October 17, 2008 Levi Stubbs, lead vocalist of the Four Tops, died. Stubbs was born Levi Stubbles on June 6, 1936 in Detroit, Michigan. In 1954, he and three friends formed a singing group called the Four Aims. Two years later they changed their name to the Four Tops and in 1963 signed with Motown […]

October 17th in African American History – Levi Stubbs
Tags: Motown Records, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Vocal Group Hall of Fame

October 17th in African American History – Mae Carol Jemison
Tags: International Space Hall of Fame, NASA, National Women’s Hall of Fame, physician
October 17, 1956 Mae Carol Jemison, physician and the first African American woman to travel in space, was born in Decatur, Alabama. Jemison entered Stanford University at the age of 16 and graduated in 1977 with a Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering and a Bachelor of Arts in African and Afro-American Studies. She earned […]

October 16th in African American History – Leon Howard Sullivan
Tags: NAACP, Presidential Medal of Freedom, Spingarn Medal, United Nations
October 16, 1922 Leon Howard Sullivan, minister, civil rights leader and activist, was born in Charleston, West Virginia. Sullivan became a Baptist minister at 18 and moved to New York where he graduated from the Union Theological Seminary in 1945 and earned a Master’s in Religion from Columbia University in 1947.

October 16th in African American History – Arthur Art Blakey
October 16, 1990 Arthur “Art” Blakey, jazz drummer and bandleader, died. Blakey was born October 11, 1919 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. By the time he was a teenager he was playing the piano full-time and leading a commercial band. Shortly afterwards, he taught himself to play the drums. In 1947, Blakey recorded with a group led […]

October 15th in African American History – The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense
Tags: Black Panther Party
October 15, 1966 The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was founded in Oakland, California by Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton. In 1967, the organization marched on the California State Capitol to protest a selective ban on weapons and they published their official newspaper “The Black Panther.” By 1968, the party had expanded into many […]

October 15th in African American History – Ernest C. Withers
Tags: Army, Civil Rights Movement, photojournalist, World War II
October 15, 2007 Ernest C. Withers, photojournalist, died. Withers was born August 7, 1922 in Memphis, Tennessee. He worked as a photographer in the United States Army during World War II and opened a studio in Memphis when he returned. He also worked for three years as one of the first African American police officers […]

October 14th in African American History – Oscar McKinley Charleston
Tags: Army, baseball, Baseball Hall of Fame, Negro League
October 14, 1896 Oscar McKinley Charleston, Negro League baseball player and manager, was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. Charleston joined the U. S. Army at the age of 15 and served in the Philippines. He began his professional baseball career in 1915 with the Indianapolis ABC’s and over his career he had a .348 batting average […]
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Previous Days in African American History
Other African American History Posts
- September 17th in African American History – Orlando Manuel Cepeda
- August 29th in African American History – Michael Joseph Jackson
- January 28th in African American History – “We Are the World”
- January 6th in African American History – Louis Emanuel Martin, Jr.
- July 11th in African American History – Walter Hawkins