This Week In Black History May 28-June 3, 2025

  • MAY 28

1936—Betty Shabazz, the widow of Black nationalist leader Malcolm X, was born on this day in Detroit, Mich. Shabazz was born Betty Jean Sand­ers and raised by foster parents. She attended Tuskegee Institute (now university) and became a registered nurse. In 1994, she created a national controversy when she linked Nation of Islam leader Min. Louis Farrakhan to the assassination of Malcolm X. However, she and Farrakhan recon­ciled in 1995 and she spoke at the historic Million Man March. She died June 23, 1997 as a result of injuries received in a house fire set by her grandson.

2010—A book is released reveal­ing that during the mid-1970s when much of the world was lining up to help overthrow racist White minori­ty rule in South Africa, Israel was attempting to aid the racist regime up to the point of providing it with chemical and nuclear weapons for possible use against the country’s majority Black population. The docu­ments were discovered by American scholar Sasha Polakow-Suransky while researching the book “The Un­spoken Alliance: Israel’s Secret Rela­tionship with Apartheid South Africa.” Though seldom mentioned by Amer­ican media, it was an open secret during the 1970s that Israel was one of the Apartheid regime’s closest al­lies. Apartheid is what the minority White government called its system of racial oppression.

  • MAY 29

1854—Escaped slave and abolition­ist Sojourner Truth delivers her fa­mous “Ain’t I a Woman” speech at the Ohio Women’s Rights Convention in Akron. Truth, born Isabella Baum­free, had been physically and sexu­ally abused by various slave owners and their wives in New York. She sought refuge in religion. She finally escaped after her last slave owner reneged on a promise to free her. She became the leading female abo­litionist of the period giving powerful speeches. She traveled widely in her anti-slavery mission telling friends “The spirit calls me and I must go.”

1865—President Andrew Johnson announces his Reconstruction pro­gram after the Civil War. However, Johnson was one of the greatest be­trayers of Blacks in American history. He went back on many of the prom­ises made to the former slaves by the recently assassinated Abraham Lin­coln. Indeed, Johnson’s Reconstruc­tion program was more favorable to the former slave owners and Con­federate soldiers than it was to the ex-slaves. Johnson even opposed granting Blacks voting rights.

  • MAY 30

1822—What could have been the largest and most elaborate slave rebellion in American history is be­trayed by a house slave seeking fa­vors from his White master. The re­bellion was organized by Denmark Vesey and involved thousands of Blacks in the Charleston, S.C., area. Vesey was actually a free man who had purchased his freedom. He was doing a thriving business as owner of a carpentry shop. But he had secretly vowed “not to rest until all slaves are free.” The betrayal of the Vesey plot by a house slave resulted in dozens of people, including four Whites, be­ing arrested and many of them were eventually hanged. Vesey was put to death on June 23, 1822.

1903—One of the most outstanding poets in the history of Black America, Countee Cullen, is born in Louisville, Ky., or Baltimore, Md. The exact city of his birth is still debated. However, he was raised in New York City and rose to fame in the early 1920s and became a leading figure in the Har­lem Renaissance. Cullen married, but there were persistent rumors that he was a closet homosexual resulting from his troubled childhood including being abandoned by his mother. He died in 1946 of high blood pressure and what was then called uremic poi­soning or acute kidney failure.

  • MAY 31

1870—Congress passes the first Enforcement Act providing stiff pun­ishment for both private citizens and public officials who conspired to de­prive the recently freed slaves of ei­ther their civil rights or their right to vote. The Act was in response to the old plantation aristocracy and the de­feated rebel soldiers who were tak­ing control of Southern governments and enacting “Black Codes” aimed at the suppression of Black freedoms and voting rights. The Act was also in response to the growing power of White terrorist organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan.

1921—The infamous and bloody Tul­sa (Oklahoma) Riots begin. Whites go on a violent rampage lasting sev­eral days. When the rioting was over, an estimated 21 Whites and 60 Blacks were dead. In addition, as many as 15,000 Blacks were left homeless as hundreds of homes and businesses were burned to the ground. The area bearing the brunt of the destruction was known as the “Black Wall Street” because of its large number of Afri­can American owned businesses. As recently as 2007, Detroit Congress­man John Conyers was working on legislation designed to give the few remaining Black survivors of the ri­oting additional time to sue in order to recover some of their loses. The rioting was reportedly sparked by a false claim from a White female ele­vator operator of being assaulted by a Black man. But White jealousy of Black success in the Tulsa area may have also played a major role.

  • JUNE 1

1835—The Fifth National Negro Convention convenes in Phila­delphia, Pa. The gathering of free Blacks demonstrated how history can sometimes come full circle. One major focus of the convention was to urge Blacks to stop referring to themselves as “Africans,” “Blacks” or “Coloreds” and instead adopt the word “Negro” as the official racial designation. Gradually, the designa­tion became popular even though all Blacks did not agree with it. Re­searcher Richard Benjamin Moore writes that at the time some Blacks felt the word “Negro” was “a symptom of the degrading sickness of opportun­ism and the increasing acceptance of inferior social and political status.”

1864—Solomon George Washing­ton Dill is murdered by angry Whites. Dill was one of those rarities in Southern society—a poor White man who supported an end to slavery and Black demands for social justice. Dill’s “crime” was giving what some Whites considered “an incendiary speech” to a group of South Carolina Blacks.

1973—Detroit’s WGPR becomes the nation’s first Black-owned televi­sion station. It was granted a license to operate on this day in 1973 but did not actually go on air until Septem­ber 1975.

  • JUNE 2

1863—Abolitionist and “Under­ground Railroad Conductor” Harriet Tubman leads a force of Union Army guerrilla soldiers into Maryland and frees more than 700 slaves. Tub­man was one of the most noteworthy women in the anti-slavery struggle prior to the Civil War and became a leading voice in the call for the fed­eral government to allow Blacks to fight in the war.

1899—African Americans observe a “National Day of Fasting” to pro­test lynching and other racial at­tacks against Blacks. The day of protest was called by the National Afro-American Council.

1975—James A. Healy becomes the first Black Roman Catholic Bish­op in the United States. He was con­secrated at the Roman Catholic ca­thedral in Portland, Maine.

  • JUNE 3

Charles-Drew.jpg

1904—Dr. Charles R. Drew is born. He grows up to conduct a first of its kind research in blood transfusions and the creation of blood plasma. Drew also established Britain’s first blood bank and in the United States he fought against the segregation of blood based on race. He died on April 1, 1950 as a result of injuries received in an automobile accident while driving in North Carolina.

JOSEPHINE BAKER

1906—Entertainer Josephine Bak­er is born in St. Louis, Mo. At 16, she starred in the hit and controversial musical “Shuffle Along.” However, she did not achieve fame until she left the United States and moved to Paris, France, where her exotic danc­ing and singing made her an inter­national sensation. Baker was mixed race of African American and Native American parentage. She returned to the U.S. several times including in 1963 to speak at the Dr. Martin Luther King-led March on Washington for civil rights.

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