Members of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) were arrested and erroneously charged with inciting violence at the 1972 Republican National Convention in Miami. They were all later acquitted after a lengthy and much publicized trial.
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The Battle of Blair Mountain was the climax of two mine wars fought in the West Virginia coalfields.
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Julius Taylor founded and ran Broad Ax, a Utah-based Black newspaper which challenged commonly accepted beliefs about politics and religion at the end of the twentieth century.
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People’s Tribunal on killing of three young men at Algiers Motel in Detroit.
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A group of white people rioted after forming a mob to lynch Maurice Mays, a Black man in custody on for the alleged (with no evidence) murder of a white woman in Knoxville, Tennessee.
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In September 2005, Hurricane Katrina, the third deadliest storm in U.S. history, took a disproportionate toll on the Gulf Coast’s Black residents. The impact of Katrina is still felt today for Gulf Coast residents.
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The National Chicano Moratorium March was held to protest the Vietnam War and Latino journalist Ruben Salazar was killed.
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Two African American men were burned at the stake in Sulphur Springs, Texas.
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Massachusetts farmers arm themselves and rebel against taxation under the Articles of Confederation.
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The Columbia Avenue Riot began in the predominantly African American neighborhoods of North Philadelphia after an altercation with the police and continued for three days.
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Hundreds of thousands of civil rights activists marched on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
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White supremacists violently attacked a Jacksonville youth-led lunch counter sit-in.
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Colin Kaepernick, quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers, draws attention to his quiet protest against police brutality during an NFL pre-season game.
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The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters was launched in New York.
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The destruction of a local Black elementary school and the refusal to allow Black children to attend the all-white school led to a years-long battle for desegregation in Old Fort, North Carolina.
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Howard Zinn, a historian, author, professor, playwright, and activist, was born in Brooklyn, New York.
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