Working Class Calendar

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!workingclasscalendar@lemmy.world is a working class calendar inspired by the now (2023-06-25) closed reddit r/aPeoplesCalendar aPeoplesCalendar.org, where we can post daily events.

Rules

All the requirements of the code of conduct of the instance must be followed.

Community Rules

1. It's against the rules the apology for fascism, racism, chauvinism, imperialism, capitalism, sexism, ableism, ageism, and heterosexism and attitudes according to these isms.

2. The posts should be about past working class events or about the community.

3. Cross-posting is welcomed.

4. Be polite.

5. Any language is welcomed.

Lemmy

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
1
 
 

Joe Slovo (1926 - 1995)

Sun May 23, 1926

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Image: Joe Slovo speaking with Pallo Jordan, another SACP and ANC leader, in the background. [africasacountry.com]


Joe Slovo, born on this day in 1926, was a South African communist politician and miliant opponent of the apartheid system whose wife, Ruth First, was assassinated by the South African police.

A Marxist-Leninist, Slovo was a long-time leader and theorist in the South African Communist Party (SACP), a leading member of the African National Congress (ANC), and a commander of the ANC's military wing Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK).

Slovo was married to Ruth First, another prominent South African anti-apartheid activist who was assassinated by state police via bomb. He, along with First, was arrested and detained for two months during the Treason Trial of 1956, and lived in exile from 1963 to 1990, conducting operations against the apartheid regime from the United Kingdom, Angola, Mozambique, and Zambia.

"No matter what vision one has of South Africa, the first thing that must be done is to destroy racism."

  • Joe Slovo

2
 
 

Margaret Fuller (1810 - 1850)

Wed May 23, 1810

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Margaret Fuller, born on this day in 1810, was an American feminist journalist associated with the American transcendentalism movement. Her work "Woman in the Nineteenth Century" was one of the first major feminist works in the U.S.

Fuller also worked as an editor, translator, critic, and journalist. She became the first American female war correspondent, writing for Horace Greeley's New-York Tribune.

Fuller's book "Woman in the Nineteenth Century" is considered the first major feminist work in the United States, and later feminists like Susan B. Anthony cited her as an inspiration. Fuller was also an advocate of abolishing slavery and prison reform.

"Male and female represent the two sides of the great radical dualism. But in fact they are perpetually passing into one another. Fluid hardens to solid, solid rushes to fluid. There is no wholly masculine man, no purely feminine woman."

- Margaret Fuller


3
 
 

Richard Oakes (1942 - 1972)

Fri May 22, 1942

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Image: Richard Oakes reading the "Indians of All Tribes" proclamation on Alcatraz Island, November 25th, 1969. Photographer Paul Glines [indiancountrytoday.com]


Richard Oakes, born on this day in 1942, was a Mohawk indigenous activist and leader within the Red Power movement, playing a prominent role in the 19-month occupation of Alcatraz Island from 1969 - 1971.

Oakes promoted Native American studies in university curricula and is credited for helping to change U.S. federal government "Termination" policies (policies regarding assimilation of indigenous people into the culture of the colonizer) of Native American peoples and culture.

In 1969, Oakes led a 19-month occupation of Alcatraz Island with LaNada Means, approximately 50 California State University students, and 37 others. On January 5th, 1970, Oakes' 12-year-old daughter, Yvonne, fell to her death from concrete steps. After her funeral, Oakes left the island.

In 1972, Oakes was shot and killed in Sonoma, California, by Michael Morgan, a YMCA camp manager. Allegedly, Oakes violently confronted Morgan, and Morgan responded by drawing a handgun and fatally shooting Oakes.

Oakes was unarmed when he was shot. Morgan claimed he acted in self-defense, and was acquitted on charges of voluntary manslaughter.

"We do not fear your threat to charge us with crimes on our land. We and all other oppressed peoples would welcome spectacle of proof before the world of your title by genocide. Nevertheless, we seek peace."

- Richard Oakes


4
 
 

Dawoud al-Marhoon Arrested (2012)

Tue May 22, 2012

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On this day in 2012, Dawoud Al Marhoon (1995 - ), was arrested and indefinitely detained by the Saudi Arabian government after refusing to spy on anti-state protesters during the Arab Spring. After 10 years in prison, he was released in 2022.

After being arrested for participating in the Arab Spring protests, the Saudi authorities tortured him for weeks and refused to allow him to communicate with anyone on the outside world. For two weeks, Dawoud's family had no idea where Saudi authorities were holding him, and he was prevented from speaking to a lawyer.

In September of 2015, al-Marhoon was sentenced to death, to be carried out by beheading and crucifixion. Secrecy surrounding Saudi's execution practices prevented the family or the prisoner from receiving prior notification on when the execution would have been carried out.

According to the Middle East Monitor, al-Marhoon was released on February 2nd, 2022, having served nearly ten years in prison.


5
 
 

Paris Commune Dissolves (1871)

Sun May 21, 1871

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Image: A barricade in the Paris Commune, March 18th, 1871. [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1871, the Paris Commune, a hotbed of radical working class politics and watershed moment in revolutionary anti-capitalist history, was crushed by the French National Army. 20,000 people were killed and 44,000 arrested.

The Paris Commune was a radical socialist government that had formed in Paris a few months earlier, on March 18th, 1871. The Commune developed a set of progressive, secular, and social democratic policies, although its existence was too brief to implement all of them.

Among these policies were the separation of church and state, abolition of child labor, abolishment of interest on some forms of debt, as well as the right of employees to take over and run an enterprise if it was deserted by its original owner.

The Commune was attacked by the French National Army on May 21st, 1871, beginning the so-called "Bloody Week" which defeated the revolutionary movement. After crushing the rebellion, the French government imprisoned approximately 44,000 people for their role in the uprising. Estimated deaths from the fighting are around 20,000.

The Paris Commune was analyzed by many communist thinkers, including Karl Marx, who identified it as a dictatorship of the proletariat. Vladimir Lenin danced in the snow when the newly formed Bolshevik government lasted longer than the Paris Commune.

The episode inspired similar revolutionary attempts around the world, including in Moscow (1905), Petrograd (1917), and Shanghai (1927 and 1967).


6
 
 

White Night Riots (1979)

Mon May 21, 1979

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Image: Rioters on the San Francisco Civic Center plaza causing property damage during the White Night riots. Burning police cruisers are in the background. Photo credit to Daniel Nicoletta [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1979, the "White Night Riots" began in San Francisco after Harvey Milk's assassin was convicted of voluntary manslaughter, the most lenient sentence possible. More than 160 people were hospitalized, including 60 cops.

Harvey Milk was one of the first openly gay politicians in the U.S., and had been elected to serve as a city supervisor in San Francisco in 1977. On November 28th, 1978, Milk, along with Mayor George Moscone, were assassinated by former police officer and disgruntled ex-supervisor Dan White.

On May 21st, 1979, Dan White was convicted of voluntary manslaughter, widely perceived to be the lightest possible sentence for his actions. His lawyers successfully argued that White was depressed, citing how much junk food he consumed. This was pejoratively dubbed the "Twinkie Defense".

Following the announcement of White's conviction, members of San Francisco's gay community began marching in protest, starting at Castro Street and ending with more than 5,000 arriving at City Hall. Protesters shouted "Kill Dan White!" and "Dump Dianne!", a reference to then Mayor Dianne Feinstein.

Some protesters began breaking City Hall windows, and the crowd was attacked by officers with night sticks. Protesters began setting police cruisers on fire. As one man ignited a cop car, he shouted to a reporter "Make sure you put in the paper that I ate too many Twinkies!" Sixty officers were injured and about two dozen arrests were made.

Later that evening, the police raided the predominantly gay Castro neighborhood, invading the Elephant Walk bar and brutalizing its occupants. Police entered the bar yelling slurs, shattering bar windows, and attacking patrons. Other officers outside indiscriminately attacked gays on the street.

The following day, Supervisor Harry Britt, who had replaced Milk, refused to apologize for the riot: "Harvey Milk's people do not have anything to apologize for. Now the society is going to have to deal with us not as nice little fairies who have hairdressing salons, but as people capable of violence. We're not going to put up with Dan Whites anymore."

Just a few months after the White Night Riots, Dianne Feinstein was elected to a full term as San Francisco Mayor with some support from the gay community. One of her first actions in office was to appoint a new Chief of Police who oversaw the hiring of a more diverse police force. By 1980, one in seven new police recruits was queer.

"If a bullet should enter my brain, let that bullet destroy every closet door."

- Harvey Milk


7
 
 

Toussaint Louverture (1743 - 1803)

Mon May 20, 1743

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François-Dominique Toussaint Louverture, born on this day in 1743, was a Haitian general and leader of the Haitian Revolution, the first successful slave revolution in the Americas. Haiti was the first country in the region to outlaw slavery.

Louverture's participation in the war was complex, first fighting for the Spanish against the French; then for France against Spain and Great Britain; and finally, he fought on behalf of independence for Saint-Domingue against the French.

Initially, Louverture was only supportive of fighting for better living conditions for the enslaved, but, after committing to the full abolition of slavery in 1791, he issued a proclamation at Camp Turel of St. Domingue: "Brothers and friends, I am Toussaint Louverture; perhaps my name has made itself known to you. I have undertaken vengeance. I want Liberty and Equality to reign in St Domingue. I am working to make that happen. Unite yourselves to us, brothers and fight with us for the same cause."

As a revolutionary leader, Louverture's military and political acumen helped transform the fledgling slave rebellion into a revolutionary movement. He governed Saint-Domingue with varying degrees of power for several years, proclaiming an autonomous constitution for the colony in 1801 that declared himself its governor for life.

Louverture was eventually tricked into being arrested by Brunet, a French General, and deported to France, where he died of unknown causes while imprisoned. Shortly thereafter, the colony finally achieved independence under the leadership of Jean-Jacques Dessalines.

"This gun is liberty; hold for certain that the day when you no more have it, you will be returned to slavery."

- Toussaint Louverture


8
 
 

Earl Browder (1891 - 1973)

Wed May 20, 1891

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Earl Russell Browder, born on this day in 1891, was an American political activist, author, and leader within the Communist Party USA (CPUSA), serving as its General Secretary from 1930 to 1945.

Browder's primary political rival within the Party was William Z. Foster; the two sharply disagreed on what the organization's stance towards the Roosevelt administration should be. Foster was the more radical of the two, while Browder endorsed Roosevelt's "New Deal", offering critical support to his administration.

Browder was the chairman of CPUSA when the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact (an agreement of non-aggression between the Soviet and Nazi governments), and the Party quickly changed from being militantly anti-fascist to only engaging in moderate criticism of Germany. CPUSA's membership declined by 15% in the following year.

Browder was an advocate for a cooperative relationship between the Soviet Union and the United States after World War II, and was sharply criticized for this by the French Communist Party, later revealed to have done so on orders from Moscow in the "Duclos Letter".

Due to the domestic Red Scare in the U.S. and Browder's ambitions clashing with the Soviet agenda, Browder was expelled from the Communist Party on February 5th, 1946.


9
 
 

Mark Ashton (1960 - 1987)

Thu May 19, 1960

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Image: A photograph of Mark Ashton, communist gay rights activist. Photo credit to Johnny Orr. [Wikipedia]


Mark Ashton, born on this day in 1960, was a British communist, gay rights activist, and co-founder of the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners (LGSM) group. He passed away from an AIDS-related illness at the age of 26.

Ashton was born on May 19th, 1960 and grew up in Portrush, County Antrim, Northern Ireland. In 1982, he began volunteering with the London Lesbian and Gay Switchboard, supported the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and joined the Young Communist League, later serving as its general secretary.

In 1984, with his friend Mike Jackson, Ashton co-founded the Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners (LGSM) support group after the two men collected donations for striking miners at the London Lesbian and Gay Pride march that year.

Diagnosed with HIV/AIDS, Ashton was admitted to Guy's Hospital on January 30th, 1987 and died 12 days later of Pneumocystis pneumonia. His death prompted a significant response from the gay community, in both writing and attendance of his funeral at Lambeth Cemetery.

The LGSM's activities were dramatized in the 2014 film "Pride", however the film completely omitted Ashton's participation in the Communist Party.

"I had to question the morals and the ideas that society had put there for me to follow. What they wanted me to be was a little straight boy, getting married, settling down, having kids...If that's what they say about sexuality, then what about the rest of life? And I started to see that basically the whole country is not geared for the people. It's geared for the few people who're making money out of it."

- Mark Ashton


10
 
 

Augusto Sandino (1895 - 1934)

Sat May 18, 1895

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Augusto César Sandino, born on this day in 1895, was a Nicaraguan revolutionary and leader of a working class rebellion against the U.S. military occupation of Nicaragua between 1927 and 1933. Despite U.S. Marines attempting to find Sandino for years, he was never captured by U.S. forces.

On February 21th, 1934, Sandino attended a round of talks with Sacasa, the newly elected Nicaraguan President. Upon leaving Sacasa's Presidential Palace, Sandino and five others were stopped in their car at the main gate by local National Guardsmen and were ordered to leave their car.

The National Guardsmen, acting on orders from future Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza García, took Sandino, his brother Socrates, and his two generals to a crossroads section in Larreynaga and executed them.

Although Sandino was called a "bandit" by the United States government, his guerilla style warfare against U.S. forces made him a hero throughout much of Latin America, where he became a symbol of resistance to United States imperialism.

Sandino's life served as an inspiration to both Che Guevara and Fidel Castro, and the Sandinista National Liberation Front, a revolutionary socialist party that overthrew the Somoza dynasty in 1979, is named in his honor.


11
 
 

Daniel Guerin (1904 - 1988)

Thu May 19, 1904

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Daniel Guerin, born on this day in 1904, was a French libertarian communist and pioneering activist for queer liberation.

Born to a wealthy liberal Parisian family, Guerin worked as a bookseller in Syria and Lebanon in the late 1920s, where he began to develop leftist sympathies after witnessing the brutalities of French colonialism.

As a young man, Guerin also traveled across French Indochina, visiting present-day Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. On the journey over, he studied works by socialist theorists, including Marx, Proudhon, and Lenin.

After returning to France in 1930, Guerin moved into a working class neighborhood and began writing for and directly involving himself with syndicalist and revolutionary socialist groups.

While initially drawn to Lenin and Trotsky, he soon came to reject vanguardism in favor of a more libertarian approach, writing "I concluded…that socialism must rid itself of the fake notion of the 'dictatorship of the proletariat' in order to rediscover its libertarian authenticity".

Guerin was also a committed anti-fascist. In his 1936 text "Fascism and Big Business", Guerin explores the connections between the fascist regimes in Italy and Germany, and their ties to local capitalist classes.

In 1940, Guerin was detained by occupying Nazi forces in Oslo. Upon release, he managed to return to France in 1942.

In the late 1940s, Guerin spent some time residing in the United States, continuing his writing there. He wrote of the American labor movement and the black liberation struggle more broadly.

Although Guerin would often directly relate his radicalization to his sexuality, he lived much of his life at a time when the workers' movement, like society at large, tended towards homophobic attitudes.

In 1955, Guerin wrote a text on the studies of American sexologist Alfred Kinsey where he began to openly argue for change, stating: "The vicious circle will only be broken when progressive workers adopt both a more scientific and a more humane attitude towards homosexuality".

For this stance, Guerin was attacked by many portions of the left, including the Communist Party of France (PCF). In 1965, in rejection of his detractors, Guerin came out, becoming one of the first openly gay communist figures in France.

Guerin's politics continued to evolve, and he would variously describe himself as either an anarchist or a Libertarian Marxist. From 1955, he was a member of the group Nouvelle Gauche, which would go throw a series of mergers before becoming part of the Unified Socialist Party in 1960.

In 1963, Guerin presented a report on workers' self-management to Ahmed Ben Bella, the first President of Algeria following successful war for independence against France. He later opposed the military junta that overthrew Ben Bella in 1965.

Guerin was an active participant of the May 68 uprising in France. Aside from the event's obvious broader political and revolutionary significance, this period marked an opening for significant changes in social attitudes - including towards homosexuality. On May 68, Guerin wrote "in contesting class society more broadly, they’re [homosexuals] led to unmask their sexuality against the ‘hetero-police’ at the same time as they fight for the Revolution".

Among Guerin's works are Anarchism: From Theory to Practice, No Gods No Masters: An Anthology of Anarchism, Autobiography of Youth, and Fire in the Blood.

Guerin continued writing and political activity in later years, joining the Union des Travailleurs Communistes Libertaires. He remained a member until his death in 1988.

"The fact that I am married, a father, a grandfather, bisexual, homosexual, this explosive whole, it seems to me that this is what I must leave behind as the final expression of my life as a writer and as a man."

- Daniel Guerin


12
 
 

Cincinnati Time Store Opens (1827)

Fri May 18, 1827

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Image: A sample labor for labor note for the Cincinnati Time Store. Scanned from Equitable Commerce by Josiah Warren (1846) [Wikipedia]


On this day in 1827, anarchist polymath Josiah Warren opened the Cincinnati Time Store, a store whose products could be purchased directly with labor power, one of the first practical applications of mutualist economic concepts.

Josiah Warren (1798 - 1874) was an American individualist anarchist, inventor, musician, printer, and author. Although he never used the term anarchism himself, Warren is sometimes credited as being the first American anarchist.

Warren's Cincinnati Time Store used "labor notes", where the customer purchased a good by agreeing to reproduce the amount of labor time it took to create it, plus a small increase to accommodate the overhead of the store.

Although the store was successful, Warren closed it after three years to create two communities based on the same mutualist foundation: Utopia, Ohio, and Modern Times, New York. Warren's concepts were influential on later anarchists, such as Benjamin Tucker and Émile Armand.


13
 
 

Theresa Garnett (1888 - 1966)

Thu May 17, 1888

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Theresa Garnett, born on this day in 1888, was a militant British suffragette whose acts of feminist rebellion included assaulting Winston Churchill with a whip, shouting "Take that in the name of the insulted women of England!"

Garnett was born in Leeds on May 17th, 1888. In 1907, she joined the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) after being inspired by a speech given by the feminist and later co-founder of the Australian Communist Party Adela Pankhurst.

The WSPU fought for women's suffrage in the United Kingdom and was noted for its use of direct action. Its members heckled politicians, held demonstrations and marches, broke the law to force arrests, broke windows in prominent buildings, set fire to post boxes, committed night-time arson of unoccupied houses and churches, and, when imprisoned, went on hunger strike and endured physically traumatizing force-feeding.

Garnett participated in several of these actions as a young adult, chaining herself in 1909, along with four other activists, to a statue in Parliament in protest of a law meant to prohibit disorderly conduct while Parliament was in session.

On November 14th, 1909, Garnett assaulted Winston Churchill, who instituted policies of force feeding suffragettes in prison, with a whip, striking him several times while shouting "Take that in the name of the insulted women of England!"


14
 
 

Catonsville Nine (1968)

Fri May 17, 1968

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The Catonsville Nine were a group of Catholic activists who, on this day in 1968, seized 378 draft files from a local draft board, dumped them in the parking lot, burned them with homemade napalm, and were promptly arrested by police.

They were found guilty of destruction of U.S. property, destruction of Selective Service files, and interference with the Selective Service Act of 1967. The group was sentenced to a collective 18 years in jail and a fine of $22,000.

Several of the nine - Mary Moylan, Phil Berrigan, Dan Berrigan and George Mische - fled before their prison sentence, forcing the FBI to hunt them down.


15
 
 

Battle of Alamance (1771)

Thu May 16, 1771

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On this day in 1771, the North Carolina "Regulator" movement, a poor peasant uprising in colonial America, was crushed by the North Carolina militia in a clash known as the Battle of Alamance.

The War of the Regulation was an uprising in British America's Carolina colonies, lasting from about 1765 to 1771, in which citizens took up arms against colonial officials, whom they viewed as corrupt, saying that "their highest study is the promotion of their wealth".

Historian Howard Zinn has argued that the Regulator Movement was a form of class conflict, as the Regulators described themselves as poor peasants, oppressed by the wealthier classes.

The battle was fought by more than 2,000 rebels and 1,000 militiamen, resulting in the deaths of at least 35 people and defeat for the Regulators.

After the battle, state militia traveled through Regulator territory, compelling Regulators and their sympathizers to sign loyalty oaths and destroying property of the most active members.


16
 
 

Adrienne Rich (1929 - 2012)

Thu May 16, 1929

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Image: Black and white photograph of Adrienne Rich sitting at a desk, surrounded by piles of books. Photo by Neal Boenzi [poetryfoundation.org]


Adrienne Cecile Rich, born on this day in 1929, was a queer American poet, essayist and feminist. She was called "one of America's foremost public intellectuals" by the Poetry Foundation and is credited with bringing "the oppression of women and lesbians to the forefront of poetic discourse" by the New York Times.

Rich criticized rigid forms of feminist identities, and valorized what she coined the "lesbian continuum", which is a female continuum of solidarity and creativity that impacts and fills women's lives. Notable works by Rich include "On Lies, Secrets, and Silence" (1979), "Blood, Bread, and Poetry: Selected Prose" (1986), and "The Dream of a Common Language" (1978).

"False history gets made all day, any day, the truth of the new is never on the news."

- Adrienne Rich


17
 
 

Nairobi General Strike (1950)

Mon May 15, 1950

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Image: Makhan Singh addressing workers after his release from custody, 1961.


On this day in 1950, a general strike in Nairobi, Kenya began after two trade union leaders were arrested, paralyzing airport travel and public services and leading to the state arresting labor organizers en masse.

The Nairobi General Strike was the culmination of Kenya's post war strike wave and urban upheaval, also coming on the heels of a general strike in Mombasa in 1947, led by the African Workers Federation (AWF).

In the decade leading up to the strike, Nairobi's population more than doubled to at least 100,000, mostly attributable to wartime migration into the city. This was fueled by serious problems of landlessness in the Kikuyu reserves, which were pushing out increasing numbers of ahoi. The land litigation cases that followed, especially in Kiambu, saw the losers becoming either workers in their former lands, now owned by the growing elite of commercial farmers, or simply leaving for Nairobi.

On the morning of May 15th, Fred Kubai and Makhan Singh, leaders in the East African Trades Union Congress (EATCU), were arrested by and charged with being officers of an unregistered trade union refusing to dissolve within the three month notification period.

Later the same day, members of the EATCU declared a general strike to begin on the 16th, but by evening a general strike was already in effect all over Nairobi.

The strike paralyzed airport travel, public services, and greatly limited commercial business. Strike leadership called off the action after a week's worth of protest, disseminating a return-to-work order for May 25th.

In the aftermath of the strike, the power of trade unions was diminished with the government arresting thousands of their members. Despite this setback, the labor movement in Kenya was not broken and continued to gain momentum in the following decade.


18
 
 

Sid Hatfield (1891 - 1921)

Fri May 15, 1891

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William "Sid" Hatfield, born on this day in 1891, was a police chief of Matewan, West Virginia who helped organizing miners resist the union-busting Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency. For this, Hatfield was assassinated in 1921.

Hatfield is most known for his role in "The Battle of Matewan", a shootout between Hatfield, armed miners, and Baldwin-Felts agents that killed ten people. The shootout occurred when Hatfield and Albert Felts (of the Detective Agency) tried to arrest each other, which culminated in Hatfield killing Felts.

Hatfield and another defendant, Ed Chambers, were later assassinated by Baldwin-Felts agents while standing trial for murder, which increased the tensions between coal miners and company owners. The agents were acquitted on the basis of self-defense despite the fact that both Hatfield and Chambers were unarmed.


19
 
 

Jackson State Killings (1970)

Thu May 14, 1970

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Image: Two students at Jackson State peer from a window that was shot out by police on campus in May 1970. Jack Thornell/AP [npr.org]


On this day in 1970, a confrontation began between Jackson State University students and local police, leading to the police opening fire on the crowd, firing more than 460 shots, killing two youths and wounding a dozen more. The murders took place just ten days after the Kent State Massacre.

On the evening of May 14th, over 100 students had gathered on Lynch Street (named after Reconstruction era legislator John Lynch) and were reportedly pelting rocks at white motorists. Tensions increased when a false rumor spread that Charles Evers, older brother of Medgar Evers and a civil rights activist in his own right, had been killed.

The police responded in force; at least 75 Jackson police units from the city of Jackson and the Mississippi Highway Patrol attempted to control the crowd, while firemen extinguished fires that had been set. After the firefighters had left the scene, the police moved to disperse the crowd that had gathered in front of Alexander Hall, a women's dormitory.

Just after midnight, the police opened fire on the building. The gunfire lasted for 30 seconds and more than 460 shots were fired. Every window on the narrow side of the building facing Lynch Street was shattered and two people were killed, one a seventeen year old at a nearby high school. Twelve more were wounded.


20
 
 

Magnus Hirschfeld (1868 - 1935)

Thu May 14, 1868

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Image: German sexologist Magnus Hirschfeld in 1932 [Wikipedia]


Magnus Hirschfeld, born on this day in 1868, was a German physician, sexologist, and feminist whose books were burned by the Nazis. His work was among the earliest advocacy for homosexual and transgender rights in the modern period, according to historian Dustin Goltz.

Hirschfeld was born to a Jewish family in Kolberg, Poland on May 14th, 1868. After completing his studies, Hirschfeld lived in the United States for eight months.

While in Chicago, Hirschfeld, himself a homosexual, noted a strong similarity between the gay subculture between that city and Berlin, leading him to a theory of universality of homosexuality in the human condition.

Hirschfeld became interested in gay rights because many of his gay patients took their own lives. He was struck by the number of his gay patients who had "Suizidalnarben" (scars left by suicide attempts), and often found himself trying to give his patients a reason to live.

During the Harden-Eulenburg affair of 1906-09, a prominent sex scandal in Imperial Germany, Hirschfeld testified "homosexuality was part of the plan of nature and creation just like normal love", causing a national scandal.

Hirschfeld developed a system which categorized 64 possible types of sexual intermediary, including those he described under the term "transvestite", which he coined in 1910, and those he described under the term "transsexuals", a term he coined in 1923. Hirschfeld and the Institute for Sexual Sciences issued a number of transvestite passes to trans people in order to prevent them from being harassed by the police.

Hirschfeld co-wrote and acted in the 1919 film "Anders als die Andern" (English: "Different From the Others"), in which Conrad Veidt played one of the first homosexual characters ever written for cinema. The film had a specific gay rights law reform agenda; after Veidt's character is blackmailed by a male prostitute, he eventually comes out rather than continuing to make the blackmail payments. His career is destroyed and he is driven to suicide.

Less than four months after the Nazis took power in 1933, Hirschfeld's Institute was sacked. On the morning of May 6th, a group of university students who belonged to the National Socialist Student League stormed the institution, shouting "Burn Hirschfeld!" and began to beat up its staff and smash up the premises.

The state seized the Institution's library and held a book burning event four days later. Berlin police arrived at the institution and announced that it was closed forever. Hirschfeld, out of the country at the time, became a political exile and never returned to Germany.

In 1896, one of Hirschfeld's patients, a young army officer struggling with his homosexuality, killed himself. In his suicide note, the officer stated: "The thought that you [Hirschfeld] could contribute a future when the German fatherland will think of us in more just terms sweetens the hour of my death."


21
 
 

Segundo Ruiz Belvis (1829 - 1867)

Wed May 13, 1829

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Ruiz Belvis, born on this day in 1829, was an abolitionist who fought for Puerto Rico's independence from Spain, helping organize the revolutionary rebellion "Grito de Lares". Belvis died while raising funds for the rebellion in Chile.

After studying abroad, Ruiz Belvis returned to Puerto Rico in 1859 and befriended Ramón Emeterio Betances, joining his group "The Secret Abolitionist Society". The society baptized and emancipated thousands of black slave children in an event known as the "aguas de libertad" (waters of liberty).

In 1866, Ruiz Belvis exiled in New York where, with Betances and others, he formed the "Comité Revolucionario de Puerto Rico" (Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico) to organize for the independence of the island.

They developed a plan to send an armed expedition to Puerto Rico, later known as the "Grito de Lares". Before the insurrection could happen, however, Belvis died of illness while on a diplomatic mission in Chile to raise funds for the rebellion.


22
 
 

MOVE Bombing (1985)

Mon May 13, 1985

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Image: The police bombing of the MOVE collective in West Philadelphia killed eleven people and left city blocks in ashes. Photograph from Bettmann / Getty [newyorker.com]


On this day in 1985, Philadelphia police bombed a home occupied by the black liberation group MOVE and let the fire burn out of control - "let the fire burn" - killing five children and six adults, and destroying 65 homes. No charges were filed.

The standoff with MOVE, a black liberation organization, was initiated by the police in an attempt to serve an eviction notice. Eleven people, including five children, died in the fire.

Eyewitnesses claimed that the victims were prevented from fleeing the fire by police gunfire upon escape. Police Commissioner Sambor infamously ordered the fire department to "let the fire burn", destroying 65 nearby homes comprising two city blocks.

Although an investigation found that the law enforcement and fire department actions were negligent, no criminal charges were filed.

In October 2013, a documentary about the stand-off and bombing titled "Let the Fire Burn" was released by Zeitgeist Films.


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Poor People's March (1968)

Sun May 12, 1968

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The Poor People's Campaign was a march on Washington D.C. to gain economic justice for poor people in the United States that began on this day in 1968, just one month after the assassination of one of its key organizers, MLK Jr.

The protest was also organized by Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and carried out under the leadership of Ralph Abernathy in the wake of King's assassination.

After presenting an organized set of demands to Congress and executive agencies, participants set up a 3,000-person protest camp on the Washington Mall, where they stayed for six weeks in the spring of 1968.

Among those demands was a proposal for an "economic bill of rights" that included a commitment to full employment, a guaranteed annual income measure, and more low-income housing for poor Americans of all races.

"I think it is necessary for us to realize that we have moved from the era of civil rights to the era of human rights…

When we see that there must be a radical redistribution of economic and political power, then we see that for the last twelve years we have been in a reform movement…

That after Selma and the Voting Rights Bill, we moved into a new era, which must be an era of revolution…"

  • MLK Jr., in a 1967 planning meeting

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Panther 21 Acquitted (1971)

Wed May 12, 1971

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Image: A poster depicting Panther Zayd Malik Shakur with his hand raised. The poster reads "FREE THE PANTHER 21!" From newafrikan77 on WordPress.


On this day in 1971, the Panther 21 were acquitted of more than 156 charges after two years of legal proceedings. Afeni Shakur, facing 300 years in prison while pregnant with her son Tupac, successfully defended herself in court.

On April 2nd, 1969, 21 members of the Harlem Chapter of the Black Panther Party were formally indicted and charged with 156 counts of "conspiracy" to blow up subway and police stations, five local department stores, six railroads and the Bronx-based New York Botanical Garden.

Each member of the 21 was held on $100,000 bail, $2.1 million in total. 22-year old Alice Faye Williams, better known as Afeni Shakur, was the first to make bail in January 1970.

The Panther 21 Trial became the longest and most expensive trial New York state history, spanning over eight months. During the court proceedings, it was revealed that the FBI had planted undercover infiltrators. These infiltrators admitted their role as provocateurs under oath.

Afeni represented herself in the trial, facing 300 years in prison and pregnant with her second son, Tupac Shakur. On May 12th, 1971, after two years of legal proceedings and just 45 minutes of jury deliberation, the Panther 21 were acquitted on all 156 charges of conspiracy.


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Ellsberg Espionage Charges Dropped (1973)

Fri May 11, 1973

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Image: Daniel Ellsberg, co-defendant in the Pentagon Papers case, talks to media outside the Federal Building in Los Angeles on April 28th, 1973. Photo credit Wally Fong, AP [nbcnews.com]


On this day in 1973, the charges of espionage, theft, and conspiracy levied against Daniel Ellsberg, the whistleblower responsible for leaking the Pentagon Papers, were dropped due to state misconduct, including the FBI tapping his phone.

Daniel Ellsberg is an American economist, activist and former United States military analyst who, while employed by the RAND Corporation, caused a national political controversy in 1971 when he released the Pentagon Papers, a top-secret Pentagon study of the U.S. government decision-making in relation to the Vietnam War.

On January 3rd, 1973, Ellsberg was charged under the Espionage Act of 1917 along with other charges of theft and conspiracy, carrying a total maximum sentence of 115 years.

Due to governmental misconduct and illegal evidence-gathering all charges against Daniel Ellsberg were dropped on May 11th, 1973. This misconduct included, but was not limited to, White House operatives burglarizing the office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist and the FBI secretly tapping his phone.


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