Motley was the first Black woman to serve as a federal judge and the first Black woman to argue a case before the U.S.
When you think about slavery in the United States you probably think about it happening in the deep south in the 1800’s and causing the Civil War. However, slavery was ...
Content warning: This piece includes an account of an apparent suicide.
On February 2, 1862, Congress took a significant step toward ending slavery in the United States by abolishing it in the District of Columbia. This decision marked a crucial moment in the fight for ...
Although no Civil War battles took place in Rhode Island, a hospital in Portsmouth, Rhode Island played a large role in ...
As he celebrated the end of the Civil War and the abolition of slavery in 1865, Frederick Douglass emphasized that pervasive racial discrimination remained an obstacle to the attainment of equal ...
Carter G. Woodson, who started the precursor to Black History Month, wrote of Cincinnati’s Black history before the Civil War ...
We have an income tax as opposed to a tariff thanks to a gesture of good will from Yankees to the Old South in 1913 ...
Winchester, Illinois, known for Stephen Douglas and dentistry pioneer George Black, also witnessed a post-Civil War lynching.
Once the arsenal of the Confederacy and a manufacturer of shells during both World Wars, Tredegar ceased operations for good ...
By sitting down to lunch at a North Carolina department store, the brave men inspired many others to take part in nonviolent ...
"By finding these names, we are releasing them to give back these enslaved people some of their dignity," said Sarah Bader-King, executive director of the John Wornall House Museum.