February is Black History Month, and 7News is speaking to experts about some noteworthy and historic African Americans figures that impacted the D.C.-area.Mary ...
The East Rosedale Monument Project creates a history stop, where visitors can learn about the fight to end racial segregation ...
On this day 125 years ago the Black National Anthem was first performed, written by James Weldon Johnson and with music ...
The law guarantees Taranaki Maunga and its surrounding peaks now have the same rights, duties, and protections as individuals. The mountain was taken from the Māori of the Taranaki region ...
Today on the Show: Indigenous rights in the age of Trump. We’ll feature a front line interview with Andrea Carmen, Executive Director of The International Indian Treaty Council. Also, Trump signs an ...
The dozen winners of the Martin Luther King Jr. Essay Contest were recognized during a reception at Bruch Hall at Wooster First Presbyterian Church before the Community Celebraton service.
The Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County is sponsoring several programs to celebrate February as Black History Month, including two lectures about civil rights advocates, an informal ...
as well as the prospect of declaring a second interim dividend for the financial year 2024-2025, the stock attracted market attention. "Further as communicated earlier, pursuant to "Code of ...
Iconic songs by Sam Cooke, Kim Weston, Public Enemy, Nina Simone, Marvin Gaye, Lauryn Hill, Kendrick Lamar and more depict the fight for civil rights.
Music clearly played a starring role in the civil rights movement. People marched to freedom ... a call to "spend it on the have-nots." In the second verse, he sings of families sending children ...
A historical monument commemorating the last school for Native Americans in South Carolina prior to public school integration was unveiled Saturday in Ridgeville. The monument honors the legacy of the ...
BHRC sent our first black president, Vernon Michel, to the last leg of the Civil Rights March led by Dr. King from Selma to Montgomery in 1965.