Constance Baker Motley: A Trailblazer in the Legal Profession
by Gary L. Ford, Jr.
Read about the life and work of Constance Baker Motley, the only woman who argued desegregation cases in courts in the racially segregated South during the Civil Rights Movement from 1946 to 1964.
“The Maroons in Ambush . . . in Jamaica”
1801
View this depiction of a maroon revolt in Jamaica.
The Hunted Slaves
1862
View a depiction of self-emancipated people in the maroon communities of the Great Dismal Swamp.
“Yemayá”
by Grupo Abbilona
View and listen to an Afro-Cuban example of syncretic religious practices.
“Festival of Our Lady of the Rosary, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil”
ca. 1770s
View this print of a festival led by enslaved people in Brazil.
“Les Fétiches”
1938
View Loïs Mailou Jones’s painting, which brought Négritude from literature to art.
Marcus Garvey at His Desk
1924
View this photograph of Marcus Garvey, the founder and leader of the Universal Negro Improvement Association.
“West India Emancipation”
1857
Read Frederick Douglass’s first use of the phrase “If there is no struggle there is no progress.”
The Question of Naming in The Liberator
1831
Explore responses to questions of Black identity and nomenclature in the famed abolitionist newspaper.
“Why We Should Have a Paper”
1837
Read the founding manifesto of The Colored American newspaper.
Solomon Northup Remembers the New Orleans Slave Market
1853
Read an excerpt from Northup’s autobiographical account, Twelve Years a Slave.
The Capture of Black Seminoles
1836
Read Gen. Thomas Jesup’s diary entries from the Second Seminole War.
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