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Black Facts for April 30th

1947 - Scott, Robert “Bobby” (1947- )

Congressman Robert Cortez “Bobby” Scott was born on April 30, 1947 in Washington, D.C. but later resided in Newport News, Virginia.  Scott attended Harvard University and later graduated from the Boston College School of Law.

Scott, a Democrat, entered politics in 1978, running a seat in the Virginia House of Delegates representing Newport News.  In 1983 he was elected to the Virginia State Senate.  During his years in the Virginia Assembly, Scott sponsored legislation related to healthcare, education, crime prevention, economic development, consumer protection and social services.  One of his measures increased the Virginia minimum wage and another produced improvements in healthcare benefits for women, infants, and children.  Scott also sponsored legislation that created the Governor’s Employment and Training Council.  His sponsorship of the Neighborhood Assistance Act led to granting tax credits to businesses for donations made to approved social service and crime prevention programs

In November, 1992 State Senator “Bobby” Scott was elected to his first term in the U.S. Congress where he represented Virginia’s 3rd Congressional District. His victory made him the second African American elected to the United States Congress from Virginia (after John Mercer Langston in the 1880s).  Additionally, he is the first American of Filipino heritage to be elected to Congress.

Congressman Scott serves as chairman of the House Budget Committee and chairman of the subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security.  Additionally, his other House committee assignments include membership on the Committee on the Judiciary, the Committee on Education and Labor and the Committee on the Budget.

Scott is currently spearheading legislation aimed at comprehensive reform in juvenile justice and crime prevention.  His Youth PROMISE Act would provide resources to state and local governments to prevent juvenile crime.  He is also the principal sponsor of the Every Student Counts bill which is designed to reduce high school

1926 - Edythe Turnham Orchestra

Also called Edythe Turnham and her Knights of Syncopation, the Edythe Turnham Orchestra was a prominent fixture in the Seattle music scene during its “Jazz Age” (1920-1933).  It was led by the husband and wife team of Edythe and Floyd Turnham and was one of the two main Seattle bands to find work on a regular basis (the other was the Garfield Ramblers led by Evelyn Bundy and drummer Leonard Gayton). Turnham’s Knights of Syncopation were noted on April 30, 1926 by the Northwest Enterprise, Seattle’s African American newspaper, as “popular musicians.”

Edythe Turnham (Edythe Pane before her marriage to Floyd) was born in Topeka, Kansas around 1890. She moved to Spokane, Washington in 1900 and married Floyd, a carpenter from Texas, in 1908. Edythe played piano from the age of three, and after moving to Spokane, toured with her sister Maggie in a vaudeville act she started. In the early 1920s she gathered her family into a five-piece band, the Knights of Syncopation. With Edythe on piano, her husband playing the drums, their young son Floyd, Jr. on the saxophone, and her sister Maggie as a dancer and entertainer, they started performing around 12th and Jackson Street (the hub of the Seattle jazz scene) as early as 1922. The Knights were so popular that until Local No. 76 (white musicians’ union) protested, they played all over Seattle, including downtown, where only white musicians were typically allowed to perform.

The group toured along the West Coast on the President Line steamship cruises and eventually ended up in Los Angeles. There they changed their stage name to the Dixie Aces and had great success, receiving compliments from top performers of the era such as Duke Ellington. Floyd Turnham, Sr. died in 1936 but Edythe continued to work until 1945. Floyd, Jr. eventually became a prominent and well-known performer in the Los Angeles music scene.

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1860 - Images of African Slavery and the Slave Trade

This gallery of Images of African Slavery and the Slave Trade includes pictures of indigenous and European slave trade, capture, transportation to the coast, slave pens, inspection by European merchants and ships captains, slaving ships, and scenes from the Middle Passage.

Indigenous slavery in West Africa, known as pawnship, differed somewhat from the chattel slavery of the trans-Atlantic trade, since pawns would live amongst a similar culture. Pawns would, however, still be restrained against escape.

Indigenous African slavers from coastal regions would travel far into the interior to obtain slaves. They were generally better armed, having obtained guns from European merchants in trade for slaves.

Prisoners could be held in slave sheds, or barracoons, for several months whilst awaiting the arrival of European merchants.

Slaves are shown hobbled to roughly hewn logs (on left) or in stocks (on right). Slaves would be fastened to the roof supports by rope, attached around their necks or interweaved into their hair.

This engraving, entitled An African man being inspected for sale into slavery while a white man talks with African slave traders, appeared in the detailed account of a former slave ship captain, Theodore Canot - Captain Canot: Twenty Years of an African Slaver, edited by Brantz Mayer and published in New York in 1854.

From an engraving entitled An Englishman Tastes the Sweat of an African, numbered from right to left the image shows Africans displayed for sale in a public market, an African being examined before purchase, an Englishman licking sweat from the Africans chin to test whether he is sick with a tropical disease (a sick slave would quickly infect the rest of the human cargo on a tightly packed slave ship), and an African slave wearing an iron slave marker.

A detailed drawing of the slave ship Brookes, showing how 482 people were to be packed onto the decks. The detailed plans and cross sectional drawing of the slave ship Brookes was distributed by the Abolitionist Society in England as

1961 - Isiah Thomas

Isiah Lord Thomas III is a retired professional basketball player who played with the Detroit Pistons from 1981 to 1994. He was born on April 30, 1961 in Chicago, Illinois and was the youngest of nine siblings. He attended a private school called St. Joseph High School in Illinois, which took him 1.5 hours daily to commute to. He led his high school team to the State Finals and was then recruited by Indiana University to play for their team the Indiana Hoosiers under coach Bob Knight. Many people tried to discourage Isiah from accepting this offer, including his older brother and anonymous letters sent to his home telling him that Knight was a harsh disciplinarian and often mistreated his players. However, he disregarded all this and accepted the Hoosiers’ offer.

In the beginning, Isiah Thomas did find it hard to adjust to Knight’s disciplinarian coaching methods and often got screamed at for not obeying orders. However, his sheer talent and dedication won Knight over, whose manner then softened. Fans loved him as well and nicknamed him “Mr. Wonderful”. Because of his relatively short height for a basketball player, Knight nicknamed him “Pee Wee”. During the 1980-81 season, he was made the captain of the team and led them to win two conference titles and the 1981 NCAA tournament. He also won the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player award.

The same year, he decided to turn pro and was drafted by the Detroit Pistons NBA team in the 1981 season with a 4 year $1.6 million contract. He led his team to the 1985 conference semi finals where the Pistons lost to the Boston Celtics. In 1987, they reached the Eastern Conference finals where they lost in a very close match, again to the Celtics. In 1988, the team reached the Conference Finals, this time facing the Los Angeles Lakers led by Magic Johnson (a close friend of Isiah’s), James Worthy, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. The Pistons lost the contest in a close game but came back to win the title for the next two consecutive years. Isiah was voted NBA Finals Most Valuable