history
Trump and Republicans Want to "Un-Cancel" Columbus Day, Erasing Indigenous Peoples Day
In 2023, then-President Biden enshrined Indigenous Peoples Day. Now Trump is blaming left-wing "radicals” and “arsonists” for "canceling" Columbus.
By Paige Oamek
Police Departments Surveilled Activists in the 1960s and 70s — and Erased The Records
"Just as police tracked civil rights, Black Power, feminist, and anti-war protesters in the 1960s and ‘70s, today they snoop on organizers taking a stand against ICE, Israel’s war on Palestine, and Atlanta’s Cop City."
By Joshua Clark Davis
A Brief History of the Showgirl, From Paris to Las Vegas to Taylor Swift
The concept of the showgirl in Las Vegas was borrowed most notably from Parisian cabarets that combined dancing, singing, gymnastics and costumes.
By The Neon Museum
Assata Shakur Was a Black Revolutionary Who Fought for Freedom Even in Exile
“Nobody in the world, nobody in history, has ever gotten their freedom by appealing to the moral sense of the people who were oppressing them.”
By Marian Jones
We Were Adopted Thanks to China’s Overpopulation Policies. These Are Our Stories.
160,000 Chinese children were adopted by families across the world since this policy went into effect in 1992.
By Isabella KahnPhotography by Isabella Kahn
This July 4th, Let's Remember: America Was Never Great
"The Trump administration’s assaults are not a deviation, but essentially a more extreme version of the same old American story. Just ask Indigenous people."
By Joseph Lee
Juneteenth Celebrates an End to Slavery—But Northern States Still Allowed It
Modern descriptions of American slavery often paint the North as slavery-free, abolitionist states, but this isn’t true.
By Noelle Lorraine Williams
Why Our Nation’s Historic Places Mostly Commemorate ‘Rich Old White Men’
There are very few “historically significant” sites associated with Black, Latino, or Native American communities.
By Marianne Dhenin
What Is an Oligarchy, and Why Are People Worried the US Is Becoming One?
We break it down.
By Liv McConnell
During World War II, These Teens Used Music and Fashion to Resist the Nazis
Get to know the Zazous, the Swing Kids, and the Edelweiss Pirates.
By Zack Budryk
This Movie Tells the True Story of Disappearances and Murder Under Brazil's Dictatorship
And why it’s a story we need to hear today.
By Liv McConnell
These 19 Films & Shows Offer Authentic Depictions of Indigenous People
Check out these movies, documentaries and shows that bring us more authentic, honest depictions of Indigenous communities, all year round.
By Maka Monture
Who Was Clara Bow, Heroine on Taylor Swift’s Tortured Poets Album?
The actress achieved her wildest dream — and it turned into her worst nightmare.
By Robyn Asleson
The Roma Have Been Discriminated Against for Centuries
“For me, being a young Roma means fighting every day for my rights.”
By Anoushka Lal
The Jewish Roots of Women's History Month
And the Russian-Jewish refugee who started National Woman's Day — a precursor to the international celebration.
By Avital Chizhik-Goldschmidt
Blanca Canales Led Puerto Rico’s Historic Rebellion for Independence
“We are a people who want to be free,” Canales said.
By Karla Méndez
Inside the History of Testing Vaccines on Institutionalized People
The flu vaccine was tested on unconsenting people held in mental facilities.
By Valorie Castellanos Clark
The Untold History of the African American History Museum Born in the Civil Rights Movement
Dr. Charles H. Wright said his mission was “ensuring that generations, especially young African Americans, are made aware of and take pride in the history of their forebears.”
By The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History
Filipino History Will Finally Be Taught in Hawai’i Schools, Thanks to These Students
Filipinos make up the largest ethnic Asian population on Hawai’i, but most classrooms didn’t teach Filipino history.
By Natasha Ishak
How Black Artists Started a Renaissance in 1920s Washington, DC
“I have sought to concentrate on beauty and happiness, rather than on man’s inhumanity to man.”
By The National Gallery of Art