April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Slave Revolts

April 6, 1712: in 1712, New York City had a large enslaved population and the city’s whites feared the threat of rebellion. Enslaved people in New York City suffered many of the same brutal punishments and methods of control faced by their counterparts toiling on Southern plantations. The labor demands of urban life required enslaved people to move frequently throughout the city to complete tasks. This brought greater freedom of movement and communication for the enslaved, which they used to organize a rebellion against their harsh living conditions and lack of autonomy.

Organizers from several ethnic groups, including the Akans of West Africa, who viewed the colonial master-servant relationship as a violation of Akan tradition; the Caromantees and Paw-Paws, also of West Africa, who rejected the brutality of slavery; Spanish-speaking Native Americans who viewed themselves as free people who had been illegally enslaved; and Creoles, who joined in protest of their status and harsh treatment, came together to plan a revolt.

The coalition set fire to a building in the center of the city. Armed with hatchets, knives, and guns, the rebels attacked whites as they arrived at the fire, killing nine and injuring seven.

Colonial Governor Robert Hunter dispatched troops to quell the rebellion. The troops arrested some rebels and captured others who fled into the woods. Six of the revolt’s organizers reportedly committed suicide, twenty-one accused rebels were convicted and executed, and thirteen were acquitted and returned to bondage. 

Governor Hugh Drysdale

In 1722, when Hugh Drysdale arrived in Williamsburg in 1722 to begin his term as Virginia’s governor, he found the jail full of mutinous slaves awaiting trial. Three of the leaders were convicted of “Conspiring among themselves and with the said other Slaves to kill murder & destroy very many” of His Majesty’s subjects and sentenced to be sold out of the colony. According to Drysdale, their design “…was to cutt off their masters, and possess themselves of the country; but as this would have been as impracticable in the attempt as it was foolish in the contrivance, I can foresee no other consequence of this conspiracy than the stirring upp the next Assembly to make more severe laws for keeping their slaves in greater subjection etc.”

Every slave rebellion or rumor of plotting resulted in laws increasing the severity of punishment, curtailing slaves’ movements, and restricting their ability to assemble, attend funerals or religious services, or possess weapons. 

Governor William Gooch

In 1730: Virginia’s Governor William Gooch reported to the Board of Trade that another slave uprising had been scotched. The spark was a false rumor that “His Majesty had sent Orders for setting of them free as soon as they were Christians, and that these Orders were Suppressed.” Gooch tried to learn the source of this falsehood and called out the militia to take up any slave found off his master’s plantation. “A great many” were made prisoner and were whipped for “rambling Abroad,” and by this method Gooch hoped “to Convince them that their best way is to rest contented with their Condition.”

 Another slave revolt

In 1730, six months after the above revolt, another insurrection began. Governor Gooch wrote: Negros, in the Countys of Norfolk & Princess Anne, had the boldness to Assemble on a Sunday while the People were at Church, and to Chuse from amongst themselves Officers to Comand them in their intended Insurrection, which was to have been put in Execution very soon after: But this Meeting being happily discovered and many of them taken up and examined, the whole Plot was detected.

After a trial, four ringleaders were executed and the rest harshly punished. 

South Carolina Security Act

In mid-August, 1739:  the Act was a response to the white’s fears of insurrection, the act required that all white men carry firearms to church on Sundays, a time when whites usually didn’t carry weapons and slaves were allowed to work for themselves. Anyone who didn’t comply with the new law by September 29 would be subjected to a fine. (see SR for expanded history of  American slave revolts)

Dred Scott

April 6, 1846: Scott filed suit for his freedom and that of his wife and two children. Sometime after his return to St. Louis, Scott had renewed contact with the sons of Peter Blow, his former master. The  Blows began to provide financial aid for Scott’s litigation.

 Scott’s lawyers assumed his case was an easy one to win. In 1824, in Winny v. Whitesides, the Missouri Supreme Court freed a slave who had been taken to Illinois.  In the next thirteen years the Missouri court heard another ten cases on this issue, always deciding that slaves gained their freedom by either working in a free jurisdiction or living there long enough to be considered a resident.  In this period Missouri was one of the most liberal Southern states on this question. It was not, however, the only slave state to reach this result. Courts in Kentucky, Louisiana, and Mississippi also upheld the freedom of slaves who had lived in a free state or territory. (next BH, see Apr 18;  see Scott for expanded story) 

Isaac Brandon lynched

April 6, 1892: a mob of at least 80 white men broke into the jail in Charles City, Virginia, removed Isaac Brandon, a Black man, from his cell, ignoring the pleas of his young son, and lynched him on the courthouse lawn.

A few days prior, several white women alleged that a Black man had broken into their home and tried to assault them. When news of this event spread, suspicion quickly turned to Brandon. Allegations against Black people were rarely subject to scrutiny.

Isaac was promptly arrested and brought to the jail. Although no evidence linked him or his young son—whose name is not recorded in contemporary newspapers—to the alleged crime, both of them were arrested and held for several days in the jail.

On the evening of April 6, a mob of at least 80 white men arrived at the home of the sheriff and shared their plan to lynch Mr. Brandon. Although he was armed and charged with protecting those in his custody, the sheriff failed to protect Mr. Brandon or his son from the mob’s actions and the mob successfully broke through the jailhouse door without incident.

Mr. Brandon and his young son pleaded with the mob not to carry out the lynching as Mr. Brandon maintained his innocence, stating to the mob: “You are going to hang an innocent man.” Mr. Brandon’s young son clung to his father as the mob bound Mr. Brandon’s hands before his son was forced back into the jail cell as the mob took his father away. The mob hanged Mr. Brandon to a tree on the courthouse lawn.

Mr. Brandon’s body was left hanging outside the courthouse until the next morning, and contemporary accounts noted that members of the Black community were forced to bear witness to Mr. Brandon’s body in the town square. [EJI article] (next BH and Lynching, see April 27) or see 19th century for expanded lynching chronology)

Scottsboro 9

April 6 – 7, 1931: before Judge A. E. Hawkins, Clarence Norris and Charlie Weems were tried, convicted, and sentenced to death. A threatening crowd gathered outside the courthouse. Victoria Price testified that six of the black youths raped her, and six raped Ruby Bates. (see Scottsboro for expanded story)

MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR

April 6, 1958: King spoke at an Easter rally in Montgomery on the marked spot on the Capitol steps where Jefferson Davis had been sworn in as president of the Confederacy in 1861. In his speech, Dr. King protested the unequal treatment of white and black defendants and victims in the courts, and concluded: “Truth may be crucified and justice buried, but one day they will rise again. We must live and face death if necessary with that hope.”

The Ku Klux Klan tried to disrupt the rally, and afterward a group of thirty-nine local white ministers released a statement decrying the protesters’ “exaggerated emphasis on wrongs and grievances.” (BH, see May 13; MLK, see June 23)

Highlander Folk School

April 6, 1961:  the Highlander Folk School, founded in 1932, was an activist organization involved in civil rights, poverty, and organized labor issues. The state of Tennessee attempted to shut it down by revoking its license and seizing its property, alleging that director Miles Horton used the center for private gain, and that intoxicating beverages were being sold on the premises. (Most believe the alcohol was planted.) On this day, the Tennessee Supreme Court upheld the revocation. Highlander reopened the next day as the Highlander Research and Education Center in Knoxville, Tennessee. (see May 1)

Albany Movement

April 6, 1964: the first step to­ward integration in Albany, GA came quiet­ly when five black children registered to attend classes the following fall with whites.

Three of the children registered at one elementary school and two at another. All were accompanied by their parents. (see Albany for expanded story)

Medgar Evers assassination

April 6, 1964: Byron De La Beckwith went on trial for the second time for the murder of Medgar Evers (BH, see April 7; see Evers for expanded chronology)

Viola Liuzzo

April 6, 1965: Collie Wilkins, William Eaton, Eugene Thomas, and Gary Rowe indicted for the murder of Viola Liuzzo. (see Viola for expanded story)

George Whitmore, Jr

April 6, 1965: The New York Assembly passed a bill to abolish blue-ribbon juries in New York City. Blue ribbon juries were established in the 1930s and are made up of persons selected on the basis of education and economic status. (see Whitmore for expanded story)

Rioting after King assassination

April 6 – 12, 1968: Baltimore, MD riots

Black Panthers

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

April 6, 1968: Oakland Police ambush Black Panthers. Eldridge Cleaver arrested. Bobby Hutton shot and killed.  (BH, see Apr 9; BP, see Sept 8)

Muhammad Ali

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

April 6, 1969:  Elijah Muhammad, leader of the Nation of Islam, expelled Ali from the Nation for one year because Ali had made statement that he would return to boxing. (Ali, see February 25, 1970; Vietnam, see Apr 9)

Tennessee House Expels Two Black Representatives 

April 6, 2023: in an extraordinary seven-hour session marked by tense exchanges and punctuated by boos and chants from onlookers, Tennessee’s Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted to expel Justine Jones and Justine Pearson, two Black lawmakers, but failed to oust a third representative, whhite Rep. Gloria Johnson, a week after the three Democrats led a gun reform protest in the chamber.

The crowd in the gallery erupted in boos and chants following both expulsions and loud cheers when the vote count turned up just short in the bid to oust whhite Rep. Gloria Johnson.

The vote over rules violations for Jones split along party lines 72-25, while the vote in Pearson’s case was 69-26. Johnson’s vote was 65-30. Expulsion from the House requires a two-thirds majority of the total membership.

Protesters upset with inaction on gun violence reform after a deadly mass shooting at a Nashville school again flooded the state Capitol on March 30 as the session to vote on the expulsions – a step the state House has taken only twice since the 1860s – was to begin. [CNN article]  (next BH, see Apr 25)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Consumer Protection

April 6, 1859: the first legislation in the U.S. for official inspection of milk was passed in Massachusetts, enabling cities to appoint inspectors. The city of Boston appointed the first full-time Inspector of Milk on 10 Aug 1859. An earlier state law prohibiting the adulteration of milk, signed by the Governor on 30 May 1856, had been ineffective. The law further cracked down on fraud, and added ten dollar fines for the sale of “swill milk,” the poor, thin output of cows kept in unsanitary conditions and fed on distillery refuse. Contaminated milk was a serious public health hazard, sometimes deadly to infants. A milk inspector was authorized to enter the premises of milk handlers, and to take specimens for analysis, the results of which could then be held as evidence for prosecution. Milk vendors had to register at his office. (see September 8, 1961)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

World War I

April 6, 1917: about 17,000 Indians served in the armed forces. during World War I.  Some Indians, however, specifically resisted the draft because they were not citizens and could not vote or because they felt it would be an infringement of their tribal sovereignty.

The Choctaw code talkers were a group of Choctaw Indians from Oklahoma who pioneered the use of Native American languages as military code. Their exploits took place during the waning days of World War I. (see November 6, 1919)

World War II

From 1941 – 1945, some 44,000 Native Americans served in the United States military during World War II. For every one drafted, one and a half volunteered; American Indian participation in the war per capita exceeded any other group. The young men were drafted and, unlike Black Americans, served in integrated units.

Most notably were the 400-500 Native American Marines who served in the United States Marine Corps and whose primary job was the transmission of secret tactical messages. Code talkers transmitted these messages over military telephone or radio communications nets using formal or informally developed codes built upon their native languages. Their service improved communications in terms of speed of encryption at both ends in front line operations during World War II. (WWII, see Dec 7; Code Takers, see November 5, 2008; NA, see August 13, 1946)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Cultural Milestones

Twinkies

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April 6, 1930: James “Jimmy” A. Dewar, plant manager at Continental Baking Company, Chicago invented Hostess Twinkies snack cakes as an inexpensive product at the time of the Great Depression. He realized the factory had baking pans for sponge cakes used only during the summer strawberry season, and that they could be made useful year-round for a new product: sponge cakes injected with a banana creme filling. They originally sold at two for a nickel. Vanilla creme was substituted during the WW II banana shortage. The name is said to have come to him based on a billboard he saw for “Twinkle Toe” shoes. (see June 6, 1933)

TV dinners

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

April 6, 1954: though the actual date is disputed (September 10, 1953 or April 6, 1954) C.A. Swanson & Sons introduced the first TV dinner on one of them. It was Roast Turkey with Stuffing and Gravy, Sweet Potatoes and Peas. It sold for 98 cents and came in an aluminum tray, so you could just open the box and heat the dinner in the oven. (Of course, No microwave ovens back then).  Supposedly executive Gerald Thomas came up with the idea when the company had tons of leftover turkey from Thanksgiving. The idea for the aluminum trays came from the trays used for airline food. They were an immediate success, and turkey dinners are still the most popular Swanson frozen dinner. Swanson stopped calling them TV dinners in 1962. (see April 15, 1955)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

Women’s Health

April 6, 1931: U.S. Customs had banned the book, Married Love, by English Women’s Health pioneer Dr. Marie Stopes. On this day in United States v. One Obscene Book Entitled “Married Love,” New York Federal Judge John M. Woolsey overturned the ban. First published in England in 1918, Married Love had been printed in 19 editions by 1931. (FS, see December 6, 1933; BC, see December 7, 1936)

Montgomery Police Commissioner L.B. Sullivan

April 6, 1964: the Supreme Court rejected Montgomery Police Commissioner L.B. Sullivan ’s request for apportionment of costs in the case in which the court overturned a $500,000 libel judgment he had won against The New York Times in a lower court. The costs were estimated at $13,000. (FS, see Apr 8; Sullivan, see June 11, 1977)

Eisenstadt v. Baird

April 6, 1967: women’s Health and abortion rights activist Bill Baird on this day delivered a lecture on Women’s Health at Boston University, attended by 2,500 people. In a prearranged event, he handed a condom and a package of contraceptive foam to an unmarried 19-year-old woman. He was arrested by Boston police for distributing contraceptives to an unmarried woman, in violation of Massachusetts law. The arrest led to the Supreme Court decision Eisenstadt v. Baird, on March 22, 1972, which invalidated the law. Baird served 3 months in jail following his arrest. (see July 25, 1968)

Skokie anti-Nazi ordinances

April 6, 1978: the US Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, sitting en banc, vacated all previous “stay orders” and orders an expedited briefing schedule.  (see Apr 11)

Planet Aid v. City of St. Johns

April 6, 2015: in  Planet Aid v. City of St. Johns (Michigan), a three-judge panel of the Sixth Circuit rejected the city’s imposing a ban on outdoor, unattended charitable donation bins likely violates the First Amendment.

The dispute began shortly after Planet Aid, a nonprofit charitable organization established in Massachusetts, placed two bins in two locations with the permission of the property owners.  Planet Aid solicits donations of clothing and shoes through its bins.

City officials confiscated the bins and later passed an ordinance prohibiting unattended, charitable donation bins.  The ordinance provided: “No person, business or other entity shall place, use or allow the installation of a donation box within the City of St. Johns.”

Planet Aid sued, alleging a violation of its First Amendment rights.

A federal district court granted the organization a preliminary injunction preventing the city from enforcing the law. The city appealed to the Sixth U.S. Court of Appeals, arguing that the ordinance was necessary to preserve aesthetics and to prevent nuisances. The decision explains that such bins convey messages about charitable solicitations and donations to the public. (see June 1)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

McCarthyism

April 6, 1954: CBS TV broadcasts Senator Joseph McCarthy’s response to the Edward R Murrow See It Now report of March 9 (Transcript of speech) (see Apr 7)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

ADA

Student Rights

April 6, 1963: a group of parents convened a conference in Chicago entitled “Exploration into the Problems of the Perceptually Handicapped Child.” Professionals from various disciplines and with diverse and extensive clinical experience in dealing with the needs of these children participated. Professionals and parents shared a common concern: the recognition of the dire need for services for their children, services that did not exist.

The 1963 conference articulated the cornerstones on which the field of Learning Disabilities is based. The underlying assumptions put forth provided the frameworks for legislation, theories, diagnostic procedures, educational practices, research and training models. A consensus was reached on a name for the category … the term “Learning Disabilities,” embedded within the title of Dr. Samuel Kirk’s conference paper, was selected. (Student Rights, see March 1971)

TTY communication

In 1964, in California, deaf orthodontist Dr. James C. Marsters of Pasadena sent a teletype machine to deaf scientist Robert Weitbrecht, asking him to find a way to attach the TTY to the telephone system. Weitbrecht modified an acoustic coupler and birth to “Baudot,” a code that is still used in TTY communication. (ADA, see July 2, 1964; TM, see April 30)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

April 6, 1965: U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson authorized the use of ground troops in combat operations in Vietnam. National Security Action Memorandum 328 came out of National Security Council meetings that were held on April 1 and April 2. The memorandum authorized U.S. personnel to take the offensive in South Vietnam to secure “enclaves” and to support South Vietnamese operations. The so-called “enclave strategy” called for the U.S. forces to control the densely-populated coastal areas while the South Vietnamese forces moved inland to fight the communists. This memorandum represented a major mission change for the American soldiers and Marines who had recently arrived in Vietnam. American forces had been limited to strictly defensive operations around the U.S. air bases, but the memorandum authorized them to go on the offensive to secure large areas of terrain, an escalation of U.S. involvement in the war. (next Vietnam, see Apr 7; see NSA for expanded article)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

April 6 Music et al

Jimi Hendrix

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

April 6, 1967: Hendrix, The Walker Brothers, Cat Stevens and Engelbert Humperdink, and others appeared at The Odeon. (see May 12)

The Graduate soundtrack

April 6 – May 24, 1968: Simon and Garfunkel’s soundtrack to The Graduate the Billboard #1 album.  (see June 15)

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Nuclear/Chemical News

Severesk

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April 6, 1993: Severesk, formerly Tomsk-7 (Russia). Workers break safety regulations by mixing dangerously large amounts of treated uranium in metal buckets, setting off a nuclear reaction (INES Level 4). Two of the workers later die from their injuries, and more than 40 others are treated for exposure to high levels of radiation. Hundreds of residents living nearby were evacuated from their homes while the nuclear reaction continued, but were allowed home two days later. (see December 9, 1993)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Tulsa shootings

April 6, 2012: five people were shot, three killed, in a shooting spree in Tulsa, OK. Police were called to several separate crime scenes. The first shooting happened at 1 a-m, when police found a woman’s body in the street. Minutes later, two men were found shot. They are the only survivors. Within a few hours the bodies of two more people were found. (see Apr 8)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Voting Rights

April 6, 2015: the US Supreme Court passed up an early chance to review a contested North Carolina election law that opponents said limits the ability of African-Americans to cast ballots.

The high court had intervened in October 2014 to order that the law remain in effect for the fall elections after a lower court ruling blocking part of the law. On this date, the justices wiped away their earlier order by rejecting the state’s appeal of that lower court ruling. The federal appeals court in Richmond, Virginia had blocked a part of the law that eliminated same-day registration during early voting in North Carolina.

A trial was set for July in the lawsuit filed by civil rights groups, and the issue of voting restrictions could return to the Supreme Court before the 2016 elections. (see Apr 20)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

April 6, 2018: Texas became the first state to deploy National Guard troops to the southern border of the United States

State officials said 250 Texas National Guard personnel would be dispatched to the border within 72 hours.

Brig. Gen. Tracy Norris, commander of the Texas Army National Guard, said the deployment would begin meeting “the priorities of the governor and the president in securing our border.” In addition to troops, the Guard said it would send ground surveillance vehicles and light and medium aircraft.

The Republican governor of Arizona, Doug Ducey, said that about 150 members of the National Guard in his state would deploy next week to the border.

The directive did not, on its own, toughen immigration policy or take concrete steps to do so; it merely directs officials to report to the president about steps they are taking to “expeditiously end ‘catch and release’ practices.”  (next IH, see Apr 11; Nat’l Guard, see February 5, 2019)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ+

April 6, 2023: the Supreme Court ruled that transgender athletes in West Virginia could compete on female school sports teams in response to a challenge by the state to allow it to enforce a law that prohibited such athletes from doing so.

In a brief, unsigned order, the justices denied the state’s emergency request to lift an appeals court’s injunction, which enabled a transgender girl to compete on her middle school’s female teams until the three-judge panel reaches a final decision. [The Hill article]  (next LGBTQ+, see Apr 26)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

April 6, 2023:  the Biden administration proposed a new regulation to significantly reduce hazardous air pollutants from chemical plants, a move that environmental advocates predicted would significantly reduce the health risks to by people living near industrial sites.

The proposed Environmental Protection Agency rule called on chemical plants to monitor and reduce the amount of toxic pollutants released in the air, including the carcinogens ethylene oxide, an ingredient in antifreeze, and chloroprene, which was used to make the rubber in footwear.

The proposed rule would affect the vast majority of chemical manufacturers, applying to more than 200 facilities spread across Texas and Louisiana; elsewhere along the Gulf Coast; the Ohio River Valley; and West Virginia. It would update several regulations governing emissions from chemical plants, some of which had not been tightened in nearly 20 years. [NYT article] (next EI, see Apr 12)

April 6 Peace Love Art Activism

Trumpeter Keith Johnson

Trumpeter Keith Johnson

June 1, 1940 – April 6, 2021

Internet footprint

In 2017  when I first created this post, I wrote that “Once again a person one would think that information about someone who played in a well-known band–Paul Butterfield Blues Band–and played at what many think is the most famous festival of all time–the Woodstock Music and Art Fair—-would be easy to find.”

That has both fortunately and unfortunately changed. In 2022, I gave the internet another chance and sadly found Johnson’s obituary from a May 27, 2021 article in The Register-Guard out of Eugene, OR.

Much of the other information came from the wonderful AllMusic site which so often rescues inquisitive music fans as well as Annie Painter, whom you, too, will discover in a moment.

Trumpeter Keith Johnson

Musician Keith Johnson

The opening lines of the Guard’s obituary by Matthew Denis was: Oregon native and trumpeter Keith Johnson, who died of cancer, leaves behind a musical legacy as a jazz mentor and longtime sideman playing with musicians such as Paul Butterfield, Martha Velez, Etta James and Van Morrison.

Born in Vancouver, British Columbia Johnson found love in jazz, art and life with his companion, Annie Painter. He died  April 6 in Portland. He was 80.

His dad was a lumberman and was sent to Oregon, thus his living there from age four until he left as a 20-something to hit the musician’s road. He attended the University of Oregon for a bit, but left to become a teamster.

Annie Painter and Keith Johnson, were married and then divorced in their youth. In 2016 they rekindled their relationship. Photo by Annie Painter

Keith Johnson was mainly a trumpeter, but as so often happens on the musician’s path, other instruments come into play. Jazz was his niche.

And at 6’5″ he might have been the tallest performer at Woodstock!

He became part of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band in time to perform with them a the Monterey International Pop Festival in June 1967. Released in December 1968, The Resurrection of Pigboy Crabshaw was the first Butterfield album Keith appeared on.

He stayed with the band for their next two albums: In My Own Dream (1967) (an album cover I stared at for many hours) and Keep on Moving (1969). 

A team player, at times Johnson played organ, but the trumpet was always his first and best instrument.

Trumpeter Keith Johnson

Despite the success of “horn” bands such as Blood, Sweat and Tears and Chicago, the Butterfield band did not enjoy the same success. 

Johnson left the group in 1970 to make a living as a roving sideman. Over the years, he played with Elephant’s Memory, on Mark “Moogy” Klingman’s first solo album “Moogy,” Van Morrison’s “His Band and the Street Choir” [Johnson call Van, Leprechaun]. The song “Domino” is Johnson’s horn chart.

 

He also played on Martha Velez’s “Hypnotized. A bit of trivia: Johnson married Velez and Martha’s brother was Jerry Velez, the same Jerry Velez who played with Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock!

He also became the musical director for Etta James in her L.A. studio and on the road. He played with her from 1975 to about 1983.

Here’s a YouTube link for Etta James performing Lovesick Blues. And as an example of Keith’s musical versatility, he plays  piano on this cut.

Trumpeter Keith Johnson

Annie Painter

Before joining Paul Butterfield, Johnson was the DJ for a jazz show on KFMY, Eugene’s first FM radio station and in 1961 he married  Annie Painter while attending the University of Oregon. They lived a settled life for 10 years before he landed the Butterfield gig. Keith hit the tour road, but the separation led to their divorce. Painter became a school principal.

She remarried and after the death of her second husband in 2016, she reconnected with Keith.

They would have, as Painter described, “the best years of our lives—the last five  we were together again until his death.

 George D. Green

Johnson met neighbor and abstract illusionist painter George D. Green and the two hit it off.

Johnson would go on to write music soundtracks for several Green paintings.   Matthew Denis describes the suites as…”a strange, hypnotic blend, emblematic of a man satisfied with his journey, looking to give just a little more beauty back to the world.”

Marooned Music by Keith Johnson for George D Green

Again from the Denis article:  At the end, Johnson accepted life and death with an equanimity indicative of a melodious life. Speaking to a friend just days before he died, Johnson knew he would be leaving the world soon.

“But he said, ‘Hey, man, what are you going to do? This is what happens,’ “ Painter said. “I thought, bless his heart. I hope we can all be that way.”

Keep the Dream Flowing

Keep the Dream Flowing is a great podcast that has interviewed dozens of people who were part of Woodstock, both organizers and performers.

Here is a link to the first of  the three podcasts they did with Keith Johnson.

Not Professor Keith Johnson

At one point it seemed that the Butterfield Keith Johnson as also a Professor Keith Johnson and taught at the college level, including the University of North Texas.  Not so.

Trumpeter Keith Johnson

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Johnson Whittaker

April 5, 1880: while sleeping in his barracks, three white cadets brutally beat cadet Johnson Whittaker,  the second Black student admitted to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and the only Black cadet at that time. The three slashed Whittaker’s head and ears, burned his Bible, threatened his life and then left him in his underwear, tied to the bed and bleeding profusely.

After Cadet Whittaker reported to West Point administrators that he had been attacked, the institution opened an investigation into him, and declined to hold his white attackers accountable. Administrators instead claimed that Cadet Whittaker had staged the attack to get out of his final exams, and in May, a West Point court of inquiry found Cadet Whittaker guilty of that charge. He was forced to take his final exams while incarcerated and withstand court-martial proceedings in New York City where the army prosecutor repeatedly referred to Black people as an “inferior race” known to “feign and sham.”

Whittaker was expelled from West Point, dishonorably discharged from the military, and held for continued imprisonment,

A year later, President Arthur issued an executive order overturning the conviction based on a finding that military prosecutors had relied on improperly admitted evidence. By the time of President Arthur’s intervention, Cadet Whittaker had been incarcerated for nearly two years; even after his conviction was overturned, West Point reinstated Cadet Whittaker’s expulsion, claiming he had failed an exam.

In 1995, more than 60 years after his death, Mr. Whittaker’s heirs accepted the commission he would have received upon graduating West Point. At the ceremony, President Bill Clinton remarked: “We cannot undo history. But today, finally, we can pay tribute to a great American and we can acknowledge a great injustice.” [EJI article; 1880 NYT article; BlackPast article] (next BH, see “In July 1881″)

Peons

April 5, 1921: although the 13th Amendment to the Constitution abolished slavery, African Americans continued to be held as de facto slaves in systems of peonage, a form of debt bondage. “Peons” or indentured servants owed money to their “masters” and were forced to work off their debt, a process that took years. A federal law passed in 1867 prohibited peonage but the practice continued for decades throughout the South. It was notoriously difficult to prosecute those who violated the federal law and those who were prosecuted were often acquitted by sympathetic juries.

Fear of a peonage prosecution led to a brutal spree of murders in rural Georgia in 1921. John Williams, a local white plantation owner, held blacks on his farm against their will in horrific, slavery-like conditions. After federal investigators suspected that Williams was violating the peonage law, Williams decided to get rid of the “evidence” of his crime by killing eleven black men whom he had been working as peons. Williams’s trial began on April 5, 1921, and four days later he was convicted of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. He died in prison several years later.

Following the murders by Williams and other local atrocities against black people, Georgia Governor Hugh Dorsey in 1921 released a pamphlet entitled “A Statement from Governor Hugh M. Dorsey as to the Negro in Georgia.” Dorsey had collected 135 cases of mistreatment of blacks in the previous two years, including lynchings, extensive peonage, and general hostility. Dorsey recommended several remedies, including compulsory education for both races; a state commission to investigate lynchings; and penalties for counties where lynchings occurred. Reflecting on the mob violence that had become common throughout the South, Dorsey wrote, “To me it seems that we stand indicted as a people before the world.”

In response, several officials denied the charges contained in the pamphlet and many Georgians called for Dorsey’s impeachment. (next BH, see May 4; next Lynching, see May 31 and June 1; for for expanded chronology, see American Lynching 2)

Trayvon Martin Shooting

April 5, 2013:  Trayvon Martin’s parents settled a wrongful death claim with the homeowners association of the Retreat at Twin Lakes, the Florida housing complex where their son was shot and killed by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman. The undisclosed sum was believed to be more than $1 million. (see April 14)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

H.L. Mencken

April 5, 1926: in an incident orchestrated himself, journalist H.L. Mencken was arrested for publishing “Hatrack,” a chapter from a book, Up From Methodism, by Herbert Asbury, in the April issue of his magazine, The American Mercury. His intention was to challenge postal obscenity laws. At trial, he was quickly acquitted. (see April 30, 1927)

Kelley v Johnson

April 5, 1976: The US Supreme Court decided in Kelley v Johnson that personal appearance of police officers is not a protected right of privacy as long as the regulations are rational and there is no substantial claim of infringement on the individual’s freedom of choice with respect to certain basic matters of procreation, marriage, and family life.

Justice Marshall dissented: By taking over appearance, the state forces the officer to sacrifice elements of his identity.  This liberty of appearance is on par with other protected interests like privacy, self-identity, autonomy and personal integrity.  Further, there is no rational relationship between the ends means (how does appearance have to do with esprit de corps?) (see May 24)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Calvin Graham

April 5, 1943: Graham’s enlistment was cancelled. Since his enlistment was considered void he was paid no accrued pay and allowances and no travel allowances. His enlistment was considered void, he was given no credit for the military service (including the more than 4 months foreign service) and no mustering out pay.(see Calvin Graham for expanded post)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Cold War/McCarthyism

Nuclear/Chemical News

April 5, 1951:  the Rosenbergs were sentenced to death and the pair was taken to Sing Sing to await execution. (Red Scare, see May 14; Rosenbergs, see June 19, 1953; NN, see Dec 20)

Roy Cohn and G. David Schine

April 5, 1953: Senator Joe McCarthy’s chief aides, Roy Cohn and G. David Schine, arrived in Germany with plans to remove allegedly “pro-Communist” materials from U.S. information libraries in Europe. Schine claimed there was “too much pro-Communist periodicals and books” and too little anti-Communist materials in the libraries. Their tour turned into a circus that embarrassed the U.S. and alienated Western Europeans. The works of a number of noted American authors were removed from the libraries in the process. Senator McCarthy later claimed there were “30,000 Communist books” in the libraries. A survey by The New York Times found that several hundred books by more than 40 authors were eventually removed. (RS, see Apr 13; FS, see April 21, 1954)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

see April 5 Music et al for more

The Cavern Club

April 5, 1962: The Beatles performed at The Cavern Club in Liverpool as part of a special night presented by the Beatles’ fan club. The Beatles wear their black leather outfits for the first half of the performance, for old time’s sake, then change into their new suits for the second half of the show. (see Apr 10)

Jerry Lee Lewis

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

April 5, 1964, Jerry Lee Lewis played and recorded the famous Live at the Star Club in Hamburg, Germany. (see Live for more)

My Fair Lady

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

April 5, 1964 Oscars held. Bob Hope hosted. The Best Picture winner My Fair Lady

Vietnam, BLACK HISTORY & Muhammad Ali

April 5, 1967:  Monkees fans walked from London’s Marble Arch to the US Embassy in Grosvenor Square to protest Davy Jones’ planned call-up. Jones was exempted because he was deemed responsible for supporting his father. (Vietnam & BH, see Apr 10;  Ali, see Apr 17)

Witchita Lineman

April 5 – 11, 1969: Glen Cambell’s Witchita Lineman Billboard #1 album

Fear of Rock

April 5, 1983: Interior Secretary James Watt banned the Beach Boys from the 4th of July celebration on the Washington Mall, saying rock ‘n’ roll bands attract the “wrong element.” (Rock, see January 23, 1986; FoR, see May 7, 1991)

Beat Generation

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

April 5, 1997: Allen Ginsberg died. (see Aug 2) (NYT article/obit)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

Daniel Ellsberg/Pentagon Papers 

April 5 – 7, 1973: top Nixon aide John Ehrlichman secretly met twice with Judge Matthew Byrne, who was presiding over the Russo/Ellsberg trial, and offered him a job as the new director of the F.B.I.  (see Papers for expanded story)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

Freedom Flight

April 5, 1973: the last of more than 260,500 Freedom Flight refugees from Fidel Castro’s Cuba arrived in the US. (see March 17, 1980)

Children separated

April 5, 2019:  in court documents filed  on this date, the US government said might take federal officials two years to identify what could be thousands of immigrant children who were separated from their families at the southern United States border.

A federal judge had asked for a plan to identify these children and their families after a report from government inspectors in January revealed that the Trump administration most likely separated thousands more children from their parents than was previously believed. [NYT article]

Census

April 5, 2019: U.S. District Judge George Hazel of Maryland in a 119-page opinion found the decision to include a citizenship question on the 2020 census forms to be unlawful. The question asked, “Is this person a citizen of the United States?

The unreasonableness of Defendants’ addition of a citizenship question to the Census is underscored by the lack of any genuine need for the citizenship question, the woefully deficient process that led to it, the mysterious and potentially improper political considerations that motivated the decision and the clear pretext offered to the public,” wrote Hazel.

Hazel concluded that the decision by Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who oversaw the census, to add the question violated administrative law. Federal judges in New York and California  had previously come to the same conclusion. [NPR article] (next IH, see Apr 8; next Census, see  July 2)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

ADA

Judy Heumann

 

April 5, 1977: demonstrators led by Judy Heumann (see September 28, 1987) took over the Health Education and Welfare (HEW) office in UN Plaza, San Francisco, California, in protest of HEW Secretary Califano’s refusal to complete regulations for Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which made it illegal for federal agencies, public universities, and other public institutions receiving any federal funds to discriminate on the basis of disability. Califano issued the regulations three weeks later. (2015 Rooted In Rights dot org article on Heumann) (see Apr 28)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Falklands War

April 5, 1982: British task force of more than 100 ships set sail for Falklands, including aircraft carriers HMS Hermes and HMS Invincible. Lord Carrington, the Foreign Secretary, resigned over the invasion. Francis Pym replaced him. (see Apr 25)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism & Women’s Health

March for Women’s Lives

April 5, 1992: the March for Women’s Lives, organized by the National Organization for Women (NOW; founded on June 30, 1966), brought approximately 750,000 people to Washington, D.C., on this day. One of the largest protest marches on the nation’s capital, the pro-choice rally came as the Supreme Court was about to consider the constitutionality of Casey v. Planned Parenthood (Feminism, see Apr 23; Women’s Health, see June 29)

Idaho

April 5, 2023: Idaho Gov. Brad Little signed a bill into law that made it illegal for an adult to help a minor get an abortion across state lines without parental consent.

The new law was the first of its kind in the United States and cames less than a year after Idaho banned nearly all abortions.

Little, a Republican, wrote in a letter to Idaho lawmakers announcing he had signed the legislation. “With the U.S. Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe vs. Wade last summer, the right and duty to establish legal policy on abortion was finally returned to our state democratic process.” [ABC News article] (see next)

Michigan Abortion Law Overturned

April 5, 2023: Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer signed bipartisan legislation repealing the state’s 1931 law banning abortion without exceptions for rape or incest and criminalizing nurses and doctors for doing their jobs. In Novmember 2022, Michiganders turned out in record numbers to get Proposal 3 on the ballot and enshrine reproductive freedom in the state constitution. The new laws remove the unconstitutional 1931 law from the books and ensure that Michiganders can make their own decisions about their own bodies.

Governor Whitmer said, “In November, Michiganders sent a clear message: we deserve to make our own decisions about own bodies. Today, we are coming together to repeal the extreme 1931 law banning abortion without exceptions for rape or incest and criminalizing nurses and doctors for doing their jobs. Standing up for people’s fundamental freedoms is the right thing to do and it’s also just good economics. By getting this done, we will help attract talent and business investment too. I will continue to use every tool in my toolbox to support, protect, and affirm reproductive freedom for every Michigander, and I’ll work with anyone to make Michigan a welcoming beacon of opportunity where anyone can envision a future.” [Michigan dot gov article] (next WH, see Apr 7)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

Pan Am flight 103

April 5, 1999: two Libyans suspected of bringing down Pan Am flight 103 in 1988 were handed over to Scottish authorities for eventual trial in the Netherlands. (see October 12, 2000)

Ahmed Ressam

 

April 5, 2001: Algerian national Ahmed Ressam, accused of bringing explosives into the United States days before the millennium celebrations, was convicted on terror charges. (see May 29)

Laurence Foley

April 5, 2004: Jordan’s military court convicted eight Muslim militants and sentenced them to death for the 2002 killing of U.S. aid official Laurence Foley in a terror conspiracy linked to al-Qaeda. (see Dec 6)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

Matthew Shepard murder

April 5, 1999: Russell Henderson pleads guilty and agrees to testify against Aaron McKinney to avoid the death penalty; Henderson received two consecutive life sentences. The jury in McKinney’s trial found him guilty of felony murder. As they began to deliberate on the death penalty, Shepard’s parents brokered a deal, resulting in McKinney receiving two consecutive life terms without the possibility of parole. (LGBTQ, see July 7; Matthew, see September 27, 2007)

Mississippi

April 5, 2016: Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant signed a controversial bill into law that could allow businesses and government workers to deny services to lesbian and gay couples.

Bryant said in a statement that he was signing HB 1523 “to protect sincerely held religious beliefs and moral convictions of individuals, organizations and private associations from discriminatory action by state government or its political subdivisions.” (see Apr 19)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

Upper Big Branch Mine

April 5, 2010: a huge underground explosion at the Upper Big Branch Mine in Montcoal, W. Va., killed 29 miners. It was the worst U.S. mine disaster in 40 years. The Massey Energy Co. mine had been cited for two safety infractions the day before the blast; 57 the month before, and 1,342 in the previous five years. Three and one-half years after the disaster Massey’s then-CEO, Don Blankenship, was indicted by a federal grand jury on four criminal counts.

Union Membership

In 2010: the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the number of American workers in unions declined sharply in 2010, with the percentage slipping to 11.9 percent, the lowest rate in more than 70 years. The report found that the number of workers in unions fell by 612,000 in 2010 to 14.7 million, an even larger decrease than the overall 417,000 decline in the total number of Americans working. (see February 16, 2011)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE

Capt. Singh

April 5, 2016: the Army granted Capt Simratpal Singh, a Sikh, permission to serve while wearing a turban over his long hair and a beard with his uniform. He was the first active duty soldier to seek the accommodation and receive it while serving in the Army, according to The Sikh Coalition, the largest Sikh American advocacy organization in the United States. (see Aug 4)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

April 5, 2021: the United States Forest Service said that an ancient site of carved boulders and rock formations in a Georgia forest that has long been sacred to Native Americans was vandalized with paint and deep scratches,.

The boulders are part of the Track Rock Gap site in the  Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forests, a protected area of more than 800,000 acres where more than 100 figure carvings known as petroglyphs were made on soapstone boulders by Native Americans in precolonial times, the service said.

Five boulders had scratches and two had paint on them, said Steven Bekkerus, a spokesman for the Forest Service.

It’s one of the most significant rock art sites in the Southeastern United States and the only such site located on public land in Georgia,” the service said. onday. [NYT article] (next NA, see June 3)

April 5 Peace Love Art Activism

Sexual Abuse of Children

April 5, 2023: according to a detailed report from the Maryland attorney general, clergy members across the Archdiocese of Baltimore abused hundreds of children and teenagers over the course of six decades, abetted by a church hierarchy that systematically failed to investigate and restrict their access to children.

The result of a four-year investigation by the attorney general’s office, the 463-page report documented what it described as “pervasive and persistent abuse” by clergy members and others in the archdiocese, as well as dismissals and cover-ups by the church hierarchy. [NYT article] (next SAoC, see May 23)