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Evacuation Day 1783, Black Loyalists

On November 25, 1783, the British marched out of New York, closing the curtain on the American Revolution. For nearly three thousand Black Loyalists, this day was not an ending. It was a leap into a new beginning. They boarded ships with their names written in the Book of Negroes, often the first time they were recorded as free people. They sailed toward Nova Scotia, the Caribbean, and other British territories, carrying hope like a small flame against a cold wind. Some would later journey to Sierra Leone, still chasing the freedom they had been promised. The good was the chance to claim that freedom. The British had offered it to enslaved people who joined their forces. The bad was the fight over their status. American leaders demanded they be returned as “property.” The British refused, but the argument showed how fragile freedom could be in the new nation. The ugly arrived in Nova Scotia. The winters were brutal, the wages were low, the land grants were broken, and discrimination followed them across the sea. Many families spent years struggling for even a piece of what they had been told they would receive. Yet their departure mattered. Evacuation Day became one of the first large-scale movements of Black Americans choosing their future for themselves. Their courage was recorded. Their journey reshaped the Black diaspora. #BlackHistory #AmericanHistory #OnThisDay #LataraSpeaksTruth #CommunityFeed

Evacuation Day 1783, Black Loyalists
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George W. Ashburn

George W. Ashburn was a white Radical Republican who openly supported political rights for newly freed Black citizens during Reconstruction. That alone made him a target in Columbus, Georgia, where resistance to racial equality was strong and vocal. On March 31, 1868, Ashburn was assassinated inside a boarding house. Witnesses reported that a masked group forced their way in and shot him, a killing widely attributed to early Ku Klux Klan activity. His murder came just weeks after he backed Georgia’s new constitution, which expanded civil rights for Black residents. Because Georgia was still under military rule, his death did not stay a local matter. Federal authorities moved quickly, and on November 23, 1868, the case became national news when a military tribunal charged dozens of white men, some from prominent families, with participating in the assassination. The investigation exposed the organized backlash against Black political progress. It also showed how far opponents of Reconstruction were willing to go to silence anyone advocating for racial equality. But despite the national attention, the case fell apart. Political pressure, intimidation of witnesses, and Georgia’s push to end military oversight led to the charges being dropped. No one was ever convicted. Ashburn’s murder became a symbol of the violent resistance that shaped the end of Reconstruction, a reminder of the dangers faced not only by Black citizens, but by anyone who stood beside them during one of the most volatile periods in American history. #HistoryMatters #AmericanHistory #ReconstructionEra #GeorgiaHistory #CivilWarLegacy #PostWarSouth #HistoricalRecord #USHistoryStory #OnThisDayHistory

George W. Ashburn
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1941… Death of Henrietta Vinton Davis

Henrietta Vinton Davis, a groundbreaking actress, elocutionist, and international advocate, died on November 23, 1941 in Washington, D.C. Her career blended performance and activism during a period when opportunities for Black artists were limited. Davis became widely known through her stage work and later emerged as a prominent figure in the Universal Negro Improvement Association. She traveled, organized, and spoke publicly on issues related to unity, cultural pride, and global awareness among people of African descent. Her passing marked the end of a career that influenced both the performing arts and early twentieth century Black political life. Davis is now recognized as an important figure whose work reached across borders and generations. #BlackHistory #HenriettaVintonDavis #UNIAHistory #CulturalHistory #OnThisDay #PerformingArtsHistory #HistoricFigures #GlobalHistory #AmericanHistory #HistoryMatters

1941… Death of Henrietta Vinton Davis
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1897… Andrew J. Beard Receives a Patent for the “Jenny Coupler”

On November 23, 1897, Andrew Jackson Beard, a Black inventor from Alabama, received a U.S. patent for one of the most important railroad safety devices of the late 1800s: the automatic car coupler known as the “Jenny Coupler.” Before Beard’s invention, railroad workers had to stand between moving train cars to manually link them together. It was a dangerous job that resulted in countless crushed limbs and deaths. Beard knew those risks firsthand—he had worked around railroads and had seen the toll the old system took on brakemen. His design changed everything. The Jenny Coupler used a pair of locking jaws that snapped together automatically the moment two cars touched. It replaced a life-threatening task with a simple, safer, almost automatic motion. Beard’s patent became part of a nationwide shift toward better railroad safety. His work influenced federal requirements for automatic couplers and helped protect the workers who kept the rail industry running. Even though his name isn’t widely recognized today, Beard’s contribution had a lasting impact. His 1897 patent remains a clear example of how Black inventors helped shape American industrial technology—often without the credit they deserved. #OnThisDay #BlackHistory #AmericanHistory #Inventors #RailroadHistory #SafetyInnovation #UnsungHeroes #CommunityFeed

1897… Andrew J. Beard Receives a Patent for the “Jenny Coupler”
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1863… Connecticut Approves a Black Civil War Regiment

On this day in 1863, the Connecticut General Assembly met in a special session to decide whether Black men could serve as front line soldiers in the Union Army. After a day of debate, lawmakers approved the measure, and Governor William Buckingham signed it into law on November 23. This decision opened the door for Black residents in Connecticut to enlist in a state infantry regiment for the first time. Recruiters began organizing almost immediately, and more than one thousand Black volunteers stepped forward in the following months. Their participation formed the 29th Connecticut Colored Infantry Regiment and helped begin a second unit, the 30th Connecticut. The 29th Connecticut mustered into service in early 1864 and later fought in major campaigns near Petersburg and Richmond. They were also among the first Union troops to enter Richmond when the city fell in April 1865. The decision made on November 23, 1863 marked a turning point in Connecticut’s military history and highlighted the essential role Black soldiers played in the Union’s efforts during the Civil War. #BlackHistory #TodayInHistory #CivilWarHistory #ConnecticutHistory #UnionArmy #29thConnecticut #HistoricalFacts #AmericanHistory #OnThisDay #HistoryMatters

1863… Connecticut Approves a Black Civil War Regiment
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VIOLA LIUZZO… THE WOMAN WHO REFUSED TO LOOK AWAY

Viola Fauver Liuzzo was a thirty nine year old White mother of five from Detroit who made a choice most people only talk about. She saw the images from the events in Selma in March of 1965 and felt something inside her shift. While many people sat on the sidelines, she packed her car, left her family, and drove to Alabama because she believed protecting human dignity was everybody’s responsibility. She volunteered with the organization working to secure equal voting rights and helped transport marchers between Selma and Montgomery. On the night of March twenty fifth, as she drove with a young Black volunteer named Leroy Moton, a car filled with men from a violent extremist group pulled beside them on the highway. They opened fire. Viola Liuzzo was killed instantly. Leroy survived by pretending to be dead. One of the men in that car was later identified as an informant for federal agents, which sparked decades of questions about what really happened that night. Her death became a turning point. It shook the country. It pushed the conversation into every living room. It helped bring national support behind the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Yet she was attacked by people who wanted to erase her sacrifice. They tried to ruin her reputation. They tried to silence her name. Her family paid the price for decades. But history kept her in the light because truth has a way of rising again. Viola Liuzzo stood where many refused to stand. She offered her life because she believed that injustice anywhere was a threat to every home, every family, and every child. Her legacy asks a simple question. What do you do when you see wrong happening in front of you. Do you turn away or do you step forward like she did. #AmericanHistory #HistoricalFigures #LegacyStories #WomenInHistory #CourageAndCharacter #UnsungHeroes #StoriesWorthKnowing #EverydayHeroes #HistoryMatters #RealPeopleRealImpact

VIOLA LIUZZO… THE WOMAN WHO REFUSED TO LOOK AWAY
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Guion S. Bluford Jr. The First African American To Reach Space

Guion Stewart Bluford Jr. was born on November 22, 1942, in Philadelphia. His birthday sits inside a chapter of history that America rarely slows down long enough to honor. He grew up in a home that valued discipline, education, and excellence. That foundation shaped everything that came next. He served as an officer in the United States Air Force and became a skilled fighter pilot with more than one hundred forty missions during the Vietnam War. He later earned multiple advanced degrees in aerospace engineering and moved through a field where many rooms did not expect to see him. He stayed anyway. He studied harder. He pushed forward. On August 30, 1983, the Space Shuttle Challenger lifted off from Cape Canaveral. Bluford stepped into a role that had never been open to anyone before him. Millions watched a Black man take a seat that represented possibility for families who had been told to keep their dreams “realistic.” His presence in that shuttle changed the imagination of a generation. Bluford continued flying missions for NASA and contributed to research on fluid dynamics, microgravity, and space systems. His work helped expand what we understand about living and operating beyond Earth. His career became a long record of discipline, focus, and quiet excellence. Today his legacy shows up in STEM programs, scholarships, and young students who see him as proof that their gifts belong in every room. His birthday is a reminder that representation in science is not symbolic. It is real. It is necessary. And it still matters. #GuionBluford #BlackHistory #AmericanHistory #STEMHistory #SpaceAchievement #Trailblazer #NewsBreakHistory

Guion S. Bluford Jr.
The First African American To Reach Space
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Texas Employers Blacklist Black Veterans (1906)

Some stories in American history were never given the full attention they deserved, and the Brownsville Affair is one of them. In 1906, more than 160 Black soldiers from the 25th Infantry were blamed for a shooting they had nothing to do with. Local officials rushed to judgment with no proof, and the nation went along with the accusation. President Theodore Roosevelt discharged the entire group in one order, stripping their service, their honor, and their futures. What many people never hear about is what happened long after the headlines died down. The government eventually admitted the soldiers had been telling the truth from day one. The bullets didn’t match their rifles. The timelines didn’t fit. Witness claims fell apart. But by the time the record was corrected, decades had passed, and many of the men were already gone. Their families lived with the weight of an accusation built on bias, not evidence. Military benefits were never restored in time to help them. Careers were lost. Entire generations grew up under a shadow they did not deserve. The correction came too late to give the soldiers the justice they needed while they were still here. Instead, their names were quietly cleared long after the damage had been done. It’s a reminder that institutions can make decisions in minutes that take lifetimes to repair. These men deserve to be remembered with truth, dignity, and the honor they earned through service. #BrownsvilleAffair #BlackHistory #MilitaryHistory #HistoryUncovered #AmericanHistory #TruthMatters

Texas Employers Blacklist Black Veterans (1906)
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1863, Nashville… The Day New Soldiers Changed the War

On November 19, 1863, the 13th United States Colored Infantry officially formed in Nashville, Tennessee. Hundreds of Black men stepped forward to wear Union blue at a time when the nation still refused to recognize their full rights. They volunteered anyway. They took up weapons in a country that denied them protections, hoping their service would help crack the walls holding their people down. The 13th USCI was one piece of the larger United States Colored Troops, a force created after the Emancipation Proclamation opened the door for Black military enlistment. The officers were white, but the spirit, grit, and discipline came from the men themselves. Some had escaped plantations. Others were freeborn. All of them were determined to see slavery fall. Their service came with barriers. Lower pay in the early months. Harsher treatment. Hostility from Union soldiers and Confederate soldiers alike. Still, the 13th USCI held the line. They fought in Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama, pushing Union control deeper into the South. Their formation marked a turning point. The Civil War shifted from just saving the Union to redefining what freedom would mean in America. Black soldiers made that shift visible. The men of the 13th USCI stood as proof that Black Americans were willing, ready, and brave enough to fight for their freedom and their families’ future. Their legacy still speaks: freedom in this country has always moved forward because of the people who were denied it, yet fought for it anyway. #history #americanhistory #blackmilitaryhistory #civilwarstories #LataraSpeaksTruth

1863, Nashville… The Day New Soldiers Changed the War
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Remembering the Gettysburg Address

On November 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln stood on the battlefield at Gettysburg and delivered a message that reshaped how the nation understood the Civil War. The ceremony was meant to honor the thousands of soldiers who died there, but Lincoln used the moment to remind the country what the fight was really about. In just a few sentences, he connected the war to the country’s earliest promise that all people are created equal, and he challenged Americans to keep working toward a future where that promise actually means something. The speech was short, but the impact has lasted generations. Lincoln said the world would not remember what was said that day, but the opposite became true. The Gettysburg Address became a reminder that freedom, sacrifice, and democracy require constant work. Even now, the words push us to think about what kind of nation we want to be and whether we’re living up to the ideals we claim to stand on. #HistoryMatters #GettysburgAddress #OnThisDay #AmericanHistory #LataraSpeaksTruth

Remembering the Gettysburg Address