This person invented a machine, called a "lasting machine," that stitched the leather of shoe to its sole.
Jan Metzeliger
Thurgood Marshall
This person's given first and middle name at birth were "Edward Kennedy."
Duke Ellington
This person was the world heavyweight boxing champion from 1937 to 1949.
Joe Louis
This person worked in childcare center before becoming a well-known political figure.
Shirley Chisholm
This person started a newspaper called "The North Star."
Frederick Douglass
This former coal mine worker born to former slaves got a degree from Harvard University and started what is called today "Black History Month."
Carter C. Woodson
This person, a well-known trumpet player, was known by the nickname "Satchmo."
Louis Armstrong
This person attended the University of California on a tennis scholarship.
Arthur Ashe
A Nation of Islam minister at one time, this person was assassinated while giving a speech in 1965.
Malcolm X
A Harvard graduate, this person played a role in starting the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
W.E.B. Dubois
This person started the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute in Alabama where black children could learn skills such as shoemaking and farming.
Booker T. Washington
This person sang in church choirs while growing up as the granddaughter of two Methodist ministers.
Leontyne Price
Jesse Owens
This person helped register black voters in Mississippi and led boycotts there of firms that practiced racial discrimination.
Medger Evers
This person refused to give up a seat on the bus. This led to a 382-day bus boycott by black people in Montgomery, Alabama.
Rosa Parks
This person was the first black congresswoman to be elected from the Deep South.
Barbara Jordan
This person, who was a famous writer of piano music, was known as the "King of Ragtime."
Scott Joplin
This person, the child of a runaway slave, was a football All-American and well-known actor and singer.
Paul Robeson
This civil rights advocate told her life story in the book A Colored Woman in a White World.
Mary Terrell
Many consider this fur and grain trader to be the founder of the city of Chicago.
Jean-Baptiste-Point DuSable
In 1870, this person was the first black to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Joseph Rainey
This person served three years in reform school for attempted burglary before writing many famous rock-and-roll songs.
Chuck Berry
In 1962, this person became the first black player inducted in the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Jackie Robinson
This person was a teacher in Mississippi before she became a well-known journalist.
Ida Wells Barnett