Blackfacts Login

Login to BlackFacts.com using your favorite Social Media Login. Click the appropriate button below and you will be redirected to your Social Media Website for confirmation and then back to Blackfacts.com once successful.



Enter the email address and password you used to join BlackFacts.com. If you cannot remember your login information, click the “Forgot Password” link to reset your password.

Forgot Password?
Forgot Your Blackfacts Password?

Enter the email address and password you used to join BlackFacts.com. If you cannot remember your login information, click the “Forgot Password” link to reset your password.


BlackFacts.com
  • Home
  • Learn
    • American Black History
    • Black History Calendar
    • Black History Facts of the Day
    • Black History Heroes
    • Caribbean Revolutionaries
    • Divine Nine - Black Fraternities and Sororities
    • Ethnic Studies Historical Events/Timelines
    • LatinX Trailblazers
    • LGBTQ+ Pioneers
    • Native American Icons
    • Wakanda "Global-Cultural" News
    • Historical Women of Color
  • For Educators
    • Diversity Schoolhouse
    • BlackFacts for Homeschoolers
    • Cultural & Historical Video Series
    • Schedule a Demo
    • Subscribe Now!
  • Shop
    • BlackFacts SWAG
    • Diversity Content Widgets
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Learn
    • American Black History
    • Black History Calendar
    • Black History Facts of the Day
    • Black History Heroes
    • Caribbean Revolutionaries
    • Divine Nine - Black Fraternities and Sororities
    • Ethnic Studies Historical Events/Timelines
    • Latinx Trailblazers
    • LGBTQ+ Pioneers
    • Native American Icons
    • Wakanda "Global-Cultural" News
    • Historical Women of Color
  • For Educators
    • Diversity Schoolhouse
    • BlackFacts for Homeschoolers
    • Cultural & Historical Video Series
    • Schedule a Demo
    • Subscribe Now!
  • Shop
    • BlackFacts SWAG
    • Diversity Content Widgets
  • About Us
  • Calendar
  • History
  • Videos
  • News
  • Donate

BlackFacts Details

Mother Emanuel’s Legacy of Hope Five Years Later

  • fave
  • like
  • share

What started with a Bible study in the basement of Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church on Calhoun Street in downtown Charleston, South Carolina, became the scene of mass murder at the hands of a racist.

Nine members of Emanuel AME – including its pastor, S.C. Senator Clementa C. Pinckney, and parishioner Cynthia Graham Hurd, a librarian at the College of Charleston – lost their lives that night, leaving the congregation and the city stunned, appalled and heartbroken.

Powers co-wrote the book We Are Charleston: Tragedy and Triumph at Mother Emanuel with South Carolina Poet Laureate Marjory Wentworth and writer Herb Frazier in an effort to shine a light on the strength of the church and its congregants, a strength born out of pain and passion for seeking something better.

Recently Powers, director of the College’s Center for the Study of Slavery in Charleston and interim president of Charleston’s International African American Museum, answered questions about how Emanuel AME has turned darkness into hope throughout history, and how we can hold onto that hope even today.

As a congregation in the AME denomination, Emanuel was born into activism because the denomination was conceived as an antiracist, antislavery church, and one that would provide for African American autonomy when it was originally founded in the late 18th century.

Source: The Charleston Chronicle

Black People Facts

  • Black people
  • List of African-American inventors and scientists
  • What I Just Learned About Black People In Early American History Blew My Mind
  • African American History and Women Timeline 1920-1929
  • Ebony Magazine
  • African-American neighborhood
  • The Notting Hill Riots (1958)
  • Colored Marine Employment Benevolent Association (1921-1934)
  • Documentary Films on Blackpast.org - African American History - Director
  • Johnnetta Betsch Cole

American Civil War Facts

  • Harriet Tubman Day: March 10
  • Timeline Home Page
  • Voices of the Civil War Episode 13: "54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment"
  • African American Life in Washington, DC, Before Emancipation
  • Clayton, Eva (1934- )
  • Black Belt (U.S. region)
  • Kenneth A Gibson elected the first African American mayor of Newark. In 1976, he
  • Brown, Jill E. (1950- )
  • Harriet Tubman Biography: Later Years
  • Menard, John Willis (1838-1893)

Popular Topics

  • African American
  • American Civil War
  • Barack Obama
  • Black People
  • Democratic Party
  • Martin Luther King Jr.
  • New York City
  • Southern United States
  • United States
  • Washington DC

Southern United States Facts

  • Ida B. Wells-Barnett
  • Ralph David Abernathy
  • Ebony Magazine
  • Juneteenth
  • Booker T. Washington
  • Southern, Eileen Jackson (1920-2002)
  • Thomas Jennings
  • 54th Massachusetts Infantry (1863-1865)
  • Anderson, Marian
  • Black Indians: A Personal and Historic Journey

Random Facts

  • Haïti-insécurité : le laxisme du gouvernement sous le feu des critiques - Haiti24
  • PM: Government still considering Tobago police force - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday
  • Alleged Cocaine Deal: How Abba Kyari worked with drug cartel in Brazil - NDLEA
  • 14 escape death in Osun auto crash – FRSC
  • 'Silly Love Songs' Valentine Tribute by Marilyn McCoo and Billy Davis Jr.
  • Gov't pays out millions in judgements and settlements
  • Roselin McFarlane Dies
  • Gabon: Zadié Sâdakâ international festival celebrates traditions of indigenous people | Africanews
  • THE PUBLIC SERVICE TOASTMASTERS CLUB BEACH CLEAN UP ACTIVITY
  • Top 14 : «Un peu à l'image de la saison», peste Ugo Mola, regrettant «l'indiscipline» toulousaine
  • Home
  • /
  • Terms of Service
  • /
  • Privacy Policy
  • /
  • Fair Use Notice
  • /
  • Dedication

Copyright © 1997 - 2025 Black Facts. All Rights Reserved.

Blackfacts BETA RELEASE 11.5.3
(Production Environment)