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News Articles: History

Hay House executive director Aubrey Newby explains the role of Chester Davis as the first tour guide and docent of the historic home in Macon.

Tagged as: 

  • History

Showcasing servants and enslaved people who brought luxury living to Hay House

Macon’s historic mansion shares its research into ‘Untold Stories’ of service and sacrifice 

March 14, 2025
|
By:
  • Liz Fabian
Caption: Andrew Young (right, standing) leads a prayer with Amelia Boynton, the Rev. Hosea Williams, John Lewis, and Bob Mants before the first march to Montgomery on March 7, 1965.  Credit: Spider Martin/Briscoe Center for American History

Tagged as: 

  • News

At 93, Andrew Young reflects on legacy, faith and America’s future. He has no plans of slowing down

Civil rights icon Andrew Young reflects on his 93rd birthday, his lifelong pursuit of justice, and his unwavering faith in America’s future.

March 12, 2025
|
By:
  • Pamela Kirkland
Police enter an immigration detention centre in Bangkok on Jan. 22.

Tagged as: 

  • Opinion

Opinion: Thailand's deportation of Uyghurs to China has echoes of 10 years ago

Thailand's recent deportations of Uyghurs to China have eerie parallels with a large deportation in 2015, in which the country bowed to Beijing, writes historian Jeffrey Wasserstrom.

March 08, 2025
|
By:
  • Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Attendees applaud as Brad Schimel announces his run for Wisconsin State Supreme Court on Thursday, Nov. 30, 2023, in Waukesha, Wis.

Tagged as: 

  • National

State Supreme Court races can be costly, competitive and combative. Why?

Wisconsin is on track to break spending records once again in a high court contest that's at times turned heated. But these races weren't always like this.

March 06, 2025
|
By:
  • Anya van Wagtendonk
President Trump speaks during an address to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, DC, on March 4, 2025.

Tagged as: 

  • Politics

Trump's speech is longest joint address to Congress in recent history

With his address clocking in at more than 90 minutes, President Trump's address to a joint session of Congress is the longest speech of its kind in at least sixty years.

March 05, 2025
|
By:
  • Elena Moore
President Trump talks to reporters from the Resolute Desk on Jan. 30.

Tagged as: 

  • Analysis

Trump is asserting extraordinary power over independent agencies. Is the Fed next?

The rise and potential fall of independent agencies.

March 04, 2025
|
By:
  • Greg Rosalsky
Professor Malandro and the students at Filhos de Bimba pose for a portrait.

Tagged as: 

  • Arts & Culture News

Atlanta capoeira students discuss cultural impact and finding community in martial arts

The Afro-Brazilian martial art began as a tool for self-defense and liberation for enslaved Africans in Brazil. Now capoeira students in Atlanta are learning that history through songs and the art form's many traditions.

February 28, 2025
|
By:
  • Amanda Andrews

Tagged as: 

  • Book Reviews

'Last Seen': After slavery, family members placed ads looking for loved ones

Formerly enslaved people would placed ads in newspapers hoping to find lost children, parents, spouses and siblings. Historian Judith Giesberg tells the stories of some of those families in a new book.

February 27, 2025
|
By:
  • Maureen Corrigan
"50 Years of Hope and HA-HAs" is the first Vietnamese American art exhibit to open in the D.C., Maryland and Virginia region, according to the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities.

Tagged as: 

  • Fine Art

A new art exhibit examines 50 years since the Vietnam War and looks forward with hope

April 2025 marks 50 years since the end of the Vietnam War. In Washington, D.C., a new art exhibit offers counter-narratives of what it means to be Vietnamese American.

February 27, 2025
|
By:
  • Suzanne Nuyen
Mercer University sophomore Taylor Boyd mounts a piece of the Freedom Seekers exhibit at Tubman African American Museum in Macon. The exhibit features so-called “runaway slave ads” researched by students like Boyd. “They had everyday problems just like us,” Boyd said. “Reading their stories and reading that they were running away to families or they had lovers that really just exemplified the importance of why we need to showcase this.”

Tagged as: 

  • History

Tubman museum's newspaper ad exhibition honors the humanity of enslaved people

When enslaved people fled bondage in the 19th-century South, their enslavers were often forced to describe the people they considered property as human beings in "runaway slave ads" in newspapers. 

February 21, 2025
|
By:
  • Grant Blankenship

Tagged as: 

  • Books

First known cookbook by a Black American woman gets new edition 160 years later

Malinda Russell's A Domestic Cookbook was first published in 1866. It contains least a hundred recipes for sweets, plus recipes for shampoo and cologne – and remedies for toothaches.

February 20, 2025
|
By:
  • Neda Ulaby
Guests get cozy in a vintage machine at the Photo Booth Museum by Photomatica in San Francisco.

Tagged as: 

  • Photography

Squeeze into a photo booth for a Valentine's Day smooch

In honor of Valentine's Day, we stop in at the new Photo Booth Museum in San Francisco to find out how people are using the booths to celebrate their love.

February 14, 2025
|
By:
  • Chloe Veltman
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says the Army base that has been called Fort Liberty since 2023 will revert to its original name, Fort Bragg.

Tagged as: 

  • National

Fort Bragg 2.0: Army base reverts to its old name, but with a new namesake

A U.S. Army base originally named after a Confederate general, then renamed Fort Liberty, will revert to the name Fort Bragg. Its new namesake is WWII hero Roland Bragg — unbeknownst to his family.

February 11, 2025
|
By:
  • Rachel Treisman
Bennett Parten is the author of "Somewhere Toward Freedom: Sherman’s March and the Story of America’s Largest Emancipation".

Tagged as: 

  • History

The largest emancipation event in U.S. history happened in Georgia. A new book describes how

Sherman's march to the sea did more than just burn Atlanta to the ground. It assisted in the emancipation of thousands of enslaved people.

February 11, 2025
|
By:
  • Peter Biello
U.S. Army 1st Sgt. Glenn Harris was among the soldiers who survived the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu in Somalia. One year later, he died at the age of 35 in a parachute training accident at Fort Benning, now named Fort Moore, where his 3rd Ranger Battalion was based. Photo courtesy of Tara Harris

Tagged as: 

  • History

Columbus native’s research helps produce Netflix docuseries ‘Surviving Black Hawk Down’

Surviving Black Hawk Down, a three-part Netflix series, tells stories of soldiers and civilians who survived the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu in Somalia.

February 10, 2025
|
By:
  • Mark Rice
  • Load More

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