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Pillar:

1865

Reconstruction Era

Reconstruction

Reconstruction: The Unfinished Revolution

The twelve years after the Civil War represent the most radical democratic experiment in American history. Understanding why it was dismantled is essential to understanding everything that came after.

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HBCUs

The HBCU Tradition: 185 Years of Building Against the Odds

From Cheyney in 1837 to today's 101 accredited institutions, the HBCU story is one of the most extraordinary institutional achievements in American history. We are still flying off the runway they built.

Civic Now

The Voting Rights Act: Gutted, Defended, and Why It Still Matters

The 1965 Voting Rights Act was won at the cost of beatings, deaths, and decades of organizing. Shelby County v. Holder (2013) gutted its core. This is the history behind a legal and political battle that is still ongoing.

Culture

The Harlem Renaissance Was a Political Project

The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s is often taught as a cultural flowering. It was that - and it was also a deliberate effort to use art, literature, and music to argue for Black humanity in a country that denied it. They were not separable.

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New pieces publish weekly. Subscribe to Insights to receive every new essay in your inbox on Friday mornings. The archive will grow substantially through Phase 2.

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