NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE
BLACK HISTORY & CULTURE
100

At the gift shop, you can pick up a kinara, a candleholder that represents African roots; it'll hold candles in the symbolic colors of black for the people, red for their struggle & green for hope, all to help you celebrate this late December holiday

Kwanzaa

100

This wedding tradition may have once had to do with sweeping away evil spirits & today symbolizes a new beginning

jumping the broom

200

Thomas Jefferson wrote that "all men are created equal", yet, as seen from the names on the bricks, he was a major slaveholder, owning hundreds at this home & plantation in Virginia

Monticello

200

In 1956, he became the first Black entertainer to host a nationally broadcast TV variety show

Nat King Cole

300

Among Harriet Tubman's most treasured possessions was a lace shawl she received in recognition of her heroic efforts from this woman, who was celebrating her diamond jubilee

Queen Victoria

300

While Ebony is for the black community in general, this magazine launched in 1970 is geared especially to black women

Essence

400

"Our feet are tired, but our souls are rested", said Martin Luther King, & then soaked his feet in the bucket after leading thousands on a 5-day, 54-mile freedom march from Selma to the steps of the Capitol in this city

Montgomery

400

The first African-American combat pilots who served during World War II

Tuskegee Airmen

500

The tape recorder was used by this man, whose ideas for black activism couldn't be contained by the Nation of Islam, leading to the sad correctness of his prediction in his autobiography that, "I, too, will die by violence"

Malcolm X

500

In 1924 the Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary became this historically black college for women

Spelman