Beauford Delaney
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Beauford Delaney

Beauford Delaney managed to carve a place in art history with his vibrant, modernist paintings that emerged during the Harlem Renaissance and other important art movements.

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Covert, Michigan
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Covert, Michigan

When most U.S. cities and towns lived in segregation, one small township defied the racist norms by integrating from its founding, though in relative secrecy. That township was Covert, Michigan.

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Mary Fields
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Mary Fields

Mary Fields, a woman of natural strength who stood six feet tall and weighed two hundred pounds, fearlessly delivered mail for the U.S. Post Office while braving the harsh terrain of Montana.

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Mark Dean
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Mark Dean

While many have not heard of Mark Dean, he is the black inventor and computer engineer who led a creative team in developing the Industry Standard Architecture (ISA) ecosystem that makes the PC so essential in daily life.

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Sesame Street’s Blackness
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Sesame Street’s Blackness

Having grown into an international success, the iconic children’s show Sesame Street grew out of the Civil Rights era and took on a look inspired by the streets of 1960s Harlem.

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Cathay Williams
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Cathay Williams

Cathay Williams became the first black female to enlist in the United States Army after posing as a man and using the pseudonym William Cathay.

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Roy Eaton
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Roy Eaton

Roy Eaton broke through the barriers in the advertising industry and rose to become an executive while he composed enduring jingles that resonated with the public.

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C.R. Patterson and Sons
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C.R. Patterson and Sons

C.R. Patterson and Sons, the first and only automobile manufacturer owned by black Americans, was initially a carriage building firm that later manufactured luxury cars.

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Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller
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Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller

Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller was an accomplished black American sculptor, painter, and poet who expressed the black experience through her art and created groundbreaking pieces in celebration of black culture.

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Horace King
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Horace King

Horace King was a celebrated bridge architect and builder in the mid-nineteenth century. He began his bridge-building career as a slave and ended as a free, wealthy black Southerner.

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Gabriel’s Conspiracy
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Gabriel’s Conspiracy

In the summer of 1800, a literate enslaved blacksmith named Gabriel planned and organized the most extensive slave uprising in the history of the American South.

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Lucy Terry
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Lucy Terry

Lucy Terry is noted as the author of the oldest existing poem composed by a black American, but she was also a gifted storyteller and seasoned orator.

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Isaac Burns Murphy
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Isaac Burns Murphy

The winner of three Kentucky Derbies, Isaac Burns Murphy is a Hall of Fame jockey who is arguably the greatest rider in the history of American Thoroughbred horse racing.

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The Chicago Defender
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The Chicago Defender

Founded in 1905 by Robert S. Abbott with an initial investment of only 25 cents, the Chicago Defender rose to become the most influential black newspaper in the country.

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Sarah J. Garnet
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Sarah J. Garnet

Sarah Jane Smith Thompson Garnet is noted as the first black female principal in the New York public school system. She was also the first black American female to found and lead a suffrage organization for black women.

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Onesimus
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Onesimus

Onesimus, a Boston slave owned by Puritan minister Cotton Mathers, is credited with instituting the first recorded inoculations in the Americas.

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Freedom’s Journal
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Freedom’s Journal

Founded by a group of black New Yorkers the same year slavery was abolished in the state, Freedom’s Journal was the first black-owned and operated newspaper in the United States.

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Bridget “Biddy” Mason
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Bridget “Biddy” Mason

Born a slave in 1818, Bridget “Biddy” Mason died a free woman, and the wealthiest resident of Los Angeles, California. She was an astute businesswoman who was beloved by the people of her city.

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Edward Bouchet
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Edward Bouchet

Edward Alexander Bouchet became the first black American to be named a PhD physicist after completing his graduate studies and dissertation at Yale University.

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Mound Bayou
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Mound Bayou

Once the nation’s largest and most self-sufficient black town, Mound Bayou, Mississippi was a thriving haven for thousands of black Americans during Jim Crow.

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