The Director of the African American History Museum Weighs in on ‘Selma’
A film with black history at its core and created by African Americans opens up a “national conversation”
The Little-Known History of the Underground Railroad in New York
Pultizer-Prize winning historian Eric Foner uncovers the hidden story behind this passage to freedom
Read Through Early Drafts of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Speeches
One website gives you a peek into the mind of one of America’s most powerful orators
60 Years Ago, the First African-American Soloist Sang at the Met Opera
Marian Anderson performed as the fortuneteller Ulrica in Verdi’s Un Ballo in Maschera
The Tin Man’s Hat From “The Wiz” Offers Just a Hint of the Musical’s Beating Heart
When the all-black musical production opened on Broadway 40 years ago, critics scoffed, but audiences embraced it
The Radical Paradox of Martin Luther King’s Devotion to Nonviolence
Biographer Taylor Branch makes a timely argument about civil right leader’s true legacy
A Lost John Steinbeck Short Story Was Rediscovered, Published
The short story deals with the racial politics of the mid-20th century
The Oscar-Winning Writer John Ridley, Talks About His New Jimi Hendrix Movie
The writer and director of Jimi: All Is by My Side speaks about making living history from legend
A Collection of Rare Color Photographs Depicts MLK Leading the Chicago Freedom Movement
The Smithsonian has acquired some of the only known images of Martin Luther King Jr. at the momentous protest
The Legacy of Hip-Hop Producer J Dilla Will Be Recognized
The late producer’s mother announced she is donating his synthesizer and beat machine to the African American History Museum
The Descendants of Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison Donate Family Heirlooms
Objects belonging to the anti-slavery advocate spent a century collecting dust in an attic. Now they’re on their way to the African-American history museum
News For All: How the Immigrant Experience Shaped American Media
From Benjamin Franklin to Noticiero Univision, the Newseum discusses the profound influence of immigrants on modern news
Before There was the Blues Man, There Was the Songster
A new release from Smithsonian Folkways celebrates the diverse sounds of turn-of-the-century itinerant musicians
Watch George Clinton’s P-Funk Mothership Get Reassembled For Its Museum Debut
A timelapse video shows Smithsonian curators rebuilding one of music’s most iconic stage props—the Parliament-Funkadelic Mothership
America’s Moral Debt to African Americans
The director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture joins the discussion around “The Case for Reparations”
Maya Angelou Was One of the Most Influential Voices of Our Time
Maya Angelou was poet, novelist, educator, producer, actress, filmmaker, dancer and civil rights activist
These Maps Reveal How Slavery Expanded Across the United States
As the hunger for more farmland stretched west, so too did the demand for enslaved labor
With no color photos of her famous performance in existence, the brilliance of Marian Anderson’s bright orange outfit has been lost, until now
Ravi Coltrane, son of jazz musicians John and Alice Coltrane, donates one of his father’s three saxophones
The New York Times’ 1853 Coverage of Solomon Northup, the Hero of “12 Years A Slave”
Northup’s story garnered heavy press coverage and spread widely in the weeks and months after he was rescued
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