National, Past Voices July 26, 2021 Black Women, the Civil War, and United States Colored Troops. By Holly A. Pinheiro jr. / AAIHS
National, Past Voices July 26, 2021 Journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones on Ida B. Wells’ impact and legacy. By CBS News
National, Past Voices July 26, 2021 John Lewis: Navy christens ship, legacy of ‘good trouble’ remembered. Grace Hauck / USA Today
National, Past Voices July 26, 2021 Confederate monument removed from city hall in Louisiana. By AP and ABC News
National, Past Voices July 26, 2021 The Endless Robbing of Native American Graves. By Elizabeth Evitts Dickinson / Wash Post
National, Past Voices July 26, 2021 Sec. Haaland on healing from the indoctrination, dehumanization at Indian boarding schools. By Judy Woodruff / PBS
National, Past Voices July 19, 2021 Ada Wright, the Scottsboro Defense Campaign, and the Popular Front. By Ashley Everson / AAIHS
National, Past Voices July 19, 2021 How a Harlem Skyrise Got Hijacked—and Forgotten. By Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts / The Nation
National, Past Voices July 19, 2021 Black female WWII unit hoping to get congressional honor. By Michael Casey / AP and ABC News
National, Past Voices July 16, 2021 Thaddeus Stevens and the Original Dreamers. By Charles M. Blow / NYT
National, Past Voices July 16, 2021 Charlottesville Removes Robert E. Lee Statue That Sparked A Deadly Rally. By Ben Paviour / NPR
National, Past Voices July 16, 2021 Haiti’s fate is intertwined with the U.S. By Ishan Tharoor / Wash Post
National, Past Voices July 16, 2021 Meet The Medical Pioneer Who Founded America’s First Black-Owned Hospital. By Leah Rosenbaum / Forbes
National, Past Voices July 12, 2021 Why reparations are always about more than money. By Kerry Whigham / The Conversation
National, Past Voices July 12, 2021 Ida B. Wells Monument Unveiled in Chicago. By Zack Linly / The Root
National, Past Voices July 9, 2021 Frederick Douglass’s 4th of July speech still burns with his spirit. By Javonte Anderson / USA Today
National, Past Voices July 5, 2021 On July 4, recognize the Black and Indigenous soldiers who helped win the Revolutionary War. By Bonnie Watson Coleman / Wash Post
National, Past Voices July 5, 2021 A Maryland attic hid a priceless trove of Black history. Historians and activists saved it from auction. By Michael E. Ruane / Wash Post
National, Past Voices July 5, 2021 Case files from 1964 “Mississippi Burning” murders made public. CBS News
National, Past Voices July 5, 2021 Pride means knowing LGBTQ history — including that of Indigenous Two-Spirit people. By Simon Moya-Smith / NBC News
National, Past Voices July 5, 2021 Johnson County, Iowa, Renamed After Black Professor Instead Of Vice President. By James Doubek / NPR
National, Past Voices July 3, 2021 Their ancestors were enslaved workers. Now they’re among the first to get cash reparations. By Faith Karimi / CNN
National, Past Voices July 3, 2021 The Hidden History of Paul Robeson. By Paul Von Blum / The Progressive
National, Past Voices June 29, 2021 Georgetown was once a slave port. Norton wants a memorial for Africans who arrived there in chains. By Meagan Flynn / Wash Post
National, Past Voices June 29, 2021 Born in Slavery: Former Slaves Tell Their Stories in Photos. By Lydia Chebbine / U.S. News
National, Past Voices June 29, 2021 Confederate Imagery On Stone Mountain Is Changing, But Not Fast Enough For Some. By Emil Moffatt / NPR
National, Past Voices June 29, 2021 77 years later, still seeking appropriate honor for a heroic Black medic on D-Day. By Thomas S. James Jr / Wash Post
National, Past Voices June 28, 2021 Confederate General’s Remains Are Being Moved Out Of Memphis. By AP and NPR
National, Past Voices June 28, 2021 Justice Deferred: The Supreme Court’s History of Enforcing Racism. By Frye Gaillard / The Progressive
National, Past Voices June 28, 2021 Postal Work and the Struggle for Black Freedom. By Rebecca Brenner Graham / AAIHS
National, Past Voices June 28, 2021 Racism kept a Black WWII vet from a Purple Heart, he says. At 99, he got the award. By Timothy Bella / Wash Post
National, Past Voices June 28, 2021 A family celebrates Juneteenth in Mexico — where their Black ancestors first found freedom. By Suzanne Gamboa / NBC News