This Day in History: 2017-09-19

September 12, 1992 – “Dr. Mae Jemison Goes to Space” “Dr. Mae Jemison, an engineer, physician and NASA astronaut, became the first African-American woman to travel in space when she went into orbit aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour. During her 8-day mission she worked with U.S. and Japanese researchers, and was a co-investigator on a bone cell experiment. Jemison originally practiced as a doctor, then served in the Peace Corps from 1985 to 1987. In 1987, she was selected to join the astronaut corps. She resigned from NASA in 1993 to found a company that researches the application of technology to daily life.”

History Spotlight

2017 In the Year 1807 - "Freed Muslim Remains in America" - Yarrow Marmout, an African slave of the Muslim faith, was set free in Washington, D.C.'s Georgetown neighborhood, where he lived for the rest of his life. Marmout was an early shareholder in the Columbia bank, which is the second chartered bank in the U.S. Today portraits of Marmout hang in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and the Georgetown Public Library. In 1927, nearly 175 years after his arrival to the U.S. as a slave, a descendant of his daughter-in-law's family, Robert Turner Ford, graduated from Harvard University.

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