History

The Life of Gert Schramm: The Black German Teenager Who Survived a Nazi Concentration Camp

Gert Schramm was born on 28 November 1928 in Erfurt, Thuringia, into a Germany that would later criminalize his very existence. He was the son of Marianne Schramm, a German woman, and Jack Brankson, an African American engineer working...

Quamina Gladstone: The Deacon Executed by the British in 1823 for Supporting Slave Rights

Quamina Gladstone was an African-born enslaved man in British Demerara (modern-day Guyana) whose religious leadership and moral authority placed him at the center of one of the most significant slave uprisings in British colonial history. A carpenter by trade...

Pvt. Albert King: The Black Soldier Murdered by a White Officer at a U.S. Army Base in 1941

In 1941, Pvt. Albert H. King, a young Black soldier stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia, was shot and killed under circumstances that would expose the deep racial injustices of the U.S. military during the Jim Crow era. His story,...

Cordella Stevenson: The Woman Brutally Lynched by a White Mob for Her Son’s Alleged Crime

Cordella Stevenson was a Black woman living in rural Mississippi. In 1915, after her son was suspected of a crime he didn’t commit, a white mob kidnapped and lynched her, leaving her body hanging in public. No one was...

Anarcha Westcott: The Enslaved Teenager Subjected to Unethical Experiments That Shaped Modern Gynecology

Anarcha Westcott was an enslaved African woman whose life and suffering became central to the development of modern gynecology. For decades, her story was nearly invisible, surviving only in the writings of Dr. J. Marion Sims, the physician who...

Charleston Workhouse Slave Rebellion of 1849: The Largest Workhouse Slave Uprising in U.S. History

In July 1849, Charleston’s Workhouse, a city-run prison for enslaved Africans, erupted in a desperate, violent revolt. It was here, in a place designed to crush every ounce of freedom, that Nicholas Kelly led an uprising that became one...

From Slave Cabin to the Pulpit: The Extraordinary Life of Rev. Peter Randolph

Peter Randolph was born into slavery in Virginia but rose to become one of New England’s most respected Black ministers. His 1893 autobiography, From Slave Cabin to the Pulpit, recounts his journey from slavery to freedom, his legal fight...

The Old Negro Mart: Charleston’s Public Slave Auction House Where Enslaved Africans Were Sold to the Highest Bidder

The Old Negro Mart is one of the last surviving buildings in America where enslaved African men, women, and children were bought and sold before the Civil War. Located on Chalmers Street, it now stands as a museum, but...

Operation Breadbasket: The Civil-Rights Campaign That Forced Businesses to Hire Black Workers

Operation Breadbasket was one of the most ambitious economic justice campaigns of the Civil Rights era, a movement built on a simple but powerful idea: Black Americans should not support businesses that refused to hire, respect, or promote them....

The Vicksburg Massacre of 1874: How White Mobs Lynched Hundreds to Crush Black Political Power in Mississippi

The Vicksburg massacre was one of the longest and deadliest attacks on freed Black Americans during the Reconstruction era. Beginning on December 7, 1874, and continuing until around January 5, 1875, the violence in Vicksburg, Mississippi left an estimated...
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The Life of Gert Schramm: The Black German Teenager Who Survived a Nazi Concentration Camp

Gert Schramm was born on 28 November 1928 in Erfurt, Thuringia, into a Germany that would later criminalize his...
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