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Black History in Aviation American Airlines produced Blacks in Aviation as a tribute to aviation professionals everywhere. Black History in Aviation
The Slave Rebellion Website This is an educaional and informational website on slave rebellion in the U.S is designed for teachers, student, researchers and the general public. The Slave Rebellion Website
Northern Visions of Race, Region & Reform An online resource documenting conflicting representations of African-Americans, white Southerners, and reformers during and and immediately after the Civil War. Northern Visions of Race, Region  & Reform
Examination Days - The New York African Free School Collection The New-York Historical Society’s New York African Free School Collection preserves a rich selection of student work and community commentary about the African Free School. The New York African Free School Collection  

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Examination Days: The New York African Free School Collection

In 1787, at a time when slavery was crucial to the prosperity and expansion of New York, the New York African Free School was created by the New York Manumission Society, a group dedicated to advocating for African Americans. The school's explicit mission was to educate black children to take their place as equals to white American citizens. It began as a single-room schoolhouse with about forty students, the majority of whom were the children of slaves, and by the time it was absorbed into the New York City public school system in 1835, it had educated thousands of children, a number of whom went on to become well known in the United States and Europe. The New-York Historical Society’s New York African Free School Collection preserves a rich selection of student work and community commentary about the school...... Read more

Walking into History: The Beginning of School Desegregation in Nashville

In September 1957, three years after the U. S. Supreme Court declared school segregation laws unconstitutional, the public schools of Nashville, Tennessee, implemented a "stairstep plan" that began with a select group of first-graders and added one grade a year until all twelve grades were desegregated...... Read more

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