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New research is shedding light on a 40-acre military camp for Black soldiers that fanned out from the southeast corner of ...
Spotlight on a letter from a young Union soldier interested in a commission with an African American regiment and a tintype of a young master and his slave, Silas Chandler, who fought together in ...
The African American Civil War Museum in D.C. marked Juneteenth with a celebration to honor the estimated 6,000 Black soldiers who went to Galveston, Texas, 160 years ago.
The virtual Feb. 19 program will be co-hosted by the new African Americans in the Civil War Era Round Table.
A climate activist with a far-left advocacy group smeared red paint on an exhibit honoring an African American regiment that fought during the Civil War, during a protest at the National Gallery ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) -- The Roots 101 African-American Museum is helping recognize Black veterans who fought in the Civil War. Nearly 24,000 African American men from Kentucky fought in the war ...
In the United States, he joined an African American regiment in the Union Army. After the Civil War, Said spent the rest of his life fighting for equality, according to Calbreath.
New monument marks African American Civil War veteran who made Moorhead home Dozens attend ceremony celebrating Felix Battles, who became one of Moorhead's first barbers.
Luzerne County Community College is hosting an exhibit which explores the often-overlooked history of African American contributions as nurses, surgeons, and hospital workers during the Civil War.
Going back to the 19th Century, just after the Civil War, the “Buffalo Soldiers” were the first African American army regiments in the U.S. Peacetime Army, with four stationed out of Fort Davis.
Unlike the American military at the time, the force mixed white and Black volunteers in the same units. Among the African-American volunteers was Fort Worth’s own Theodore Gibbs.
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