Destroying Segregation: The Personal Mission of Civil Rights Attorney Fred Gray

National Archives Foundation , United States

Attorney and Civil Rights icon Fred Gray played a pivotal role in the push for equality. Join the National Archives Foundation for a chance to hear rare first person accounts from Gray about how the Civil Rights movement gained momentum through bus boycotts in Alabama, how his friend Rosa Parks was ready to sit down […]

Free

Descendants of Enslaved People at Monticello

Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Monticello , United States

The stories of the descendants of enslaved people at Monticello weave a rich history of trials and perseverance, hope and family connection. Since 1993, the Getting Word African American Oral History Project at Monticello has been collecting stories from descendants of people enslaved at Monticello in order to preserve and shared these frequently untold stories. […]

Free

Education Guides on Reconstruction

American Civil War Museum , United States

This collection of Educator Resources rely on primary sources to explore different aspects of the Reconstruction period after the Civil War. You can use each of these for your own independent learning or to facilitate group learning.

Free

Billboards to Awaken Democracy

For Freedoms , United States

Imagine radical visions into reality. The 2020 Awakening featured more than 100 billboards by over 85 artists in all 50 states, Washington D.C., Puerto Rico, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Free

Enemy Mail: An American Story of Wartime Separation

Japanese American National Museum , United States

Use this resource to explore one Japanese American family's experience of incarceration during World War II. Utilizing artifacts donated to JANM by the Gihachi Yamashita family, this resource includes an Issei’s reflections while separated from his family along with correspondence between him and his wife and daughters as they reached out to each other through […]

Free

Edit the Declaration of Independence

American Philosophical Society , United States

If you had to edit the Declaration of Independence, could you? Would you search for formatting and grammatical errors or would you focus on the content? Maybe you would do both. Of course, once you edit it, you have to give it back to the writer. Are you ready to deal with an angry author?

Free

Download an Audio Tour of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights

The National Center for Civil and Human Rights , United States

This app allows you to discover and learn about the American Civil Rights and Global Human Rights movements. Whether you have a couple of hours or a couple of days, there are many ways to experience the Center for Civil and Human Rights.

Free

Equal Rights Exhibition

National Archives , United States

After the 15th Amendment banned voter discrimination, Southern states still barred most African Americans from the polls. Women campaigned until 1920 for their right to participate in elections—they continue to fight for equal pay. Various groups have battled against ethnic and religious discrimination in the military, schools, and public accommodations.

Free

Records of Rights: First Amendment Rights Exhibition

National Archives , United States

Are there limits to the types of speech we protect? What happens when a publication threatens national security? How do we keep the practice of one religion from impinging on the rights of others? Americans have debated the boundaries of their First Amendment rights since those rights were delineated in the Constitution.

Free

Explore American Flags Throughout History

Smithsonian Institution , United States

This is an assortment of photographs from the Photographic History Collection of photographs and photographic objects that include an American flag.

Free

Explore Oral History Playlist

Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum , United States

Short oral histories of people connected to Intrepid' s collections , including veterans, a Concorde pilot and the former head of NASA.

Free