One of the most obscure chapters in American history is the trade of enslaved Native Americans and Indigenous peoples, which lasted over 300 years.
One of the most obscure chapters in American history is the trade of enslaved Native Americans and Indigenous peoples, which lasted over 300 years.
From the time of Columbus until the 1900s, as many as five million Native Americans were enslaved. This week, we explore that history, and the psychological reasons it stayed hidden in plain sight.
One of the most obscure chapters in American history is the trade of enslaved Native Americans and Indigenous peoples, which lasted over 300 years.
From the time of Columbus until the 1900s, as many as five million Native Americans were enslaved. This week, we explore that history, and the psychological reasons it stayed hidden in plain sight.
Gynecology Invented Through The Torture of Black Women In the 19th century, the father of modern gynecology, J. Marion Sims, conducted his research experiments on
It was by far the deadliest racial confrontation in Arkansas history and possibly the bloodiest racial conflict in the history of the United States.
S Sylvester Magee may have been the last living slave in America, and the oldest person who ever lived! Born a slave in North Carolina, he was the son of slaves named Ephraim and Jeanette, who work…
One of the most obscure chapters in American history is the trade of enslaved Native Americans and Indigenous peoples, which lasted over 300 years.
Born into slavery about 1815 at The Hermitage Plantation near here, Henry Brown was working in Richmond by 1830. Brown mailed himself to Philadelphia, and freedom, on 23 Mar. 1849 inside a three-foot-long box. (A historical marker located near Mineral in Louisa County, Virginia.)
The Black Wall Street story is one of the most tragic episodes in the history of Jim Crow America. Black Wall Street is the story of the wanton destruction of an independent Black community made up of former Slaves that had strived successfully against the odds to be a
African American genealogy: Washington GA, Swint, Haines, Smith, Hodges, Harmon, Harris, Taylor, Gordon, Deedom, Becky, Daniel, George, Chester, Whitaker