See Also: saltpetre(encyclopedia)
saltpetre(dictionary)
saltpetre(medicine)
saltpetre(dictionary)
Jackson, Joe(encyclopedia)
Jackson(encyclopedia)
Jackson(dictionary)
Jackson(tourism)
Jackson's law(medicine)
Pollock, Jackson(dictionary)

Jackson, Mahalia (sh) and saltpetre (medicine)


Jackson, Mahalia (sh)




born Oct. 26, 1911, New Orleans, La., U.S.
died Jan. 27, 1972, Evergreen Park, Ill.

U.S. gospel Music singer.

As a child, Jackson sang in the choir of the New Orleans church where her father preached. She learned sacred songs but was also exposed to blues recordings by Bessie Smith and Ida Cox. In Chicago she worked at odd Jobs while singing with a touring gospel quintet, and she opened several small businesses. Her warm, powerful voice first came to wide public attention in the 1930s, when she participated in a cross-country tour singing songs such as "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands." Closely associated with Thomas A. Dorsey, she sang many of his songs. "Move on up a Little Higher" (1948) sold more than a million copies, and she became one of the most popular singers of the 1950s and '60s. She first appeared at Carnegie Hall in 1950. Active in the civil rights movement from 1955, she sang at the epochal 1963 civil rights march on Washington.


Mahalia Jackson, 1961.

The Bettmann Archive


saltpetre (medicine)


saltpetre
<chemistry> Potassium nitrate; niter, a white crystalline substance, KNO3, having a cooling saline taste, obtained by leaching from certain soils in which it is produced by the process of nitrification (see Nitrification, 2). It is a strong oxidizer, is the chief constituent of gunpowder, and is also used as an antiseptic in curing meat, and in medicine as a diuretic, diaphoretic, and refrigerant.

<chemistry> Chili salpeter, nitric acid; sometimes so called because made from saltpeter.

Origin: F. Salpetre, NL. Sal petrae, literally, rock salt, or stone salt; Salt, and Petrify.

Source: Websters Dictionary