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Quilters have been copying patterns believed to have been used as signals for the Underground Railroad even though historians say they can't find any evidence they were used that way.
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The $5 million agreement will support operations of the new historical facility downtown.
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The episode features an encore interview between John L. Hanson Jr. and Shirley A. Chisholm, detailing her accomplishments as a congresswoman.
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The museum celebrated the 20th anniversary of legislation that funded it this week, but it can trace its origins back to Black veterans who fought for the Union Army in the Civil War.
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Over 100 years ago, one of the deadliest race riots in American history destroyed the prosperous neighborhood of Greenwood, in Tulsa, Okla. Will victims ever get justice?
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NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with actor Kelvin Harrison Jr. about starring in the new movie Chevalier, which tells the forgotten story of Joseph Bologne, a Black composer and violinist of the 1700s.
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The Alamo Collections Center, located on the grounds of the mission-turned fortress, site of the 1836 battle during the Texas Revolution against Mexico, opens on Friday.
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Black History Month events around San Antonio celebrate Black contributions in film, literature, artwork, theater, business, and civil rights for the U.S. broadly and San Antonio specifically.
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The book seeks to set the record straight on a number of conventional American beliefs.
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The U.S is in the midst of a mental health crisis — especially in the Black community. One organization is turning to local barbers to get Black men and boys to open up and seek help.