at President George W. Bush during a news conference in December 2008 was sentenced to three years in jail. Al-Zaidi, had pleaded not guilty, saying at a hearing that he was overcome by passion because of the suffering of the people of Iraq after the American-led invasion six years ago that toppled Saddam Hussein.  (2015 article) (see Apr 7)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Westboro Baptist Church

March 12, 2014:  U.S. District Judge Fernando Gaitan Jr upheld a Missouri law requiring protesters to stay at least a 100 year away from funeral sites, beginning an hour before they start until an hour after the services end. The ruling capped a nearly eight-year legal fight over Missouri’s funeral protest restrictions that were prompted after members of a Kansas church opposed to homosexuality protested at the funeral of a Missouri solider who had been killed in Iraq. (see Mar 19)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Charles Manson

March 12, 2018: in a messy legal battle over Charles Manson’s remains and belongings, Judge Alisa R. Knight of the Bakersfield Division of the Superior Court of California ruled that Jason L. Freeman, the apparent grandson of Manson, was entitled to the remains.

Three other men who had also staked claims — a purported friend who said he filed Mr. Manson’s will in court; and two people, including a purported son, who filed a joint petition — could not refute Freeman’s assertion, the judge said. (see Mar 17)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

March 12, 2018: U.S. District Court Judge George L. Russell III of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland ruled that federal law protected transgender students’ right to use the restroom and locker rooms in alignment with their gender identity.

In M.A.B. v. Board of Education of Talbot County, Talbot County Public Schools (MD) policy forced Max Brennan (M.A.B.), who is transgender, to use separate restrooms and locker rooms because he was transgender.

Russell was specific in his ruling: “M.A.B.’s claims come down to a boy asking his school to treat him just like any other boy. This court finds that Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause provide M.A.B. grounds to do so.” (see Mar 23)

March 12 Peace Love Art Activism

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Deborah Samson

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Deborah Samson had disguised herself as a man during the American Revolution and joined the Army where she served well, even wounded. Because she was a woman, Congress denied her a veteran pension. On February 20. 1805 Paul Revere had written Congress on her behalf to reconsider its refusal.

On March 11, 1805 Congress Washington obliged Revere’s letter and placed her on the Massachusetts Invalid Pension Roll. This pension plan paid Deborah Samson four dollars a month. (see Samson for expanded story)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

March 11 Music et al

Bob Dylan

March 11, 1962: Dylan performed on NYC radio station WBAI-FM with Cynthia Gooding. Mentioned that he “stole” melody for Emmett Till tune from Len Chandler. ( see Mar 19)

Supremes

March 11 – 17, 1967: “Love is Here and Now You’re Gone” by the Supremes #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Cultural Milestone

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

March 11, 1969: Levi-Strauss started selling bell-bottomed jeans. (see June 2)

Paul McCartney

March 11, 1997: Queen Elizabeth II knighted Paul McCartney for his “services to music.” (see March 15, 1999)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

James J. Reeb

March 11, 1965: James J. Reeb died in a hospital in Birmingham, Alabama after White supremacists had beat him in Selma, AL following the second march from Selma on March 9.

Upset with the way the SCLC is handling things in Selma, James Forman and much of the SNCC staff move to Montgomery and begin a series of demonstrations. The group also asked for students from across the country to join them. Tuskegee Institute students come to Montgomery in an attempt to deliver a petition to Wallace. (2015 Washington Post article) (see MM for expanded March chronology)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

Live Free or Die

March 11, 1975: in the Maynards case, the single District Judge issued a temporary restraining order against further arrests and prosecutions of the Maynards. Because the appellees sought an injunction against a state statute on grounds of its unconstitutionality, a three-judge District Court was convened pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 2281. Following a hearing on the merits, the District Court entered an order enjoining the State “from arresting and prosecuting [the Maynards] at any time in the future for covering over that portion of their license plates that contains the motto `Live Free or Die.'” The governor of New Hampshire chose to appeal to the United States Supreme Court, and it accepted the case. (FS, see June 21; see Maynards for expanded story)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Symbionese Liberation Army

March 11, 1976: though represented by well-known defense attorney F. Lee Bailey, a jury found Patty Hearst guilty of armed bank robbery. (see Sept 24)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

March 11, 1990:  Lithuania declared independence from the Soviet Union with the Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania. (see May 15)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

March 11, 1993: Janet Reno was sworn in as the first female U.S. Attorney General. (see Apr 28)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

Nuclear waste

March 11, 1997: an explosion at a nuclear waste reprocessing plant exposed 35 workers to low levels of radioactivity. The incident was the worst in Japan’s history. (WISE article) (see Apr 29)

Fukushima Daiichi power plant

March 11, 2011: a powerful tsunami generated by a magnitude-9.0 earthquake out at sea slammed into Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant damaging four of it six reactors.

A series of fires are set off, after cooling systems fail. Venting hydrogen gas from the reactors caused explosions forcing engineers to use seawater in an effort to cool overheating reactor cores. (worldnucler.org article) (see May 28)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

March 11, 1998: the grand jury spent the day listening to audio recordings, which sources say are tapes made by Linda Tripp of her conversations with Monica Lewinsky. (see Clinton for expanded story)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

California court stops same-sex marriages

March 11, 2004: the California Supreme Court issued a stay ordering San Francisco officials to cease issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. (see May 17, 2004)

GetEQUAL

March 11, 2010: GetEQUAL formed. It is an American non-profit organization and advocacy group which advocates for LGBTQ social and political equality through confrontational but non-violent direct action. (see July 8).

Florida/Don’t Say Gay

March 11, 2024: under a settlement reached between Florida education officials and civil rights attorneys who had challenged a state law which critics dubbed “Don’t Say Gay.”, students and teachers can discuss sexual orientation and gender identity in Florida classrooms, provided it’s not part of instruction,

The settlement clarified what is allowed in Florida classrooms following passage two years ago of the law prohibiting instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity in early grades. Opponents said the law had created confusion about whether teachers could identify themselves as LGBTQ+ or if they even could have rainbow stickers in classrooms. [AP article] (next LGBTQ+, see Apr 19)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Hurricane Katrina

March 11, 2010: Katrina shootings and cover-up: Officer Jeffrey Lehrmann pleaded guilty to misprision of a felony for failing to report the cover-up. (NOLA article) (see Katrina for expanded chronology)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Wisconsin

March 11, 2011: Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker signed a measure to eliminate most union rights for public employees, a proposal which had provoked three weeks of protests. (see January 17, 2012)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Kandahar massacre

March 11, 2012: a US Army sergeant killed sixteen civilians (nine children, four men, and three women) and wounded five in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan. A US Army sergeant was taken into custody by U.S. military authorities as the primary suspect. (BBC article) (see Mar 13)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

March 11, 2014: police arrested Zachary Jordan Klundt, in connection with the All Families Healthcare break-in on March 4. Klundt faced charges of felony criminal mischief, attempted burglary, and theft. (Klundt sentencing article from Montana Public Radio)  (WH, see Mar 14; Terrorism, see May 15)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

DEATH PENALTY

Glenn Ford

March 11, 2014: it was announced that Glenn Ford, a black man wrongfully convicted of murder by an all-white jury in Louisiana in 1984, a man who had spent the last 30 years on death row for a crime he did not commit following a trial filled with constitutional violations, would be set free. Once that happened he became one of the longest-serving death row inmates in modern American history to be exonerated and released.

Ford’s lawyers and parish prosecutors in Shreveport both filed motions late last week informing a state trial judge that the time has come now to vacate Ford’s murder conviction and death sentence. Why? Because prosecutors now say that they learned, late last year, of “credible evidence” that Ford “was neither present at, nor a participant in, the robbery and murder” of the victim in his case, a man named Isadore Rozeman. (see April 28)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

Student Rights

March 11, 2014: claiming the district’s policy was in violation of Plyler v Doe, a 30 year old US Supreme Court decision that guaranteed a free public education for all, the American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey sued the Butler school district for discrimination and won. The hearing only lasted a couple of minutes. Butler schools’ didn’t put up a fight. In fact at the very start, they agreed immediately to change their student enrollment policy.

Previously, Butler schools required photo ID from parents, among other proofs, before enrolling a child. But the ACLU calls this unconstitutional, arguing it singles out undocumented immigrants, because they don’t have access to state- or county-issued identification. (IH, see Nov 20; SR, see Sept 17)

Trump’s Wall

March 10, 2019: President Trump requested $8.6 billion in the annual budget proposal for a border wall. He also asked Congress for another $3.6 billion to replenish military construction funds he had diverted to begin work on the wall by declaring a national emergency, for a total of $12.2 billion. (see TW for expanded post on Wall)

March 11 Peace Love Art Activism

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Anarchism

March 10, 1919: U.S. Supreme Court upheld the espionage conviction of labor leader and socialist Eugene V. Debs. Debs was jailed for speaking out against World War I. Campaigning for president from his Atlanta jail cell, he won 3.4 percent of the vote—nearly a million votes. (C-Span site video) (Anarchism, see Apr 30; Debs, see December 25, 1921)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

”SCOTTSBORO BOYS”

March 10, 1933: Roy Wright told New York Times reporter Raymond Daniell, “They whipped me and it seemed like they was going to kill me. All the time they kept saying, “now will you tell?” and finally it seemed like I couldn’t stand no more and I said yes. Then I went back into the courtroom and they put me up on the chair in front of the judge and began asking a lot of questions, and I said I had seen Charlie Weems and Clarence Norris with the white girls.” (see Scottsboro for expanded story)

James Earl Ray

March 10, 1969: James Earl Ray pleaded guilty in Memphis, Tenn., to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. (1998 NYT obit)  (see Mar 20)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Transport Workers Union

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

March 10, 1941: New York City bus drivers, members of the Transport Workers Union,  went on strike. After 12 days of no buses—and a large show of force by Irish-American strikers at the St. Patrick’s Day parade—Mayor Fiorello La Guardia ordered arbitration. (see May 29)

César E. Chávez

March 10, 1968: United Farm Workers leader César Chávez broke his 24-day fast, by doctor’s order, at a mass in Delano, California’s public park. Several thousand supporters were at his side, including Sen. Robert Kennedy. Chavez called it “a fast for non-violence and a call to sacrifice” (UPI article) (see June 5, 1968)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

Sacher v. United States

March 10, 1952: the Supreme Court, in Sacher v. United States, on this day upheld the contempt citations of six attorneys who had represented Communist Party leaders in the famous Smith Act trial (November 1, 1948). At the end of the trial, the Party leaders were convicted of violating the Smith Act (June 29, 1940), which prohibited advocating the overthrow of the government. (The Supreme Court upheld the Smith Act and their convictions, in Dennis v. United States, on June 4, 1951.) Judge Harold Medina also cited the six defense lawyers for contempt of court because of their conduct during the trial. On this day, the Supreme Court upheld the contempt convictions, and as a result all the lawyers served time in prison.

The lawyers were Abraham J. Isserman, Harry Sacher, Richard Gladstein, George Crockett, Louis McCabe, and Eugene Dennis (who as General Secretary of the Communist Party was one of the defendants in the trial and had acted as his own attorney). Isserman, for example, served four months in prison in 1952 and was disbarred. The disbarment of the lawyers seriously crippled the left-wing bar in the United States and had the effect of scaring away many attorneys across the country from serving as lawyers for Communists or other political radicals.  (Red Scare, see Apr 10; FS, see May 26)

Student Rights

March 10 Peace Love Art ActivismMarch 10, 2014: the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a school district’s appeal over an attempt by school officials to ban breast cancer awareness bracelets bearing the message “I (heart sign) boobies,” handing victory to of students Brianna Hawk and Kayla Martinez who challenged the decision on free speech grounds.

The court’s decision not to take up the case means that an August 2013 ruling by the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in favor of students was left intact. (Constitution Center article) (FS, see Sept 17; SR, see Mar 26)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

March 10 Music et al

Bruce Channel

March 10 – 30, 1962: “Hey Baby” by Bruce Channel #1 Billboard Hot 100.

Aretha Franklin

March 10, 1967: Aretha Franklin released I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You album. ( see AF for expanded story)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

My Lai Massacre

March 10, 1970: the U.S. Army accused Capt. Ernest Medina and four other soldiers of committing crimes at My Lai in March 1968. The charges ranged from premeditated murder to rape and the “maiming” of a suspect under interrogation. Medina was the company commander of Lt. William Calley and other soldiers charged with murder and numerous crimes at My Lai. (see My Lai for expanded story; see Time magazine article for text and pictures)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

AIDS

March 10, 1987:  AIDS advocacy group ACT UP (The AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) was formed in response to the devastating affects the disease has had on the gay and lesbian community in New York. The group holds demonstrations against pharmaceutical companies profiteering from AIDS-related drugs as well as the lack of AIDS policies protecting patients from outrageous prescription prices. (AIDS, see Mar 20; LGBTQ, see August)

Westboro Baptist Church\

March 10, 2006: Members of the Westboro Baptist Church picketed the funeral of Marine Lance Corporal Matthew A. Snyder in Westminster, Maryland. The picket was held in a location cordoned off by the police, approximately 1000 feet from the Church, for about 30 minutes before the funeral began. (see January 26, 2008)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health/Domestic terrorism

Dr. David Gunn

March 10, 1993: Michael Griffin shouted “Don’t kill any more babies” then shot and killed Dr. David Gunn during an anti-abortion protest at the Pensacola Women’s Medical Services clinic. Dr. Gunn performed abortions at several clinics in Florida and Alabama and was getting out of his car in the clinic’s parking lot when Michael Griffin shot the doctor three times in the back. Griffin immediately surrendered to a nearby police officer. (see Aug 19)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

March 10, 1998: Kathleen Willey, a former White House volunteer who accused the president of fondling her, testifies before the grand jury for four hours. (see Clinton for expanded story)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History & Trump’s Wall

March 10, 2019: President Trump requested $8.6 billion in the annual budget proposal for a border wall. He also asked Congress for another $3.6 billion to replenish military construction funds he had diverted to begin work on the wall by declaring a national emergency, for a total of $12.2 billion. (IH & TW, see Mar 14; or see Wall for expanded post)

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism

2020 Census

March 10, 2022: the Census Bureau said that the 2020 census seriously undercounted the number of Hispanic, Black and Native American residents even though its overall population count was largely accurate.

At the same time, the census overcounted white and Asian American residents, the bureau said.

In essence, the bureau’s report said, minority groups — mostly concentrated in cities and tribal areas — were underrepresented in census figures, even though the total population count in those areas often was fairly accurate. That could affect those groups’ political clout, and conceivably could sway decisions by businesses and governments over the next decade, from the allocation of city services to locations of stores.

Some minority advocacy groups threatened to challenge the results in court, but remedying the undercounts would be difficult if not impossible, experts said. [NYT article]

March 10 Peace Love Art Activism