A Wisconsin man made history at the 1904 Olympics when he became the first Black person to win a medal. Geoge Poage broke barriers, but his story hasn't been well known until recently.
The stylish multi-hyphenate opens up about her important role in shaping the way people view Black history, present and future at one of the country’s premiere cultural institutions.
In 1867, the Freedmen’s Bureau opened the only school available to African Americans from Bland, Carroll, Grayson, and Wythe ...
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds announced that he's running to be the next governor of Florida in 2026, ...
"It's important to celebrate Black History Month because it is a time to reflect on how far we have come as a community." ...
A traveling exhibit in Reisterstown honors some of the Black pioneers in Maryland's horse-racing industry. " (At) Churchill ...
Gregory Allen grew up with a dream of playing in the National Football League. Despite joining Syracuse University's football team at a time when it was conside ...
Nigeria's long-running effort to repatriate the Benin Bronzes-some of the most prized artifacts in African history-has taken ...
The event at Reading High School’s Geigle Education Complex featured educational displays, artworks and performances by ...
A group of academics met to hash out a first scholarly history of the Biden administration. But in today’s scrambled politics ...
An effort to protect a Greensboro neighborhood steeped in Black history finally paid off thanks to local support.
Guinea-Bissau's opposition has vowed to bring the West African country to a standstill on Thursday in a dispute over when the ...