Search for a Black History Project
This website is a free, searchable directory for online history projects that can help further Black History research. This ongoing project was created to collect information about these digital Black History projects in order to benefit historians, genealogists, and family historians who are researching the lives of Black individuals and families.
406 Search Result(s)
Project Name | Description | Creator(s) |
---|---|---|
Harambee City | A digital archive that contains information about the rise and fall of Black power within the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). Explores through the lens of the Cleveland chapter of CORE. Includes historical information, oral history interviews, photos, videos, maps, lesson plans, and more. | Dr. Nishani Frazier |
Hartford Black History Project | A website that presents a virtual exhibit of the African American community in Hartford, Connecticut from 1638 to now. | The Hartford Black History Project, Inc. |
History Leaks | A website that shares and publishes "rare and underappreciated" public domain and fair use documents and artifacts that may be of historical significance or of general public interest. | History Leaks |
Honoring the Enslaved | A website that recognizes and honors the role of enslaved peoples on the St. Mary's College of Maryland campus. | t. Mary's College of Maryland |
IAAM Center for Family History | The Center for Family History at the International African American Museum is a one of a kind research center with a special focus on African American genealogy. | International African American Museum |
In Pursuit of Freedom | ||
In the Same Boats | A project that contains interactive visualizations that follow the "movements of significant cultural actors from the Caribbean and wider Americas, Africa, and Europe within the 20th century Afro-Atlantic world." | |
Independent Voices: An Open Access Collection of an Alternative Press | An open access digital collection containing periodicals that were produced by Black Power advocates, Hispanics, LGBT activists, Native Americans, feminists, dissident GIs, campus radicals, and other alternative press in the late 20th century. | Reveal Digital, JSTOR |