Black History Month

Education

How do you get a whole race of people to uplift themselves after years of persecution? This was the very question Colonel Allen Allensworth asked himself before he embarked on one of the most important journeys in African American history: to build the first Black self-sufficient town in California.

Education

From Mary McLeod Bethune to Booker T. Washington, here are seven Black educators who made an impact in the classroom and beyond.

News

When Nelson Mandela won the first-ever multiracial presidential election in South Africa on May 2, 1994, the freedom fighter changed the course of history. Here's how.

News

Tariffs did far more than adjust trade balances throughout the 19th century. They stoked regional tensions and played a major role in unraveling America's troubling slavery system.

Countless riots—tragic and often ignored—have unfolded throughout American history. Here are five you may not have learned about in school.

Dr. Martin Luther King was fighting for the rights of Black sanitation workers in Memphis before his tragic death on April 4, 1968.

News

The 'Freedom's Journal,' founded March 16, 1827, was the first newspaper owned and operated by African Americans. It aimed to address issues of slavery, racism, and civil rights.

Music

Here are 7 Black country musicians who have redefined the genre.

Black History Month

CareSource is a nonprofit health plan headquartered in Dayton, Ohio, offering a range of services to Medicaid members in the state. The organization is committed to providing quality health care and additional support to its members, ensuring comprehensive coverage that extends beyond basic medical services. Enrollment Process To enroll in CareSource’s Medicaid plan, individuals can […]

Lifestyle

Let’s take a glimpse into life in Chicago’s South Side for the Black Americans who called it home in the early 1940s.

In his short yet prolific life, Dunbar used folk dialect to give voice and dignity to the experience of Black Americans

Viewed through a more expansive lens, Belle da Costa Greene's passing can be seen as part of an exercise in self-invention.