On November 15, 1866 Cathay Williams became the first African American woman to serve in the U.S. Army, and the only woman to serve in the U.S. Army as a Buffalo Soldier.
Read MoreIn 1905 The Colored Orphanage and Old Folks Home was known as, "the only home for colored children in an area of seven states." The Lincoln Home was started by the Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs in the city of Pueblo and became the only known Black orphanage in Colorado. Built in 1906, the home moved in 1914 to two small red-brick houses that were built closely together on 2714 North Grand Avenue, where it remained until the city’s segregated orphanage system ended in 1963.
Read MoreThomas Downing (1791–1866) was an American restaurateur and abolitionist active in New York City during the Victorian era who was nicknamed the "New York Oyster King". He was one of the wealthiest people in New York City at the time of his death, though he spent his life being prohibited from acquiring U.S. citizenship until the Civil Rights Act of 1866 was passed, the day before he died.
Read MoreIn 1878, Henrietta Wood, a formerly “illegally” enslaved Black woman, was awarded $2,500 in reparations by an all-white jury — the most significant sum of its kind that a U.S. court had granted.
Read MoreEqual Justice Initiative founder and CEO Bryan Stevenson speaks with NBC News’ Lester Holt about the new sculpture park in Montgomery, Alabama. A new monument honors the lives of 10 million Black people who were enslaved in America.
Read MoreFor civil rights attorney and renowned social justice activist Bryan Stevenson, it’s not enough to know the history of slavery and the centuries-old struggles of Black people in America. He wants people to see it. Feel it. Touch it.
A new park in Montgomery, Alabama, was conceived to do just that, as visitors of the breathtaking Freedom Monument Sculpture Park will be treated to “an immersive experience” along 17 acres above the Alabama River, which was a primary route to transport enslaved Africans during the slave trade.
Read MoreBorn in the heart of DeWalt, Texas, in 1933, Nancy Stephenson Woods' journey reflects a profound legacy. Stop my the Fort Bend Museum next month to join in celebrating the life of a remarkable woman.
Read MoreUntold Stories of Black Life in Texas: Reframing Our Shared History, a presentation hosted by Fort Bend County Libraries. Journey through the impactful events that shaped early Black history in Texas.
Read MorePhotograph of the regular monthly hands on the George Ranch. Five cowboys on horseback - four of them African-American cowboys - watch over a calf nestled in the grass in front of them. The rest of the herd of cattle can be seen in the background.
Read MoreSolomon Carter Fuller, M.D., the first known Black psychiatrist in America and an early pioneer in the fight against Alzheimer's.
Read MoreDr. Charles Prudhomme, physician, psychoanalyst, and the first Black Vice President of the American Psychiatric Association.
Read MoreThe historically Black neighborhood in South Beaumont known as Pear Orchard developed after 1901.
Read MoreSt. John Colony outside Lockhart began in the early 1870s, when a group of Black families, led by the Rev. John Henry Winn, relocated here from Webberville.
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