Hidden History: African American Women During Reconstruction
with Rebecca Czuchry
Explore responses by Black Texan women to racial violence in the wake of the Civil War.
Hidden History: Celebrating That Freedom Day
with Michael Hurd
Take a deep dive into the first Juneteenth celebrations where it all began, in Galveston, Texas.
“Why Sit Ye Here and Die”
1832
Read a speech by Maria W. Stewart, the first Black woman to publish a political manifesto.
“How the Sisters Are Hindered from Helping”
1900
Read Nannie Helen Burroughs’s address casting light on the importance of women organizing in Black institutions.
“Treatment of Slaves on Lloyd’s Plantation”
1855
Read Frederick Douglass’s recollection of plantation life in Maryland from his second autobiography.
“Nonviolence and Racial Justice”
1957
Explore Martin Luther King’s philosophy toward nonviolent resistance.
Why We Can’t Wait
1964
Read an excerpt from Martin Luther King’s 1964 book, focused on segregation in Birmingham prior to SCLC’s campaign there.
“Little Rock”
1958
Read this poem written by Afro-Cuban poet Nicolás Guillén after the Little Rock Crisis.
“Boycott Cripples City Schools”
1964
Read an article about a student protest led by 360,000 Black and Puerto Rican students in New York City.
“Discourse on Colonialism”
1972
Read the preamble to Aimé Césaire’s treatise, a foundational document of the Négritude movement.
The Black Panther Party’s Ten-Point Program
1966
Read the Black Panther Party’s guiding manifesto.
“Original Faubus Fables”
1960
Hear Charles Mingus's musical retort to Arkansas Governor and segregationist Orval Faubus.
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