Discover the pioneering work of Charlotta Bass, a civil rights activist and journalist who made significant strides for racial equality in the U.S.
Saturday, hundreds of people filled the Waterloo West High School Auditorium, for the 1619 Freedom School's African American Read-In.
Hundreds of people gathered at Waterloo West High School Saturday to listen to Black authors read their books.
The plight of the African-American experience in America has been tightly intertwined with and displayed through the lens of the national pastime. Whether it be the fight to break through the ...
A civil rights activist who ran for president twice and became a Democratic power broker, Jackson is an American political ...
Discover the remarkable life of Alice A. Dunnigan, the first African-American female correspondent at the White House and a ...
Waterloo schools, a minority-majority district, declined to participate in the African American Read-In. The 1619 Freedom ...
Francesca Zambello is the artistic and general director, emerita of the Glimmerglass Festival. She currently holds the ...
Sitting on a fifth-grade classroom carpet inside the Regional Multicultural Magnet School on Monday, Carey Redd II stepped away from his job as the city’s head of parking and transportation and into ...
Artist George F. Baker III was born in Nebraska, raised in Detroit and moved to Atlanta in 2008. Baker painted four murals in Adair Park and one in Pittsburgh. He was influenced by the cartoons he ...
African -American literature and local history was the focus of the first African-American Read-In on Saturday at the main ...