This Week in Washington History – Week 20

This Week in Washington History – Week 20

Week 20: May 18-24

Paul Robeson at the Immigration Station, 1952 Courtesy The New York Public Library (3415)

May 18, 1952

On this day, singer, actor, athlete, scholar, and political activist Paul Robeson performed an outdoor concert for more than 25,000-45,000 people gathered on both sides of the United States/Canadian border at Peace Arch Park in Blaine. An outspoken supporter of civil rights worldwide and an admirer of the Soviet Union, where he perceived there to be no racism, Robeson had been increasingly persecuted for his political views since the late 1940s. His passport has been confiscated by the State Department, denying his right to travel and perform outside of the United States, and he had been prevented from crossing the border to Canada, which at the time did not require United States citizens to show a passport.

Detail, Japanese American students, University of Washington, 1941 Courtesy Interrupted Lives Exhibition, University of Washington Libraries

May 18, 2008

On this day, in Seattle, the University of Washington held a graduation ceremony to honor 450 Japanese American (known as Nikkei) students who were forced to leave the UW for incarceration camps during World War II under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066.

Nearly 200 Nikkei students or their surviving family members attended and received honorary diplomas after a 66-year wait. A crowd of 900 attended the ceremony at UW’s Kane Hall.

Black Student Union entering building for sit-in. May 20, 1968 Courtesy Seattle Civil Rights Labor History Project

May 20, 1968

Map of Yakama Reservation for Yakama Treaty, June 9, 1855 Courtesy National Archives (437015621)

May 20, 1972

The Labor Journal, Everett, May 27, 1910 Courtesy The Labor Journal

May 23, 1910

James and Lillian Walker, Bremerton, 1990s Courtesy Legacy Project, Washington Secretary of State

May 23, 1943

Northern Spotted Owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) habitat in Washington Courtesy U.S. Forest Service

May 23, 1991

This post is in partnership with HistoryLink, and Warren Seyler, former chairman Spokane Tribe of Indians, the Black Muse Resource Center, and the Living Arts Cultural Heritage. 

We encourage you to engage in further research through your local historic societies, museums, archives, and community.

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