(The third entry makes me giggle.)
| December 4, 1833 The American Anti-Slavery Society was formed by Arthur Tappan in Philadelphia. He and his brother Lewis had been active abolitionists throughout their lives, including providing legal defense for the Africans who mutinied on the slave ship Amistad. ![]() ![]() Arthur Tappan The Anti-Slavery Society produced The Slave’s Friend, a monthly pamphlet of Christian and abolitionist poems, songs, and stories for children. In its pages, young readers were encouraged to collect money for the anti-slavery cause. |
| December 4, 1916 Five members of a women’s suffrage group unrolled a banner from the visitor’s gallery during President Wilson’s annual message (state of the union) to Congress, asking, “Mr. President, What will you do for woman suffrage?” There was no mention of the issue in his speech. ![]() Wilson and suffrage |
December 4, 1969![]() President Richard Nixon President Richard Nixon, Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew and 40 U.S. governors embarked on a fact-finding mission to discover the causes of the generation gap. They viewed films of “simulated acid trips” and listened to hours of “anti-establishment rock music.” ![]() Vice-President Spiro T. Agnew |
December 4, 1969![]() Fred Hampton Black Panther party leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were assassinated by Chicago Police officers with cooperation from the FBI. Hampton had founded the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party at the age of 20. He led in establishing the Breakfast for Children program and a free health clinic on the west side of the City. A main purpose of the Panthers was to resist police violence. One of Hampton’s achievements was to persuade Chicago’s most powerful street gangs to agree on a non-aggression pact. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, however, considered the Panthers as “the greatest threat to the internal security of the country.” The Panther party headquarters had been raided three times with over 100 members arrested. The Senate Intelligence Committee, led by Frank Church (D-Idaho), revealed in 1976 that William O’Neal, Hampton’s bodyguard, was an FBI informant who had delivered an apartment floor-plan to the Bureau with an “X” marking the bed where Hampton died. About 100 shots were fired by the police, just one from the building. The survivors, including Deborah Johnson, Hampton’s pregnant girlfriend, were arrested and charged with attempting to murder the police. “You can kill a revolutionary, but you can’t kill a revolution!” – Fred Hampton ![]() Chicago police remove the body of Fred Hampton, slain by police on Chicago’s west side, Dec 4, 1969 Remembrance by someone who worked with Deputy Chairman Fred Hampton |
| December 4, 1970 Cesar Chavez was sentenced to 20 days in jail for refusing to call off the United Farm Workers’ consumer boycott of Bud Antle, Inc., the country’s second largest lettuce grower. Antle had signed a contract with Teamsters Local 890 though only 5% of the workers voted to ratify it. Nor had there ever been an election for the workers to choose a union to represent them. The boycott had been called to pressure Antle to negotiate with the Farm Workers. Lettuce & Grape boycott poster UFW chronology About the boycott About Cesar Chavez for students |
https://www.peacebuttons.info/E-News/peacehistorydecember.htm#december4







Hampton’s murder still sickens me. And people wonder why everyone doesn’t trust the police.
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And that’s a single example, even. It is still sickening; spreading lies about their organization when they were taking care of forgotten neighborhoods. 2d Amendment for some, but not for all.
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