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    This Day in History: April 15th

    By Shayla FarrowApril 15, 20263 Mins Read
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    Asa Philip Randolph, founder of the March on Washington and the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, was born on April 15, 1889, in Crescent City, Florida.

    Randolph’s father was a tailor and a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal church. His mother was a skilled seamstress. Both of his parents were also fierce fighters for justice. Randolph recalled the night his father left the home with a pistol in his coat to stave off a lynching of a Black man at the local jail while his mother waited up for him in the front room of their home with a shotgun.

    They also believed that education was the great equalizer and both Randolph and his older brother, James Jr.,  excelled in school. They attended the only Black high school in East Jacksonville, Florida where Randolph was a standout in literature, drama and public speaking as well as baseball and the choir. He was the valedictorian of The Class of 1907 at Cookman Institute.

    After graduation, Randolph read W.E.B. DuBois’s The Souls of Black Folk and was inspired to do more than work odd jobs and sing and act, which he was pursuing. The book awakened a desire to fight for equality in Randolph, who was not finding work in Florida outside of menial and manual-labor jobs.

    Randolph moved to New York City in 1911, where he enrolled in City College.

    He still loved the arts and helped organize the Shakespearean Society in Harlem, where he acted in plays such as Othello, Romeo and Hamlet. He also got involved with the Industrial Workers of the World, which promoted socialist ideals. Randolph started studying Marxism and developed his own views on the subject, which evolved into a focus on economic and employment equality for Blacks.

    He, along with Chandler Owen, who was a law student at Columbia University when he met Randolph, opened an employment office in Harlem to provide job training for the thousands coming to New York during the Great Migration. They encouraged these newly trained workers to also join trade unions.

    Many unions didn’t allow Blacks to join. In 1925, Randolph organized and led the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first Black labor union in America.

    In addition to the union, Randolph also took on political leaders to demand equal rights. He pressed President Franklin Delano Roosevelt into issuing Executive Order 8802 in 1941, which banned discrimination in the defense industries during World War II. He also pressured President Harry S. Truman to issue Executive Order 9981 in 1948 to integrate the armed forces.

    In 1963, Randolph led The March on Washington, which was organized by Bayard Rustin and intended to raise awareness of the economic disparities between Blacks and whites. The march saw 250,000 people converge on the Mall in Washington, D.C., where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., delivered his famed “I Have a Dream” speech.

    In 1967, Randolph inspired the “A Freedom Budget,” which was published by the Randolph Institute in January of that year.

    Randolph, whose wife Lucille died in 1963 before The March on Washington, died in Manhattan in his apartment from a reported heart ailment. He had no children.

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    Shayla Farrow

    Shayla Farrow is a multimedia journalist with a Media, Journalism and Film Communications degree from Howard University and a master’s degree in management from Wake Forest University. Shayla discovered her passion for journalism while working as a reporter with Spotlight Network at Howard University. She worked with other campus media, including NewsVision, WHBC 96.3 HD3, WHUR-FM, 101 Magazine, and the HU News Service. Her reporting abilities earned her opportunities to interview industry professionals including Cathy Hughes, movie director Malcolm D. Lee and creator of “David Makes Man,” Tarell Alvin McCraney. Shayla intends to leave her mark in journalism by broadcasting radio and television shows that cover a wide array of topics ranging from politics and social justice issues to entertainment and pop culture. She has worked on a variety of shows, including the Wendy Williams Show, The Joe Madison Show, and The Karen Hunter Show as well as worked as a producer for the NBC News Channel. However, her ultimate career goal is to own a television and audio entertainment platform that provides quality content to viewing and listening audiences.

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