April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

NJ Doesn’t End Slavery

April 18, 1846:  New Jersey enacted a law which bound enslaved Black people to indefinite servitude as “apprentices for life” to work at the will of their white enslavers.

Under the new law, called “An Act to Abolish Slavery,” white enslavers continued to exploit and profit from the labor of Black people who were now referred to as “apprentices” instead of “slaves,” but who were still unable to obtain freedom without a written certificate of discharge from their “masters or mistresses.”

Though enacting the law allowed New Jersey to claim its state laws no longer permitted “slavery,” the Act did not meaningfully change the plight of Black people living in bondage there. Many of the same oppressive provisions that defined enslavement in New Jersey and elsewhere remained in place under this new law. The Act prohibited Black “apprentices” from leaving the State of New Jersey, for instance, and imposed criminal penalties on any person who hid or harbored an “apprentice” or helped them run away.  [EJI article; PDF of NJ/Slavery history] (next BH, see January 27, 1847)

Adam Clayton Powell Jr

April 18, 1941: bus companies in New York City agreed to hire 200 African-American workers after a four-week boycott by riders led by Adam Clayton Powell Jr., a pastor for Harlem’s Abysinnian Baptist Church, the largest Protestant congregation in the U.S. Powell ran and won a City Council seat later that year. Four years later, he became a member of Congress. He served through 1972.  (House dot gov bio) (see Apr 28)

Davis Knight

April 18, 1946: a thirty-two-year-old Navy veteran named Davis Knight married Junie Lee Spradley, a white woman. In June 1948, Mississippi indicted Mr. Knight for violating a law that prohibited “marriage or cohabitation between white persons and those with one-eighth or more Negro or Mongolian blood.” At trial, Mr. Knight insisted that he was white: his wife believed him to be white and his Navy service records listed him as white. The State set out to prove he was black.

The whole case turned on the race of Mr. Knight’s deceased great-grandmother, Rachel; if she was black, Mr. Knight was at least one-eighth black and guilty of the charge. As evidence of Rachel’s race, the State presented several elderly witnesses, including an eighty-nine-year-old white man who testified that Rachel had lived on his father’s plantation and was a “known Negro.”(Renegade south article)  (BH, see June 3; Knight/Spradley, see December 18, 1948)

School Desegregation

April 18, 1959: about 26,000 students took part in the Youth March for Integrated Schools in Washington, D.C. They heard speeches by Martin Luther King Jr., A. Phillip Randolph and NAACP leader Roy Wilkins. “In your great movement to organize a march for integrated schools,” King told them, “you have awakened on hundreds of campuses throughout the land a new spirit of social inquiry to the benefit of all Americans.” (BH, see Apr 25; SD, see June 26)

Medgar Evers assassination trial

April 18, 1964: a second mistrial was declared in the murder case against Byron De La Beckwith, the accused killer of Medgar W. Evers, after the jury of white men reported it was unable to agree on a verdict. (see Evers for expanded chronology)

William Lozano dismissed

April 18, 1994: the Miami Police Department announced that it was dismissing William Lozano, the Miami police officer whose shooting of a black motorcyclist in 1989 led to three days of rioting here. The department spokesman said that Mr. Lozano’s dismissal was for violating “administrative regulations” in connection with the shooting.  (NYT article) (BH, see Apr 19; RR, see February 21, 2001)

Amadou Diallo

April 18, 2000: Diallo’s mother, Kadiatou, and his stepfather, Sankarella Diallo filed a $61,000,000 ($20m plus $1m for each shot fired) lawsuit against the City of New York and the officers, charging gross negligence, wrongful death, racial profiling, and other violations of Diallo’s civil rights. (see June 4)

School Desegregation

April 18, 2013:  The Washington Post reported that, “More than half of Maryland’s black students attend schools where the vast majority of students are nonwhite and poor, according to a report released Thursday that documents intensifying segregation patterns in the state’s public schools over two decades. Fifty-four percent of Maryland’s black students were enrolled in schools where at least 90 percent of students were members of racial and ethnic minorities in 2010, up from about a third in 1989.” (BH & SD, see Apr 27)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism
Superman

April 18, 1938: Superman debuted in Action Comics No. 1. Writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster brought the original “Man of Steel” to life. (August 25, 1939)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

April 18 Music et al

Tommy Shannon

April 18, 1946: Tommy Shannon born. Bassist best known for his work with Johnny Winter.

The Beatles

April 18, 1963: The Beatles performed at a rock show at the Royal Albert Hall in London. Among others they meet American singer, Del Shannon. (Beatles, see May 5; Shannon, see June 1963)

1965 Oscars

April 18, 1966: 1965 Oscars held. Bob Hope hosts. Best picture: The Sound of Music (1964) which had surpassed Gone With the Wind (1939) as the number one box office hit of all time.

The Road to Bethel
Wallkill approval

April 18, 1969: the Wallkill Zoning Board of Appeals gave permission for the festival. 

Tim Hardin

April 18, 1969: Tim Hardin signed to perform. $2,000.  (see Chronology for expanded story)

John Lennon

April 18, 1975: John Lennon performed in front of a live audience for the last time when he appeared on ‘Salute To Sir Lew Grade’, performing ‘Slippin And Slidin’, and ‘Imagine’. During ‘Imagine’ he ad libs “Imagine no immigration…” (see June 13)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

April 18, 1971: Vietnam Veterans Against the War began a five-day demonstration in Washington, D.C. Called Dewey Canyon III in honor of the operation of the same name conducted in Laos, about 1,000 veterans participated some throwing their combat ribbons, helmets, and uniforms on the Capitol steps, along with toy weapons.  (VVAW site) (see Apr 22)

Operation Popeye

April 18, 1972: regarding any US program to affect the weather/rainfall in Vietnam, Nixon’s secretary of Defense, Melvin Laird testified at a Senate that, “we have never engaged in that type of activity over Northern Vietnam.” (V, see Apr 22; see Popeye for expanded chronology)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

Wounded Knee II

April 18, 1973: fourteen Indian women and children ran a Government roadblock into Wounded Knee, refusing to obey orders from marshals and Bureau of Indian Affairs officers to stop. Marshals arrested 20 other Indians who were watching.

The Governments chief negotiator, Assistant Attorney General J Stanley Pottinger, warned that the patience of the US marshals, FBI agents, and border patrolmen guarding Wounded Knee “is not inexhaustible.” (see May 8)

New York Mascot Policy

April 18, 2023: the NY Board of Regents approved a policy to eliminate school mascots and logos containing racially insensitive images or words.nickname.  may soon have to be changed.

According to the National Congress of American Indians, more than 20 states had taken action to change mascot names, using a variety of means, including legislation and actions by human rights commissions.  [NYT article]  (next NA, see June 15)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

Zimbabwe

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

April 18, 1980: Zimbabwe independent of the United Kingdom. The green represents Country’s vegetation and land resources. The yellow represents the country’s mineral wealth. The red represents the blood spilled during the liberation struggle. Black represents the black majority. The Zimbabwe Bird is the National Emblem of Zimbabwe. The white triangle stands for peace and the “way forward”. The Red Star stands for internationalism. (see July 30)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

U.S. embassy in Beirut

April 18, 1983: U.S. embassy in Beirut destroyed in suicide car-bomb attack; 63 dead, including 17 Americans. The Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility. (CIA dot gov article) (see Oct 23)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

IRAQ War I

Resolution 687

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

April 18, 1991: Iraq declared some of its chemical weapons and materials to the UN, as required by Resolution 687, and claims that it does not have a biological weapons program. (PDF of text via UN) (see Nov 7)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

April 18, 1998: U.S. News & World Report reported that retired Secret Service office Louis Fox testified before the grand jury that during a visit by Lewinsky to the White House in the fall of 1995, Clinton told him, “Close the door. She’ll be in here for a while.” (see Clinton for expanded story)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Women’s Health

Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act

April 18, 2007: The Supreme Court upheld the ban on the “partial-birth” abortion procedure. The ruling, 5–4, which upheld the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, a federal law passed in 2003, was the first to ban a specific type of abortion procedure. Writing in the majority opinion, Justice Anthony Kennedy said, “The act expresses respect for the dignity of human life.” Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who dissented, called the decision “alarming” and said it is “so at odds with our jurisprudence” that it “should not have staying power.” (see May 31, 2009)

Ohio law blocked

April 18, 2019: Senior U.S. District Judge Michael Barrett in Cincinnati blocked part of an Ohio law that banned the abortion method of dilation and evacuation in most cases, adding to a list of restrictions on the procedure that were or soon would be in legal limbo.

Barrett ordered the state not to bring criminal charges against doctors who perform the D&E procedure under most circumstances until the case could be fully litigated. Other parts of the law were allowed to proceed.

The ruling came as the state’s ban of abortions in cases involving a Down Syndrome diagnosis also was before the courts, and the ACLU planned a court challenge to a heartbeat abortion ban signed April 12. (see Apr 25)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

April 18, 2019:  a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld California’s controversial “sanctuary state” law, ruling that the measure did not impede the enforcement of federal immigration laws in that state.

The panel, in a unanimous decision, found that the state law, known as SB 54, limiting cooperation between state and local law enforcement and federal immigration authorities did not conflict with federal law.

The judges said they “have no doubt that SB 54 made the jobs of federal immigration authorities more difficult.” But “California has the right … to refrain from assisting with federal efforts.” [NPR story]  (see Apr 25)

April 18 Peace Love Art Activism

April 18 Music et al

April 18 Music et al

Tommy Shannon

April 18, 1946: Tommy Shannon born. Bassist best known for his work with Johnny Winter.

April 18 Music et al

The Beatles

Dell Shannon

April 18 Music et al

April 18, 1963: The Beatles performed at a rock show at the Royal Albert Hall in London broadcast live by the BBC.

The event, titled Swinging Sound 63, also featured among others, American singer Del Shannon. They performed twice – at 8:40 pm and again at 10 pm.

 

Following the event, Paul McCartney met Jane Asher for the first time. (Beatles, see May 5; Shannon, see June 1963)

1965 Oscars

The Sound of Music

April 18, 1966: 1965 Oscars held. Bob Hope hosts. Best picture: The Sound of Music  which had surpassed Gone With the Wind (1939) as the number one box office hit of all time.

April 18 Music et al

The Road to Bethel

April 18, 1969: the Wallkill Zoning Board of Appeals gave permission for the festival in the area known as Scotchtown. (See Chronology for much expanded list)

Tim Hardin

April 18 Music et al

April 18, 1969: Tim Hardin signed to perform at Woodstock. $2,000. (see Apr 21)

The Beatles

John Lennon

April 18, 1975: John Lennon performed in front of a live audience for the last time when he appeared on ‘Salute To Sir Lew Grade’, performing ‘Slippin And Slidin’, and ‘Imagine’. During ‘Imagine’ he ad libs “Imagine no immigration…” because of the recent reversal of his deportation case.

From Ultimate Rock site: “Everything finally seemed to be coming together for John Lennon, as he took the stage for what would sadly become his last public performance on April 18, 1975.

Wife Yoko Ono had become pregnant following their post-Lost Weekend reunion, earlier in 1975; Sean Lennon would be born on John’s 35th birthday that October. By then, a New York State Supreme Court judge had reversed Lennon’s pending deportation order, allowing him to remain in the U.S. He’d finally concluded a long-standing legal action over songwriting royalties with his publisher too, and that’s what brought Lennon to the New York City’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel. The occasion was a gala all-star special, organized for television broadcast, called A Salute to Sir Lew Grade: The Master Showman.”

From Buskin with The BeatlesThe name of John’s eight-piece backing band was Brothers of Mother Fuckers – abbreviated to “BOMF” on its bass-drum head – which is probably why they were jointly announced as “John Lennon Etcetera”. (He would subsequently rename them Dog Soldier.) The musicians all wore masks created by sculptor Ruby Jackson on the backs of their heads as a sardonic reference to Grade’s two-faced personality, making John’s participation even more baffling.(see June 13)

April 18 Music et al

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Reparations

April 17, 1878: freed slave Henrietta Wood sued Zebulon Ward, a white man who had re-enslaved Wood 25 years before. Wood was suing him for $20,000 in reparations

Twelve white jurors in Cincinnati, Ohio, ruled in Wood’s favor and awarded her $2,500. [Smithsonian story] (next BH, see April 5, 1880)

Caesar Sheffield lynched

April 17, 1915: a mob of white men near Lake Park, Georgia took 17-year-old Black boy Caesar Sheffield from jail and shot him to death. Police had arrested Caesar for allegedly stealing meat from a smokehouse owned by a local white man.

When the mob took Caesar from the jail, prison officials had abandoned the building despite being charged with protecting those inside the jail,  allowing the mob to easily force its way into the jail. The men took Caesar to a nearby field and shot him to death. His body was found later that day, riddled with bullets.

No arrests were made following his murder and no one was ever held accountable. [EJI article] (next BH, see June 21; next Lynching, see Dec 8 or see AL2 for expanded lynching chronology)

Little Palace Cafeteria

April 17, 1943: a sit-in by African-American students at Howard University students challenged racial segregation at the Little Palace Cafeteria, on 14th and U Streets in Washington, D.C. This event and a similar sit-in in Chicago on May 8, 1943, were signs of the rising demands for racial equality in 1943.

Howard University students staged a second sit-in the following year, on April 22, 1944. The sit-ins were soon quashed by pressure from Southerners in Congress who controlled the budget for the District of Columbia and Howard University. Restaurants in Washington, D.C., remained racially segregated for another decade, until a court ordered them integrated on June 8, 1953, in the case of District of Columbia v. John R. Thompson. (SNCC article) (see May 5)

Muhammad Ali

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

April 17, 1967: the U.S. Supreme Court barred Muhammad Ali’s request to be blocked from induction into the U.S. Army. (see Apr 28)

BLACK & SHOT/Ralph Yarl

April 17, 2023: on Thursday 6 April in Kansas City, MO , 16-year-od Ralph Yarl had gone to pick up his twin brothers at a friend’s house, but he mixed up the address. He went to Northeast 115 Street instead of Northeast 115th Terrace.

The owner, Andrew D. Lester, 84, came to the door and shot Yarl twice: once in the head and once in the arm. Yarl survived. Police took Lester into custody, but released him the next day without charges.

Over the weekend, anger began to spread in the community. Protesters marched on Lester’s home on Sunday 16 April while the Kansas City police chief, Stacey Graves, acknowledged the public frustration at a news conference. Yarl was released from the hospital that  evening.

As pressure mounted,  the Police Department said in a statement that it had submitted the case file to the Clay County prosecuting attorney’s office. The prosecutor, Zachary Thompson, publicly identified Mr. Lester a few hours later and announced that he had been charged, saying what many already believed: “There was a racial component to the case.”

Thompson said Lester had been charged with assault in the first degree, a class-A felony, and could face life in prison if convicted. He also was charged with armed criminal action, which carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison, Mr. Thompson said. [NYT article] (next B & S and Yari, see Aug 31)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Nuclear/Chemical News

Lieutenant Colonel Boris T. Pash

April 17, 1945:  U.S. Lieutenant Colonel Boris T. Pash commandeered over half a ton of uranium at Strassfut, Germany, in an effort to prevent the Russians from developing an A-bomb. Pash was head of the ALSOS Group, organized to search for German scientists in the postwar environment in order to prevent the Russians, previously Allies but now a potential threat, from capturing any scientists and putting them to work at their own atomic research plants. Uranium piles were also rich “catches,” as they were necessary to the development of atomic weapons. (Atomic Heritage Foundation article) (see Apr 24)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

 Syria

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

April 17, 1946: Evacuation Day (Arabic: عيد الجلاء‎‎), also called Independence Day, is Syria’s national day commemorating the evacuation of the last French soldier and Syria’s proclamation of full independence and the end of the French mandate of Syria (see August 14, 1947)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

April 17 Music et al

Lawrence Welk

April 17 – May 21, 1961: Lawrence Welk’s Calcutta is Billboard’s #1 album.

The Apartment

April 17, 1961: 1960 Oscars held. Bob Hope hosts. The Best Picture Award winner was director/producer/writer Billy Wilder’s The Apartment (with a total of ten nominations and five wins – Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Writing: Story and Screenplay, Best B/W Art Direction, and Best Film Editing).

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

The Road to Bethel

April 17, 1969
  • Michael Lang and Joel Rosenman co-sign a $10,000 check to construct offices for Woodstock Ventures at 47 W 57th Street in NYC. Bert Cohan in charge. They also put down $4,500 as a deposit on a property in Woodstock for the recording studio (the Tapooz property).
  • a $14,000 check given to Alexander Tapooz for deposit on Woodstock retreat studio. (see Road to Bethel for expanded story)
April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

The Cold War

April 17, 1961: a group of Cuban exiles backed by the U.S. government and trained by the CIA lands at the Bay of Pigs in Cuba in an unsuccessful attempt to overthrow the government of Fidel Castro. The failed coup further heightened Cold War tensions and diverts President Kennedy’s attention from domestic policy. (see Bay of Pigs for expanded story)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

April 17, 1965: Paul Kuntzler and nine other people picketed the White House in what advocates believe was the first gay rights demonstration. The group was mostly fighting for gays and lesbians to keep their government jobs. (see May 29)

Vietnam

Daniel Ellsberg/Pentagon Papers

April 17, 1965: the  SDS led an anti-Vietnam war march in Washington. 15,000 attend including Phil Ochs, Joan Baez and Judy Collins. Daniel Ellsberg and Patricia Marx go on their first date…this rally. For the next two years Ellsberg served in Vietnam as a civilian on special assignment for the U.S. Department of State, studying counter-insurgency. (next Vietnam, see Apr 21; see DE/PP for expanded story)

LGBTQ

April 17 Peace Love Activism

April 17, 1966: Donald Slater, a spokesman for the Committee to Fight Exclusion of Homosexuals From the Armed Forces, explained the beginning of a 6-day campaign to support that committee’s goal. Slater stated that the campaign represented the first manifestation of a new militancy in “the homosexual movement.” (tangentgroup dot org committee statement) (LGBTQ, see Apr 21; Vietnam, see Apr 29)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Sirhan Sirhan

April 17, 1969, Sirhan Sirhan was convicted of assassinating Senator Robert F. Kennedy. (see Apr 23)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Boston Marathon

In 1967 Kathrine Switzer registered as K.V. Switzer for the Boston Marathon. Race Official Jock Semple grabbed her and tried to tear off her number. Other runners helped push Semple away and Switzer finished the race. (Switzer’s story)

On April 17, 1972,  for the first time, the Boston Marathon officially permitted  women to compete. (see June 23)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

Appeal denied

April 17, 2017: the Supreme Court rejected an appeal from detained immigrant mothers and their children who claimed they would be persecuted if they were returned to their Latin American homelands. The decision left in place a lower court ruling that said the families did not have a right to contest their deportation in federal court.

The 28 mothers and their 33 children were arrested in Texas soon after crossing the border illegally, and immigration officials rejected their asylum claims. The immigrants came from Honduras, Guatemala and Ecuador. They had argued they were entitled to a hearing before an independent federal judge. (KAAL TV article) (see Apr 25)

Mandatory Deportation

April 17, 2018: the US Supreme Court invalidated a provision of federal law that required the mandatory deportation of immigrants who had been convicted of some “crimes of violence,” holding that the law was unconstitutionally vague.

The case, Sessions v. Dimaya, had originated during the Obama administration but had been closely watched to see if the justices would reveal how they will consider the Trump administration’s overall push to both limit immigration and increase deportations.

As expected after the oral argument, Justice Neil Gorsuch joined with the more liberal justices for the first time since joining the court to produce a 5-4 majority invalidating the federal statute. In doing so, Gorsuch was continuing the jurisprudence of Justice Antonin Scalia, who also sided with liberals when it came to the vagueness of statutes used to convict criminal defendants. (see Apr 24)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism

Native Americans

April 17, 2020: for nearly a century, an illustration of a Native American woman with a feather in her hair has adorned the packaging of Land O’Lakes cheese and butter products.

The company, founded in 1921 by a group of Minnesota dairy farmers, announced that it was phasing in a new design ahead of its 100th anniversary. Instead of the depiction of the woman, some products will be labeled “Farmer-Owned” and feature an illustration of a field and lake, or photographs of its farmers, the company announced. [NYT article] (next NA, see July 9)

April 17 Peace Love Art Activism