Category Archives: Peace Love Art and Activism

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Joseph H. Rainey

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 1870: Joseph H. Rainey of South Carolina took his seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, becoming the first black congressman. (see October 10, 1871)

Arthur Young and Charles Wright lynched

December 12, 1922: Arthur Young and Charles Wright were accused of killing a local white school teacher. Though items found near the woman’s body belonged to a local white man, police were convinced the perpetrator had to be a black man, and quickly focused on Wright as a suspect. The deep racial hostility that permeated Southern society during this time period often served to focus suspicion on black communities after a crime was discovered, whether evidence supported that suspicion or not. This was especially true in cases of violent crime against white victims.

After several days of violent manhunts that terrorized the black community and left at least one black man dead, police arrested Charles Wright with a friend named Arthur Young. Before the men could be investigated or tried, a white mob seized Mr. Wright as they were being transported to jail and burned him alive.

Four days later, on December 12th, the lynch mob attacked again. As officers were moving Arthur Young to another jail, the mob seized him, riddled his body with bullets, and left his corpse hanging from a tree on the side of a highway in Perry, Florida.

No one was ever held accountable for the lynchings

Following the murders, members of the mob turned on the black community of Perry, burning several black-owned homes, a church, the Masonic hall and a school.  [EJI article] (next BH & Lynching, see January 1, 1923; see American Lynching 3 for expanded article)

Lloyd Gaines

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 1938: the Registrar at the Law School of the University of Missouri, Cy Woodson Canada, had refused admission to Lloyd Gaines because he was an African-American. At the time there was no Law School specifically for African-Americans within the state. Gaines cited that this refusal violated his Fourteenth Amendment right. The state of Missouri had offered to pay for Gaines’ tuition at an adjacent state’s law school, which he turned down.

Although not striking down “separate but equal,” on this date the US Supreme Court held that States that provided only one educational institution must allow blacks and whites to attend if there was no separate school for blacks. (next BH, see Dec 28); Lloyd Gaines, see March 19, 1939)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Technological Milestone

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 1901: Italian physicist and radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi succeeded in sending the first radio transmission across the Atlantic Ocean, despite critics telling  him that the curvature of the earth would limit transmission to 200 miles or less. The message–simply the Morse-code signal for the letter “s”–traveled more than 2,000 miles from Poldhu in Cornwall, England, to Newfoundland, Canada. Ironically, the detractors were correct: the radio signal had been headed into space when it was reflected off the ionosphere and bounced back down toward Canada. (see November 2, 1902)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Religion and Public Education

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 1947:  the Champaign School Board asserted that the interpretation of the US Constitution to prohibit the use of public school buildings for religious education “is to commit religion in every form of its expression to a state of anarchy.” (see March 8, 1948)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 1947: the United Mine Workers union withdrew from the American Federation of Labor.(see March 29, 1948)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12 Music et al

GI BluesDecember 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12 – 18, 1960: Elvis Presley’s GI Blues album is Billboard #1. (see Dec 26)

“Mr Lonely”

December 12 – 18, 1964: “Mr Lonely” by Bobby Vinton #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

ss

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 1963: Kenya independent from United Kingdom. (see Independence Days for more dates)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam & DRAFT CARD BURNING

 

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 1966: the NY Civil Liberties Union challenged the constitutionality of law prohibiting draft card burning. The appeal charged that the law was an unconstitutional abridgment of the freedom of expression guaranteed by the First Amendment and its purpose is to suppress dissent. (Draft Card Burning, see January 11, 1967; Vietnam, see Dec 23)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Sara Jane Moore


December 12 Peace Love Activism
December 12, 1975, Sara Jane Moore pleaded guilty to trying to kill President Gerald R. Ford. (see Oliver W Sipple for expanded chronology)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

December 12, 1983: Shiite truck bombers attacked the U.S. embassy in Kuwait and other targets, killing 5 and injuring 80. (2012 WI article] (see February 26, 1984)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Jack Kevorkian

December 12, 1990: District Court Judge Gerald McNally dismissed murder charge against Kevorkian in death of Adkins. (see JK for expanded chronology)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

December 12, 1998: the House Judiciary Committee approved a fourth and final article of impeachment against President Clinton, accusing him of making false statements in his answers to written questions from Congress. A Democratic proposal to censure Clinton instead goes down to defeat. (see Clinton Impeachment for expanded chronology)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Sexual Abuse of Children

December 12, 2002:  the Boston Globe reported a grand jury examining possible criminal acts by Catholic bishops who failed to prevent acts of sexual abuse has subpoenaed Boston Cardinal Bernard Law and five subordinates. Law remained in Rome. (see Dec 13)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Stop and Frisk Policy

December 12, 2003: Judge Shira Scheindlin of Manhattan federal court approved a settlement agreement in the Daniels case. The agreement requires the NYPD to formulate an anti-racial profiling policy, audit officers who engage in stop-and-frisks and publicly disclose the results of those audits. Judge Scheindlin maintained oversight over the settlement through 2007.

By the end of December 2003 NYC Police had stopped New Yorkers 160,851 times. 140,442 were totally innocent (87 percent). 77,704 were black (54 percent); 44,581 were Latino (31 percent); 17,623 were white (12 percent). 83,499 were aged 14-24 (55 percent). (see December 2005)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Fourth Amendment

Amy Barnes

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 12, 2014: Cobb County, Atlanta agreed to pay Amy Barnes $100,000.

According to Barnes, in 2012 after seeing, “yet another African American stopped for doing nothing other than being outside while black,” she yelled profanities (“Cobb police suck” and “Fuck the police.”) at the police officers, who then arrested her, jailed her, and kept her in solitary confinement overnight.

The charges were dismissed in 2013, but Barnes filed a lawsuit saying the Cobb County Police Department officers had violated her constitutional rights. Cobb County agreed to pay Barnes to end the lawsuit.

“It’s a shot across the bow,” Barnes said. “And it basically sent a message across this whole nation that free speech shall remain free or somebody’s going to keep paying.”

According to Barnes’ attorney, “The officers argued that it was a bad neighborhood and you shouldn’t disrespect the police because it could create issues.”

As for the isolation after her arrest, the police claimed it was for Barnes’ own protection, because she has impaired hearing. (see Fourth Amendment below)

United States v. Vargas

December 12, 2014: a federal court said that six weeks of continually video recording the front yard of someone’s home without a search warrant violated the Fourth Amendment. Senior U.S. District Court Judge Edward Shea wrote that “Law enforcement’s warrantless and constant covert video surveillance of Defendant’s rural front yard is contrary to the public’s reasonable expectation of privacy and violates Defendant’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable search”.

Local police in rural Washington suspected Leonel Vargas of drug trafficking. In April 2013, police installed a camera on top of a utility pole overlooking his home. Even though police did not have a warrant, they nonetheless pointed the camera at his front door and driveway and began watching every day. A month later, police observed Vargas shoot some beer bottles with a gun and because Vargas was an undocumented immigrant, they had probable cause to believe he was illegally possessing a firearm. They used the video surveillance to obtain a warrant to search his home, which uncovered drugs and guns, leading to a federal indictment against Vargas. Vargas moved to suppress the evidence and Shea wanted more information about the specific surveillance equipment the government was using, details the government was unsuccessful in keeping secret (see Dec 15)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

December 12, 2015: representatives of 195 nations reached a landmark accord that would, for the first time, commit nearly every country to lowering planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions to help stave off the most drastic effects of climate change.

The deal, which was met with an eruption of cheers and ovations from thousands of delegates gathered from around the world, represents a historic breakthrough on an issue that has foiled decades of international efforts to address climate change.(see February 9, 2016)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Crime and Punishment

Solitary confinement 

December 12, 2017: a rule in New York City’s jail system had been that if an inmate at Rikers Island who had been serving a stretch in solitary confinement before release returned to the jail, the person would be forced back into solitary no matter how much time had passed.

The city had dropped the rule, called the old time policy, in 2015, in response to a lawsuit.

On this day, federal magistrate Judge Cheryl L. Pollak in Brooklyn gave preliminary approval to a class-action settlement in which the city agreed to pay a total of $5 million to 470 people who were put in solitary confinement under the policy between Nov. 23, 2012, and Sept. 16, 2015. The lawsuit that prompted the settlement, Roy Parker et al. v. the City of New York, alleged that the practice was inhumane and violated pretrial detainees’ due process rights.

Pollak said the settlement was “fair and reasonable.”

Alexander A. Reinert, one of the lawyers and a law professor at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University, said he believed this was the first case in the country in which a court awarded compensation to a class of pretrial detainees wrongfully held in solitary confinement. [NYT article]

Video calls only

By the end of 2017,  hundreds of correctional facilities across the United States had replaced in-person visits with video calls that were expensive and unreliable.

The Guardian reported that researchers estimated at least 600 jails and prisons had instituted video visitation programs. While a handful of states including California and Texas had passed laws ensuring that in-person visitation be maintained in jails where video visitation is offered, data showed that 74 percent of correctional facilities that implement video calling either reduce or eliminate in-person visits.

The video technology was offered by prison telephone companies like Securus, which charged $12.99 per 20-minute video call at the Jefferson Parish correctional center in Louisiana. Earlier in 2017, Securus succeeded in forcing the FCC to withdraw support for regulations that cap the cost of phone calls from people in jails and prisons.

Prison phone companies pitch video calls as a potential new source of revenue for counties, with facilities typically receiving 10 to 20 percent commissions on each call.

Despite the hefty price tag for video calls, the technology often does not work. Callers cannot see the image or hear any sound, or the calls are cut off midway through. (see February 1, 2018)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

Cannabis

December 12, 2019: Major League Baseball in association with its players union, announced changes to its Joint Drug Program  and became the first major American sports league to remove marijuana from its list of drugs abuse.

The drug will still be tested for and could result in punishment similar to its alcohol and violence policies.

“Natural cannabinoids (e.g., THC, CBD, and Marijuana) will be removed from the Program’s list of Drugs of Abuse,” MLB said in its release. “Going forward, marijuana-related conduct will be treated the same as alcohol-related conduct under the Parties’ Joint Treatment Program for Alcohol-Related and Off-Field Violent Conduct, which provides mandatory evaluation, voluntary treatment and the possibility of discipline by a Player’s Club or the Commissioner’s Office in response to certain conduct involving Natural Cannabinoids.” [ABC News article]  (see CCC for expanded chronology) (next C, see Dec 31)

December 12 Peace Love Art Activism

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

US Labor History

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

December 11, 1886: a small group of Black farmers organized the Colored Farmers’ National Alliance and Cooperative Union in Houston County, Texas. They had been barred from membership in the all-White Southern Farmers’ Alliance. Through intensive organizing, along with merging with another Black farmers group, the renamed Colored Alliance by 1891 claimed a membership of 1.2 million (see November 1, 1887)

Houston Revolt of 1917

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

On August 23, 1917 the Houston Revolt of 1917, or Camp Logan Riot, occurred. It was a mutiny by 156 African American soldiers of the Third Battalion of the all-black Twenty-fourth United States Infantry Regiment.

Two Houston police officers stormed into the home of an African American woman, allegedly looking for someone in the neighborhood, after firing a warning shot outside. They physically assaulted her, then dragged her partially clad into the street, all in view of her five small children. The woman began screaming, demanding to know why she was being arrested, and a crowd began to gather. A soldier from the 24th stepped forward to ask what was going on. The police officers promptly beat him to the ground and arrested him as well.

Their official reports and later news reports stated the soldier was charged with interfering with the arrest of a publicly drunk female. Later that afternoon, Corporal Charles Baltimore went to the Houston police station to investigate the arrest, as well as beating of another black soldier, and also to attempt to gain the release of the soldier. An argument began which led to violence, and Corporal Baltimore was beaten, shot at, and himself arrested by the police.

That evening 156 angry soldiers, stole weapons from the camp depot and marched on the city of Houston. They were met outside the city by the police and a crowd of armed citizens, frightened by the reports of a mutiny. A virtual race riot began, which left 20 people dead – four soldiers, four policemen, and 12 civilians. Order was restored the next day, and the War Department disarmed the soldiers. The Third Battalion was sent by rail back to New Mexico.

December 11, 1917: thirteen Black soldiers hanged for alleged participation in the Houston riot. (BH, see April; next RR, see July 26, 1918; next HR, see August 31 1918)

Albany Movement

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

December 11, 1961: over four hundred people marched to city hall in downtown Albany, protesting the arrest of the Freedom Riders. The city gave the marchers permission to circle the block twice, but when the marchers refused to stop after the allotted distance, Chief Pritchett ordered the protesters arrested. Herding the protesters into the alley between police headquarters, Pritchett arrested 267 protesters. Pritchett informed the press that “We can’t  tolerate the NAACP or the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee or any other ‘nigger’ organization to take over this town with mass demonstrations.”

That same day, in Garner v. Louisiana, the Supreme Court reversed the convictions of 16 black college students who had been arrested in a civil rights demonstration in Louisiana. “In the circumstances of these cases, merely sitting peacefully in places where custom decreed that petitioners should not sit was not evidence of any crime, and it cannot be so considered either by the police or by the courts.” (see Albany for expanded chronology)

Muhammad Ali

December 11, 1981:  at age 39 and attempting another comeback, Ali fought the top heavyweight title contender, Trevor Berbick and lost a ten-round decision. Ali retired for good after the fight, finishing his career with an overall record of 56-5. [NYT article] (BH, see November 2, 1983; Ali, see September 1984)

BLACK & SHOT

December 11, 2017: The Chicago Police Department said all patrol officers were equipped with body cameras. (B & S, see March 18, 2018; McDonald, see March 20, 2018)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

INDEPENDENCE DAY

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

December 11, 1931: South Africa independent from United Kingdom.(see October 3, 1932)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

December 11, 1961: American helicopters arrived in South Vietnam along with 400 U.S. personnel, who will fly and maintain the aircraft. (see Dec 18)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

see December 11 Music et al for more

Please Mr. Postman

December 11 – December 17, 1961: “Please Mr. Postman” by the Marvelettes #1 Billboard Hot 100. Released on August 28, the song is notable as the first Motown song to reach the number-one position on the Billboard Hot 100.

Sam Cooke

December 11, 1964: Sam Cooke was killed under mysterious circumstances in Los Angeles. (Performing Songwriter site article) (see Dec 14)

Muir Beach Acid Test

Augustus Bear Owsley Stanley

December 11, 1965: the first acid test for famed acid chemist, Owsley Stanley. In his book, Dark Star Robert Greenfield quoted Stanley:  “In December ’65, I really heard the Grateful Dead for the first time. It was at the Fillmore  the night before the Muir Beach Acid Test. I was standing in the hall and they were playing and they scared me to death. Jerry’s guitar terrified me. I had never before heard that much power. That much thought. That much emotion. I thought to myself, ‘These guys could be bigger than the Beatles.'” (see Dec 18)

John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band

December 11, 1970: John Lennon’s John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album released. It was the first solo album by John Lennon. ( Lennon had issued three experimental albums with Yoko Ono and Live Peace in Toronto 1969, a live performance in Toronto credited to the Plastic Ono Band.) The album was recorded between 26 September – 23 October 1970, simultaneously with Ono’s debut avant garde solo album, Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band, at Ascot Sound Studios and Abbey Road Studios using the same musicians and production team, and featured nearly identical cover artwork. John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band is generally considered one of Lennon’s finest solo albums, documenting with honesty and artistic integrity his emotional and mental state at that point in his career. In 1987, as part of its 20th anniversary, Rolling Stone magazine ranked it fourth on “The 100 Best Albums of the Last Twenty Years”. In 2012, the magazine ranked it number 23 on its list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. (see Dec 31)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Iran hostage crisis

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

December 11, 1978:  massive demonstrations took place in Tehran against the Shah. In Isfahan, Iran, 40 people were killed and 60 wounded during riots against the Shah.  (see Crisis for expanded chronology)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

December 11, 1980:  President Jimmy Carter signed into law legislation creating $1.6 billion environmental “superfund” that would be used to pay for cleaning up chemical spills and toxic waste dumps. (see February 3, 1984)

Climate change

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

December 11, 1997: negotiators from around the world (more than 150 countries) agreed on a package of measures that for the first time would legally obligate industrial countries to cut emissions of waste industrial (greenhouse) gases that scientists say were warming the Earth’s atmosphere. [NYT article] (see October 11, 2000)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

CLINTON IMPEACHMENT

Monica Lewinsky

December 11, 1997: Monica Lewinsky met with Vernon Jordan and he referred her to several job leads.

Articles of impeachment

December 11, 1998: the House Judiciary Committee approved three articles of impeachment, alleging that President Clinton committed perjury and obstruction of justice. The action came despite another apology from Clinton. (see Clinton for expanded chronology)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Irish Troubles

December 11, 1997:  Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams became the first political ally of the IRA to meet a British leader in 76 years. He conferred with Prime Minister Tony Blair in London. (see Troubles for expanded chronology)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

TERRORISM

Zacarias Moussaoui

December 11, 2001: the US government indicted Zacarias Moussaoui for involvement in the September 11 attacks. (see Dec 13)

Intelligence agencies

December 11, 2002: a congressional report found that intelligence agencies before September 11, 2001, were poorly organized, poorly equipped and slow to pursue clues that might have prevented that day’s terrorist attacks. (see January 30, 2003)

James Alex Fields Jr

December 11, 2018:  Neo-Nazi James Alex Fields Jr. was sentenced  to life in prison for killing Heather Heyer in a vehicular attack in Charlottesville, Virginia, last year.

A jury sentenced Fields to one life term for the murder, along with 419 years for another nine charges, according to NBC Washington. The jury also recommended he be fined nearly half a million dollars.

The 21-year-old extremist, who is associated with the hate group Vanguard America, was charged with first-degree murder and nine other felonies after he intentionally rammed his vehicle into anti-racist counter-protesters following the “Unite the Right” rally on Aug. 12, 2017, killing one and injuring dozens more. Fields was found guilty of all 10 charges  and faces 30 charges in a separate federal case concerning the same attack. (see March 21, 2019)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Bernard Madoff

December 11, 2008,  U.S. federal authorities arrested Bernard Madoff on charges of running a massive decades-long Ponzi scheme swindling thousands of investors – the largest financial fraud in history. (NYT article) (see Dec 14)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

Fourth Amendment

December 11, 2014: United States v. Chad Daniel Camou: US Court of Appleals, 9th Circuit Judge Harry Pregerson reversed the district court’s denial of Camoe’s motion to suppress images of child pornography found on his cell phone during a warrantless search. The panel held that the warrantless search of the cell phone at a Border Patrol checkpoint’s security offices was not roughly contemporaneous with the defendant’s arrest and, therefore, not a search incident to arrest, given both the passage of one hour and twenty minutes between arrest and search, and the seven intervening acts between arrest and search that signaled the arrest was over. In the new decision, the Ninth Circuit suppressed evidence from a 2009 search of a cell phone taken from a car incident to arrest at the border.

The new ruling might not be the final word in the case. But the court did decide an important question along the way: The Ninth Circuit ruled that if the police have probable cause to search a car under the automobile exception, they can’t search cell phones found in the car. (see Dec 12)

December 11 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Feminism

Voting Rights

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10, 1869:  motivated more by interest in free publicity than a commitment to gender equality, Wyoming territorial legislators passed a bill that is signed into law granting women the right to vote. Western states led the nation in approving women’s suffrage, but some of them had other motives. Though some men recognized the important role women played in frontier settlement, others voted for women’s suffrage only to bolster the strength of conservative voting blocks. In Wyoming, some men were also motivated by sheer loneliness–in 1869, the territory had over 6,000 adult males and only 1,000 females, and area men hoped women would be more likely to settle in the rugged and isolated country if they were granted the right to vote. (Voting Rights, see February 3, 1870)

Matilda Josyln Gage

In 1870  Gage researched and published “Woman as Inventor.” In it, Gage credited the invention of the cotton gin to a woman, Catherine Littlefield Greene. Gage claimed that Greene suggested to Whitney the use of a brush-like component instrumental in separating out the seeds and cotton. [Gage provided no source for this claim and to date there has been no independent verification of Greene’s role in the invention of the gin. However, many believe that Eli Whitney received the patent for the gin and the sole credit in history textbooks for its invention only because social norms inhibited women from registering for patents.]  During this same time Gage wrote a series of articles speaking out against United States’ unjust treatment of American Indians and describing superior position of native women. “The division of power between the sexes in this Indian republic was nearly equal,” Gage wrote of the Iroquois. In matters of government, “…its women exercised controlling power in peace and war … no sale of lands was valid without consent” of the women, while “the family relation among the Iroquois demonstrated woman’s superiority in power … in the home, the wife was absolute … if the Iroquois husband and wife separated, the wife took with her all the property she had brought … the children also accompanied the mother, whose right to them was recognized as supreme.” “Never was justice more perfect, never civilization higher,” Gage concluded. (next Feminism, see February 3, 1870; Native Americans, see June 18;  see Gage for her expanded chronology)

Equal Rights Amendment

December 10 Peace Love Activism

December 10, 1923: The Equal Rights Amendment, drafted by Alice Paul, introduced in the Senate. It read, “Men and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States and every place subject to its jurisdiction.”  Although the amendment will be introduced in every session of Congress, it will not reach the floor of the House of Representatives for a vote until 1971.(see January 14, 1927)

Jane Addams

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10, 1931: Jane Addams became the first American woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize; the co-recipient was Nicholas Murray Butler. (January 12, 1932)

Janice R. Lachance

December 10, 1997: with the swearing in of Janice R. Lachance as Director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management on this day, the total number of women appointed to President Clinton’s Cabinet reached 13, the highest number in any presidential cabinet in US history. (see March 4, 1998)

Shirin Ebadi

December 10, 2003: Iranian democracy activist Shirin Ebadi, the first Muslim woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, accepted the award in Oslo, Norway. (see January 26, 2005)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

BLACK HISTORY

Charles Lewis lynched

December 10, 1897: in Lawrence County, Mississippi a white family was found murdered. A surviving 5-year-old child claimed a black man did it. Officials brought several black male “suspects” before her and she identified one — a man named Charles Lewis — as the perpetrator. A mob of hundreds immediately formed and lynched Lewis.

Although early accounts alleged only one perpetrator, the white community was unsatisfied to lynch only one man, and continued to “investigate” the white family’s murders. [EJI article] (next BH, see Dec 15; see 19th century for expanded lynching chronology)

Ralph Bunche

December 10, 1950: for his peace mediation during the first Arab-Israeli war, American diplomat Ralph Joseph Bunche received the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, Norway. Bunche was the first African American to win the prestigious award.(see January 20, 1951)

Humboldt Black Players Secregated

December 10, 1960, Black college football players from California’s Humboldt State College were banned from “mixing” with white people during their stay in Florida for the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) National Championship Football Game. After an undefeated season, the racially integrated team earned the right to compete in the Holiday Bowl on December 10 in St. Petersburg, Florida, for the national title. However, segregated facilities forbade Humboldt State’s Black players from sleeping under the same roof as their white teammates. [EJI article] (next BH, see January 6, 1961)

Freedom RidersDecember 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10, 1961: nine Freedom Riders from Atlanta arrived at the Albany Trailways bus terminal and were met by a crowd of approximately three hundred black onlookers and a squad of Albany policemen. Albany Police Chief Laurie Pritchett arrested the riders without incident, telling the press that white Albany would “not stand for these troublemakers coming into our city for the sole purpose of disturbing the peace and quiet in the city of Albany.” (BH, AM, & FR, see December 11)

Martin Luther King, Jr

December 10, 1964: Martin Luther King, Jr received Nobel Peace Prize. In his acceptance speech, King said, “I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality.” (BH, see Dec 12; MLK, see Dec 28)

Frank Morris burned to death

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10, 1964: the Ku Klux Klan set fire to the business of Frank Morris, a 51-year-old African-American in Ferriday, Louisiana. Morris died four days. He had been asleep in the back of his shoe shop when he heard glass breaking shortly after midnight. Out front he saw two men, one pouring gasoline on the outside of the building, the other holding a shotgun. Morris yelled, “Hey, stop that!” Suddenly, the building was ignited, and Morris was in a sea of flame and smoke. The man with the shotgun blocked his escape through the front door as he pointed the barrel at Morris while shouting, “Get back in there, nigger!”

Two police officers arrived just seconds after Morris’s attackers fled. They watched Morris emerge from the back of the building completely in flames—naked, bleeding, exhausted—leaving behind a trail of bloody footprints. Skin peeled and fell from his body. Morris’s hair was ablaze, the waistband of his boxer shorts and the shoulder straps of his undershirt smoldering. Morris said he didn’t know his attackers.

The FBI agent who rushed to the hospital within hours of the arson said, “If Frank would have told me who they [his attackers] were, we would have gone after the sons of bitches.” Morris’s friends believed he knew his attackers but was afraid to identify them. No one was prosecuted. (see Dec 14)

March to Montgomery

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

On December 10, 1965, Elmer Cook, O’Neal Hoggle, and his brother Willam Hoggle were acquitted of the murder of Rev James J Reeb. The all-white jury deliberated 90 minutes. (BH, see January 3, 1966; see March for expanded chronology)

Toni Morrison

December 10, 1993: Toni Morrison received the Nobel Prize for Literature at the award ceremony in Oslo, Norway. She was the first African American woman to win. (Feminism, see January 24, 1994; BH, see January 26, 1974)

Nelson Mandela

December 10, 1996: Mandela signed into law a new democratic constitution, completing the country’s transition from white-minority rule to a non-racial democracy.  (SA/A, see January 28, 1997; NM, see June 16, 1999)

Antwon Rose

December 10, 2018:  NBC news reported that the parents of Antwon Rose, who East Pittsburgh police officer Officer Michael Rosfeld fatally shot  when as Rose fled a traffic stop, sued Rosfeld’s former employer — the University of Pittsburgh — for failing to properly discipline him or record performance issues in his personnel file.

In the lawsuit filed in Allegheny County, the Rose’s parents  said the university allowed Rosfeld to resign quietly without putting any notice in his personnel file that there had been issues with at least one arrest. The University had hired Rosfeld as a university police officer in 2012, was suspended in December 2017, and resigned a few weeks. (B & S, see Dec 14; AR, see January 11, 2019)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

US Labor History

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10, 1906: first sit-down strike in U.S. called by International Workers of the World at General Electric in Schenectady, N.Y.(see April 4, 1907)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

LGBTQ

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10, 1924: Henry Gerber founded The Society for Human Rights in Chicago. The society was the first gay rights organization as well as the oldest documented in America.

After receiving a charter from the state of Illinois, the society published the first American publication for homosexuals, Friendship and Freedom. Soon after its founding, the society disbanded due to political pressure.(see June 23, 1945)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

FREE SPEECH

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

December 10, 1948: Chicago authorities banned The Respectful Prostitute, a play by Jean-Paul Sartre. Chicago theater and film censor Harry Fulmer argued that the play would offend African-Americans. The play involves an incident that occurred on a train where an African-American man was falsely accused of attacking a white woman, when in fact a white man perpetrated the attack. National NAACP Director Walter White gave the play his “unqualified endorsement” but was unsuccessful in preventing the ban. (next FS, see following; next BH, Dec 14)

Book burning

December 10, 1948: most of the 500 students at St. Patrick’s School in Binghamton, NY, on this day stood and watched as the school burned 10,000 comic books as part of a “purity” crusade. The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese, as part of the crusade, urged parish members to “boycott” stores that sold magazines with “indecent pictures and sensational details of crime.” The comic books were burned in a courtyard behind the school. The event was part of a national panic over comic books in the 1950s regarding their alleged impact on juvenile delinquency.(see March 8, 1949)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Cold War

December 10, 1949: Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, longtime American ally and leader of the anticommunist Chinese Nationalists, fled mainland China to organize the Republic of China on the island of Taiwan. (NYT article) (see January 21, 1950)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Technological Milestone

December 10, 1959: a National Airlines Boeing 707 with 111 passengers flew from New York to Miami. It was the first domestic passenger jet flight. (see February 7, 1960)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

see December 10 Music et al for more

Roots of Rock: Fats Domino

December 10, 1949: Fats Domino recorded his first sides for Imperial Records. He recorded The Fat Man, one of the earliest rock and roll records. The title also turned into Domino’s nickname and stayed with him through his years of success. (see January 3, 1950)

John Lennon leaves Hamburg

December 10, 1960: John Lennon traveled back to England by train and boat. Stuart Sutcliffe continued stay in Hamburg, , effectively signified the end of his time in The Beatles. (see Beatles Deported for expanded chronology)

CBS/Beatles

December 10, 1963: CBS-TV aired a four-minute segment on The Beatles that had been pre-empted by the JFK tragedy. (see Dec 17)

Grateful Dead & Rock Venues

December 10, 1965: the San Francisco Fillmore auditorium held its first rock ‘n’ roll concert (thanks to promoter Bill Graham), a benefit for the San Francisco Mime Troupe. Unbilled but also playing that night: the Grateful Dead, having just changed its name from the Warlocks. (RV, see January 8, 1966; GD, see January 22, 1966)

seeGood Vibrationsfor more

December 10 – 16, 1966: “Good Vibrations” by the Beach Boys #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

John Lennon/John Sinclair

December 10, 1971: John Lennon headlined The John Sinclair Freedom Rally, a protest and concert in response the imprisonment of John Sinclair who was given ten years in prison for the possession of two marijuana cigarettes. The concert was held in Crisler Arena at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Two days after the event, Sinclair was released. (see January 1972)

Bob Dylan

December 10, 2016: Bob Dylan did not attend the Nobel Banquet in the Stockholm City Hall. Azita Raji, the United States Ambassador to Sweden, gave an acceptance speech in his place. (see June 4, 2017)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Vietnam

My Lai Massacre

December 10, 1970: the defense opened its case in the murder trial of Lt. William Calley. Citing “superior’s orders,” Defense Attorney George Lattimer contended that Capt. Ernest Medina, Calley’s company commander, told his men that they were finally going to fight the enemy. He reportedly ordered “every living thing” killed. Lattimer also cited poor training of the platoon, the rage of the men who had seen their buddies killed, and the expectation of fierce resistance as additional factors contributing to the incident. The lawyer also charged that higher commanders on the ground and in the air observed the episode but did nothing. (Vietnam; see Jan 12; see My Lai for expanded chronology)

 Peace Accord

December 10, 1972: technical experts on both sides began work on the language of a proposed peace accord, giving rise to hope that a final agreement is near. (see Dec 13)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

AIDS

December 10, 1982: CDC reported a case of AIDS in an infant who received blood transfusions. The following week, the MMWR reports 22 cases of unexplained immunodeficiency and opportunistic infections in infants. (see January 7, 1983)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Immigration History

Luis Ramirez

On July 12, 2008 six white teenagers beat Mexican immigrant Luis Ramirez to death in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, while taunting him with racial slurs and threats including: “Spic,” “fucking Mexican,” and “This is Shenandoah. This is America. Go back to Mexico.” After leaving Mr. Ramirez, a 25-year-old father of two, unconscious and convulsing on the pavement, one of the attackers yelled: “Tell your fucking Mexican friends to get the fuck out of Shenandoah or you’re going to be fucking laying next to him.” Mr. Ramirez died of his injuries two days later. (see Luis Ramirez for expanded chronology)

Trump’s Wall

December 10, 2019: Judge David Briones of the US District Court for the Western District of Texas said  that the administration cannot use military construction funds to build additional barriers on the southern border.

The ruling was a setback for the administration, which has sought to shore up money for the President’s signature campaign promise of a border wall, and marks yet another high-profile blow the courts have dealt Trump on key issues, including his immigration policies and his fight to not turn his tax returns over to Congress. It targeted only one set of Pentagon funds, however, leaving in place the money the Supreme Court allowed to be used earlier this year. [CNN article] (next Wall, see January 8, 2020 or see TW for expanded chronology) (next IH, see Dec 20)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Marijuana

December 10, 2013: Uruguay’s Senate gave final congressional approval to create the world’s first national marketplace for legal marijuana. The government will oversee production, sales and consumption. (NYT article) (see February 6, 2014)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Trump Impeachment Inquiry

December 10, 2019: House Judiciary Chair Jerry Nadler announced the articles of impeachment against President Trump: obstruction of Congress and abuse of power. [CNN article] (see TII for expanded chronology)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism

Environmental Issues

Climate change

December 10, 2019 the annual Arctic report card  stated that temperatures in the Arctic region remained near record highs in 2019. The high temperatures lead to low summer sea ice, cascading impacts on the regional food web and growing concerns over sea level rise.

Average temperatures for the year ending in September were the second highest since 1900, the year records began, scientists said. While that fell short of a new high, it fit a worrying trend: Over all, the past six years have been the warmest ever recorded in the region.

“It’s really showing that we have a system that’s under duress,” said Donald K. Perovich, a professor of engineering at the Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth College and the lead author of the report’s chapter on sea ice.

The results are from a peer-reviewed assessment produced by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that takes a broad look at the effects of climate change in the region and compares current findings with the historical record. [NYT article] (next EI, see Dec 20)

December 10 Peace Love Art Activism