Sherry Carter is an American television and radio personality, celebrated for her influential role as a host on BET’s Video Soul and Video LP during...
Taylor Electric Company stands as one of the oldest family-owned Black businesses in the United States and Chicago’s longest-running Black-owned enterprise. Its history is deeply...
The notion that “whiteness” is incapable of integrating with other cultures is a provocative claim rooted in historical and sociological patterns of domination. This article...
Horace Mann Bond (November 8, 1904 – December 21, 1972) was a transformative figure in American education, particularly known for his role as the first...
In 1946, Albert Einstein, the world-renowned physicist and Nobel laureate, made a bold and symbolic gesture by visiting Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, the first degree-granting...
Emmett Till, a 14-year-old African American boy, was brutally murdered in Mississippi in 1955, a crime that became a pivotal moment in the Civil Rights...
The 1980s saw a devastating surge in crack cocaine use in the United States, particularly in Black communities, leading to widespread social and economic consequences....
Britain’s Immigration Hypocrisy and Colonial Karma The British Empire, once a sprawling global power that dominated vast swathes of the world, is often remembered for...
In the early 20th century, the United States grappled with systemic racial segregation, not only in public spaces but also in private property transactions. The...
A Legacy of Segregation in American Housing Racially restrictive covenants were legal clauses embedded in property deeds across the United States, primarily from the early...