February 27, 2013 ~ Alabama officials argued before U. S. Supreme Court in Shelby County v. Holder that Voting Rights Act of 1965’s protections are no longer needed to prevent discrimination; on June 25, the Court agreed.
Author Archives: rtsallie
Selfie Sunday
Day in the History of Racial Injustice
February 26, 2012 ~ Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old Black boy, was murdered in Sanford, Florida; police arrested shooter George Zimmerman only after national outcry against claim that Stand Your Ground law barred his prosecution.
Day in the History of Racial Injustice
February 25, 1886 ~ Anti-Chinese convention in Boise, Idaho, starts a movement, often violent, against Chinese immigrants. Chinese share of Idaho’s population (more than 4,000 Chinese residents) decreased from one-third in 1870 to nearly zero by 1910.
Eight Grade Artists Do WORK
Today I spent a little time in Mr. Love’s 8th-grade art class.
Day in the History of Racial Injustice
February 24, 1865 ~ Kentucky refused to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment abolishing slavery and does not do so until 1976.
Civil Rights Class Week 5
More than 1,700 people who served in the U.S. Congress in the 18th, 19th and even 20th centuries owned human beings at some point in their lives, according to a Washington Post investigation of censuses and other historical records. When Congress voted on the 1820 Missouri Compromise, which prohibited the expansion of slavery in theContinue reading “Civil Rights Class Week 5”
Day in the History of Racial Injustice
February 23, 2020 ~Ahmaud Marquez Arbery (born May 8, 1994), a 25-year-old Black man, was murdered in Satilla Shores, a neighborhood near Brunswick in Glynn County, Georgia, United States. Arbery was jogging when three white men decided to pursue him: Travis McMichael and his father Gregory, who were armed and in one vehicle, and theirContinue reading “Day in the History of Racial Injustice”
Day in the History of Racial Injustice
February 22, 1898 ~ After Frazier Barker was appointed postmaster of Lake City, South Carolina, enraged white people burned his house, fatally shot him and is infant a daughter. His wife and other children were wounded.
Day in the History of Racial Injustice
February 21, 1891 ~ A mob of white men in Glynn County, Georgia, hung two Black men, Wesley Lewis and Henry Jackson, from a tree and shot them over 1,000 times, and left them on display for thousands of white spectators.
