Between the 16th and 19th centuries, as many as a thousand slave ships carrying captive Africans sank while crossing the Atlantic Ocean. National Geographic explorer and writer Tara Roberts has been ...
MATT WALSH (HOST): So who did, quote, unquote, build the country? Well, this country was in fact primarily built by white men. It just was. That again is a historical fact.
The event included a presentation on the history of protest music and a break-down of the symbolism in Kendrick Lamar’s ...
The Black church has long played a significant role in supporting faith and the fight for Civil Rights in America, with its origins dating back to the first African American congregations in the ...
Discover the enduring impact of the Transatlantic Slave Trade and its ongoing effects on racial justice and economic ...
Growing up, Dayna James never thought she’d willingly step foot on a plantation, let alone thank God for one. On an early ...
The U.S. Army established Camp Bragg in 1918 as an artillery training ground that was part of the rapid expansion of the United States military for World War I. It was named after Confederate Gen.
The enslavement of millions of Indigenous people in the Americas is a neglected chapter in U.S. history. Two projects aim to bring it to light.
Villanova University history professor Judith Giesberg has written a new book, "Last Seen: The Enduring Search by Formerly ...
On the night of July 1, 1839, 53 enslaved Africans revolted aboard the slaving schooner La Amistad – Spanish for “Friendship” ...
For the briefest of moments, a silence fell over the pews of New Orleans’ famed St. Louis Cathedral, as the chapel filled ...