History

The Legacy of William Davenport: Britain’s Most Prolific Slave Trader Who Trafficked 40,000 Africans

William Davenport was one of the most prolific slave traders in British history. Operating out of Liverpool, he organized numerous voyages that transported tens of thousands of enslaved Africans to the Americas and the Caribbean. By the sheer scale...

Ella Abomah Williams: The African American Giantess Who Captivated the Circus World in the Late 1800s

Ella Abomah Williams was born in South Carolina in 1865 to enslaved parents, arriving just as the nation abolished slavery through the Thirteenth Amendment, which also freed newborns like her. Gifted with extraordinary height and a commanding presence, she...

Edmund Ruffin: The Confederate Who Chose Suicide Rather Than Live in a United States Where Black People Were Free

Edmund Ruffin was a Virginia planter, politician, and fierce pro-slavery advocate, who spent his life defending the Confederacy and the institution of slavery. When the Civil War ended in 1865, the South lay in ruins, millions of enslaved Black...

Remembering the 1985 Mamelodi Massacre in Apartheid South Africa

On November 21, 1985, the township of Mamelodi, near Pretoria, became the scene of one of the darkest episodes of apartheid in South Africa. Thirteen Black South Africans were killed, and dozens more wounded, when apartheid police opened fire...

Henry Blair: The Second African American Inventor to Receive a U.S. Patent

In the heart of the 19th century, when most Black people in America were still denied education, freedom, and basic human rights, one man managed to carve his name into the pages of American innovation. His name was Henry...

Dennis Hubert: The Atlanta Teen Lynched on a Playground for Allegedly Insulting a White Woman in 1930

In the early evening of June 15, 1930, Atlanta, Georgia, witnessed a tragedy that would haunt the city for decades. Dennis T. Hubert, an 18-year-old sophomore at Morehouse College, was lynched on the playground of the segregated Crogman School....

The Role Christian Ministers Played Aboard Slave Ships During the Transatlantic Slave Trade

The transatlantic slave trade was one of history’s darkest enterprises, carrying millions of Africans across the ocean in brutal conditions to serve as labor in the Americas. The ships that ferried them were not just centers of commerce but...

Robert Charles Riots: How Provocative Policing Triggered a Race Riot That Targeted Black Americans in New Orleans in 1900

The Robert Charles riots of 1900, remain one of the most violent and racially charged events in New Orleans history. The conflict began after African-American laborer Robert Charles was confronted by police whose provocative tactics and heavy-handed enforcement led...

The San Genocide: How European Settlers Hunted, and Massacred a People to the Brink of Extinction

Long before European ships anchored on the southern coast of Africa, the San people, hunter-gatherers whose ancestors had lived in the region for tens of thousands of years, roamed the open plains freely. They were among the earliest inhabitants...

The Morant Bay Rebellion of 1865: Jamaica’s Deadliest Stand Against Colonial Oppression

The Morant Bay Rebellion of 1865 was one of the most important and tragic events in Jamaica’s history. It began in the small parish of St. Thomas-in-the-East, where years of poverty, unfair laws, and racism had pushed people to...
- Advertisement -

Latest News

The Legacy of William Davenport: Britain’s Most Prolific Slave Trader Who Trafficked 40,000 Africans

William Davenport was one of the most prolific slave traders in British history. Operating out of Liverpool, he organized...
- Advertisement -