National, Past Voices January 26, 2021 Trump Administration’s ‘1776 Report’ Justifies Slavery, Three-Fifths Compromise. By Sarah Ruiz-Grossman / HuffPost
National, Past Voices January 26, 2021 When Medicare Helped Kill Jim Crow. By Mike Konczal / The Nation
National, Past Voices January 22, 2021 Lincoln’s first inauguration met with threats of kidnapping, killing and militias. By Michael E. Ruane / Wash Post
National, Past Voices January 22, 2021 Virginia holiday commemorating Confederate generals won’t be celebrated in 2021, for the first time in over 100 years. By Li Cohen / CBS News
National, Past Voices January 22, 2021 Reconstruction lessons for Trump: Dealing with Confederate treason was more complicated than you’d think. By Rebecca Onion / Slate
National, Past Voices January 19, 2021 The Austerity Politics of White Supremacy. By Vanessa Williamson / Dissent
National, Past Voices January 19, 2021 Was the Constitution a Pro-Slavery Document? By Gordon S. Wood / NYT
National, Past Voices January 19, 2021 Mass Incarceration and the Metaphor of Slavery. By Shannon King / AAIHS
National, Past Voices January 15, 2021 I Desegregated the University of Georgia. History Is Still in the Making. By Charlayne Hunter-Gault / NYT
National, Past Voices January 15, 2021 Preserving New York’s Ties to the Underground Railroad. By John Freeman Gill / NYT
National, Past Voices January 12, 2021 2021’s call to Reconstruction. By E. J. Dionne Jr. / Wash Post
National, Past Voices January 11, 2021 How a courageous Southern governor broke ranks with segregationists in 1961. By John Drescher / Wash Post
National, Past Voices January 11, 2021 New Native American memorial offers peace in the heart of one of the city’s few wild spaces. By Philip Kennicott / Wash Post
National, Past Voices January 11, 2021 1st Chinese American lawyer gets Columbia Law honor, highlights past barriers. By Kimmy Yam / NBC News
National, Past Voices January 11, 2021 Don’t ‘better explain’ the Emancipation Memorial. Put up monuments to Black people instead. By Karen Attiah / Wash Post
National, Past Voices January 4, 2021 Statue Of Lincoln With Formerly Enslaved Man At His Feet Is Removed In Boston. Bill Chappell / NPR
National, Past Voices December 31, 2020 The Haunting of Tulsa, Okla. A recently unearthed mass grave may soon provide answers about what happened to victims of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. By Brent Staples / NYT
National, Past Voices December 31, 2020 Sculpture honors 1st Black president of an American college. By Lisa Rathke / ABC News
National, Past Voices December 31, 2020 ‘Most Important Indian,’ And Treaty Rights Advocate Hank Adams Dies At 77. By Jaclyn Diaz / NPR
Past Voices, World December 31, 2020 Ancient DNA Is Changing How We Think About the Caribbean. By David Reich and Orlando Patterson / NYT
National, Past Voices December 31, 2020 What Was Christmas Like for America’s Enslaved People? By Ferrell Evans / History
National, Past Voices December 28, 2020 Barbara Johns’ statue will replace that of Robert E. Lee in the US Capitol. By leah Asmelash / CNN
National, Past Voices December 25, 2020 Lewis and Clark’s Long, Dark Winter. And Ours. By Timothy Egan / NYT
National, Past Voices December 25, 2020 Here’s what might replace America’s disappearing Confederate monuments. By Phillip Morris / National Geographic
National, Past Voices December 25, 2020 His Storied Life: James Wiley, Tuskegee Airman and American War Hero. By Charleen Smith-Riedel / Smithsonian Folklife
National, Past Voices December 22, 2020 W.E.B. Du Bois Is as Relevant as Ever. By Norman Stockwell / The Progressive
National, Past Voices December 22, 2020 Cowboy Confederates. The ideals of the Confederate South found new force in the bloody plains of the American West. By Jefferson Cowie / Dissent
National, Past Voices December 18, 2020 Descendants of enslaved Blacks explore Virginia history. By Susan Svrluga / Wash Post
National, Past Voices December 18, 2020 The Elusive Promise of the Underground Railroad. By Eric Herschthal / The New Republic
National, Past Voices December 18, 2020 The founder of Johns Hopkins owned enslaved people. Our university must face a reckoning. By Martha S. Jones / Wash Post
National, Past Voices December 18, 2020 “40 Years a Prisoner” confronts the police we’re supposed to trust “telling bold-faced lies.” By D. Watkins / Salon
National, Past Voices December 15, 2020 The History of Seneca Falls You Didn’t Learn in School. By Olivia B. Waxman and video by Arpita Aneja / Time