This page features brief excerpts of stories published by the mainstream
media and, less frequently, blogs, alternative media, and even obviously
biased sources. The excerpts are taken directly from the websites cited in
each source note. Quotation marks are not used.
Source: NYT
10/3/18
Even during the debates over civil rights in the sixties senators on opposite sides of the issue remained civil.
Source: AP
10-3-18
Anthony Pitch, author of a 2016 book on the lynching, has been fighting for the transcripts for years. The case heads to court this week.
Source: The Washington Post
10-2-18
And why it shouldn't. For one thing, the FBI never talked to — or even knew to look for — four potential witnesses who had knowledge of Anita Hill’s complaints about Thomas.
Source: The Guardian
10-2-18
The UK Black History Month website has been brought down by hackers for a second time in 24 hours in what its editors believe to be a case of “cyber-racism.”
Source: NYT
10-1-18
Mexico’s student movement erupted so suddenly in the summer of 1968 that it seemed to catch even its followers by surprise.
Source: The Washington Post
10-2-18
Long before Donald Trump and Stormy Daniels, there was President Warren G. Harding, whose sexual dalliances made history.
Source: The Washington Post
10-2-18
Turns out he's related to the slave used as a model in a famous Lincoln/slave statue.
Source: National Security Archive
10/2/18
The documents show Clinton believed backing Yeltsin personally was necessary to ensure Russian stability and market reform, which he privileged over the development of democracy.
Source: The Guardian
9-30-18
Appropriation row comes as councils scrap the Black History Month name in favor of celebrations of all different ethnicities.
9-29-18
by Kevin Gannon
Here's the answer historian Kevin Gannon provided on Twitter.
Source: Smithsonian
9-28-18
In September 1868, Southern white Democrats hunted down around 200 African-Americans in an effort to suppress voter turnout.
Source: Time
9-30-18
The 13th Amendment states: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”
Source: Haaretz
9-28-18
A new annotated and critical edition of the manifesto is stirring controversy, with Dutch booksellers reluctant to even display ‘Mijn Strijd’.
Source: The News & Observer
9-27-18
In announcing the app at a news conference, African-American Mayor LaToya Cantrell said the New Orleans Slave Trade Marker and App Project "will let us honor the lives and dignity of those ancestors who were undoubtedly bought and sold here."
Source: Weatherford Democrat
9-27-18
The state education board approved a new course in Mexican American Studies.
Source: The Washington Post
9-27-18
New technology allows scientists to visualize ancient Maya cities like never before.
Source: The Conversation
9-27-18
by Jeff South
In the debate over Confederate symbols in the U.S., the 10 Army bases named after Confederate generals who fought for the South during the Civil War have largely escaped scrutiny.
Source: Newsweek
9/26/18
"If we brought George Washington here, and we say this is George Washington, the Democrats would vote against him," Trump said. "He may have had a bad past. Who knows?”
Source: The Forward
9/25/18
Stephen Kantrowitz, now an award-winning history professor at the University of Wisconsin, remembered him differently at Yale.
Source: Smithsonian
9-25-18
The Italian Old Master had a notoriously mercurial temperament and was forced to flee Rome in 1606 after killing his rival in a duel.