We have systematically oppressed a group of people for 400 years — from the slave ships of 1619 to the Three-Fifths ...
Carter G. Woodson, who started the precursor to Black History Month, wrote of Cincinnati’s Black history before the Civil War ...
Women presenting as men — whether to escape the stifling construct of feminine life or to stay close to husbands or brothers ...
A free symposium at the museum Feb. 15 will look at African American engagment in World War II and its place in social ...
The American Civil War (1861–1865) remains one of the most defining chapters in the nation’s past, forging our modern ...
Memo to President Trump: Women and people of color aren’t taking over America ... 4 percent to Native American-owned businesses, 1.9 percent to Hispanic-owned companies, 1.8 percent to South ...
In 1987, journalist Juan Williams helped illuminate the Civil Rights Movement with "Eyes on the Prize," a groundbreaking book ...
Martin Luther King Jr.’s fight for equality continues to inspire cannabis reform, challenging racial disparities in policing ...
Some pundits claim that this idea has proved false because the Democrats have lurched to the left, adopting a platform that ...
The group went to the departmental archives in Périgueux, where they found only one record which contained Yvette’s surname — and it didn’t even belong to their ancestors. They traveled to the village ...
Iconic songs by Sam Cooke, Kim Weston, Public Enemy, Nina Simone, Marvin Gaye, Lauryn Hill, Kendrick Lamar and more depict the fight for civil rights.
President Woodrow Wilson facilitated the segregation of a diverse federal workforce, where Black and White professionals had been working together for years.