David Kurlander Profile picture
Dec 2, 2021 16 tweets 13 min read Read on X
On Now & Then this week, we encored our July ep on the history of federal holidays, in which @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 explained the development of July 4th, Election Day, & Columbus Day. In the Time Machine, I looked at the battle over MLK Day:

cafe.com/article/to-tho…
On January 15th, 1969, nine months after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated, millions marked what would have been his 40th birthday. In Atlanta, singer @harrybelafonte and Rosa Parks joined King's family and thousands in a solemn parade ( Irving Philips for @afronews)
Coretta Scott King, @OfficialMLK3, Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen Jr., and other King family members also broke ground on the 192-unit low-income MLK Jr. Village housing project (Irving Phillips for @afronews).
Simultaneously in Washington, Michigan Rep. John Conyers and Illinois Senator Edward Brooke led the initial push to declare King’s birthday a federal holiday. By March, Congress received 500,000 letters supporting the initiative (Irving Phillips for @afronews):
On April 1st, 1969, 150 protestors delayed the opening of a Washington D.C. City Council meeting to advocate for the holiday (Stephen Northup for @washingtonpost):
Ralph D. Abernathy, King's successor as @NationalSCLC president, advocated for the holiday in the lead-up to King's next birthday in January 1970. Rev. Douglas Moore of the Black United Front took issue with white involvement in the initiative (@AP, January 9th, 1970):
On April 4th, 1970, exactly two years after King's killing, Congress received 6.5 million signatures in favor of the holiday. Leaders of the petition campaign joined with Conyers & NY Rep. Shirley Chisholm to examine the outpouring of support (@afronews, April 4th, 1970):
Conyers and Brooke introduced bills throughout the 1970s, but to no avail. Democratic Presidential Candidate Sen. George McGovern joined in the fight in 1971 (@thelasentinel, Jan. 7, 1971), and Black servicemen in Vietnam also took up the cause (@afronews, Jan. 23rd, 1971):
Finally, in 1979, the King Holiday Bill seemed poised to pass. A group of Republican congressional holdouts pushed through an amendment setting the holiday on a Sunday to avoid a day off and gave anti-King statements. The effort was scuttled (@MIChronicle, Nov. 1979):
In 1981, @StevieWonder released "Happy Birthday," a song about the importance of the holiday: "“I just never understood / How a man who died for good / Could not have a day that would / Be set aside for his recognition.”
Wonder also organized a massive parade in Washington for January 15th, 1981, on what would have been King's 52nd birthday. He offered a rousing speech, recorded by @whuttv and stored in the @americanarchivepub:

americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aa…
And he sang happy birthday to King with fellow groundbreaking recording artists and activists Johnny Taylor and Gil Scott Heron (@NYAmNews, Jan. 15, 1981)
When the Bill went down in Congress again, @StevieWonder upped his efforts. He wrote a number of opinion pieces, including a January 1982 @Essence essay, and held an even larger parade with @MsGladysKnight and @RevJJackson (Fred Sweets for @washingtonpost, Jan. 15 1982):
He also visited House Speaker Tip O'Neill with Coretta Scott King (@AP, Feb. 24, 1982) as part of a larger push to directly impact congressional opinion (James Atherton for the @washingtonpost, Jan. 7, 1983)
Finally, in October 1983, after fifteen years of widespread activism, the Bill reached a decidedly-not-thrilled President Reagan's desk. Here, Republican and holiday backer Senator Howard Baker celebrates with Coretta Scott King and @OfficialMLK3 (@AP, Oct. 20, 1983):
Check out the full piece for more on the congressional battles over MLK Day (and North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms' crusade against the holiday), and listen to @HC_Richardson and @jbf1755 on the encore of the Now & Then ep on federal holidays here:
cafe.com/now-and-then/e…

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More from @DavidKurlander

Sep 15, 2023
I wanted to pen a little love letter to free online history archives as a way of marking the end of Now & Then and expressing how much researching for @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 meant to me. Take a read (and check out the thread) for some invaluable historical tools:
When I first started producing Now & Then, I knew a lot more about 20th century America than I did about the early years. The eminently patient @jbf1755 helped to change that, and I also took to the @USNatArchives Founders Online portal:

founders.archives.gov
Founders Online has over 185,000 searchable letters and documents written by the Founders & Framers. This came up huge in our tenth episode, where we wanted to explore the surreal time that Thomas Jefferson shipped a moose to France. Here's the full ep:

cafe.com/now-and-then/p…
Read 47 tweets
Jun 16, 2023
How has the West responded to past droughts? On Now & Then, @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 put the recent Colorado River agreement into context. In the Time Machine, I look at how the Golden State confronted the 1976-1977 dry spell:

cafe.com/article/everyo…
In late 1975, a high-pressure ridge in the Pacific pushed precipitation North to Canada and South to Mexico; California was entering a drought, and the national media was taking notice (@baltimoresun, Jan. 22, 1976): Image
The drought hit farmers early and hard. Over the course of 1976, California farmers lost $500 million, while water-intensive crops like artichokes dried up almost completely (PC: Sandy Solmon, @nytimes, Feb. 2, 1977): Image
Read 25 tweets
Jan 13, 2023
How do we know when we are in a new era? On Now & Then, @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 talked about how epochal shifts have shaped America's self-image. In the Time Machine, I look at Marilyn Ferguson’s vibe-defining 1980 book "The Aquarian Conspiracy":

cafe.com/article/a-rema…
Marilyn Ferguson was 42 when she published "The Aquarian Conspiracy." A poet & journalist from Grand Junction, CO, she had traveled a winding literary road to arrive at her impactful tome (PC: Mary Frampton, @latimes, Nov. 13, 1980): Image
In 1968, while living in Houston, Ferguson authored "Champagne Living on a Beer Budget" with her then-husband Mike. The book offered common-sense money-savers for wannabe jet-setters, like house-swapping for vacations instead of hotels: Image
Read 21 tweets
Jul 1, 2022
What did Justice Clarence Thomas’s predecessor, the legendary Justice Thurgood Marshall, say upon retiring? On Now & Then, @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 processed Roe’s reversal. In the Time Machine, I look at Marshall’s exit and its poignant relevance:

cafe.com/article/libert…
Justice Marshall’s final dissent came on June 27th, 1991, in Payne v. Tennessee. The Court ruled that a victim impact statement in a brutal double-killing was admissible, a reversal of precedent. Here’s @nytimes coverage of the case (June 28, 1991):
In Booth v. Maryland (1987), the Court had barred the use of victim impact statements in capital cases, arguing that the tactic violated the 8th Amendment’s clause against cruel and unusual punishment. Justice Powell wrote the majority opinion (@nytimes, June 16, 1987):
Read 21 tweets
May 20, 2022
How should we interpret Elon Musk’s free speech criticisms? On Now & Then, @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 talked about how gov’t and citizens have defined free speech. In the Time Machine, I look back at the 1995 Washington battle over Internet speech:

cafe.com/article/the-po…
The Internet exploded between 1993 and 1995, with @AOL, the popular dial-up provider, seeing revenues grow from $40 mil to $375 mil. In January 1996, @Newsweek provided this telling graph:
Americans struggled over how to keep their kids safe online, especially amid sometimes-exaggerated reports over the pervasiveness of online pornography. Here are other telling @Newsweek infographics from July 1995:
Read 20 tweets
Mar 4, 2022
How can a State of the Union address change the world? On Now & Then, @HC_Richardson & @jbf1755 spoke on foreign policy in #SOTU speeches. In the Time Machine, I looked at Carter’s 1980 #SOTU, which came weeks after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan:
cafe.com/article/let-th…
On June 3rd, 1979, @washingtonpost political analyst Jim Hoagland wrote an article called “A Carter Doctrine for the Middle East?” You can read the full article here:
washingtonpost.com/archive/opinio…
Hoagland argued that the collapse of the Iranian Shah and new tensions between Egypt & Saudi Arabia pushed the U.S. to militarily protect oil access in the Persian Gulf. The article included this very forthright Uncle Sam Cartoon by @BobBarkin:
Read 25 tweets

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