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

PHOTOS: Joyful Juneteenth marchers brave D.C rain as America enters a civil rights summer

  • fave
  • like
  • share

And here they were on Juneteenth, blocks from America’s epicenter of power.

More than a dozen demonstrations had more than a dozen messages— “Defund the Police” and “Defend Black Women” were two—but the violent subculture seemed to stay home, and seemed to know this wasn’t their moment.

Some women held simple signs, each with the name of a black woman or girl killed by law enforcement.

The signs were simple, just the names in black letters, floating on a white background.

Standing at Freedom Plaza, just a few blocks from the White House, you could see all the competing marches converge.

Source: New Pittsburgh Courier - Powered by Real Times Media

Democratic Party Facts

  • Congressman Denny Heck, Olympia, Washington
  • Dash, Stacey (1967- )
  • Pacific Bound: California’s 1852 Fugitive Slave Law
  • (1965) Bayard Rustin, “From Protest to Politics: The Future of the Civil Rights Movement”
  • Wilder, Lawrence Douglas (1931- )
  • John W. Davis
  • Bayard Rustin
  • First inauguration of Barack Obama
  • Wheat, Alan Dupree (1951 - )
  • Edward Brooke

Black People Facts

  • (1849) Frederick Douglass, “On Mexico”
  • William Levi Dawson
  • Lecture 13 | African-American Freedom Struggle (Stanford)
  • How Income Inequality Affects Minority Workers
  • White, V. Ethel Willis (1920-2003)
  • (1850) Samuel Ringgold Ward, “Speech on the Fugitive Slave Bill”
  • (1863) Frederick Douglass, Men of Color, To Arms!
  • Slavery and Freedom on a Canadian Shore: Africa's Children in Nova Scotia, 1750-2009
  • (1987) Thurgood Marshall, “A Colorblind Society Remains an Aspiration”
  • Zimbabwe

United States Facts

  • (2013) President Barack Obama, Inaugural Address
  • (1871) Congressman Joseph H. Rainey, “Speech Made in Reply to An Attack Upon the Colored State Legislators of South Carolina..."
  • Prison rebellion, Rahway State Prison, New Jersey
  • Mt. Pisgah African Methodist Episcopal Church [Elsinboro, New Jersey] (1754- )
  • Congress cracks down on civil rights for blacks
  • Harrison, Samuel (1818-1900)
  • Gullah
  • (1904) Mary Church Terrell, “The Progress of Colored Women”
  • Clardy Craven, Erma (1918-1994)
  • St. Philips Moravian Church [Winston-Salem, North Carolina] (1822- )

American Civil War Facts

  • The 50 Most Influential Novels Written on the Black West
  • Cheatham, Henry Plummer (1857-1935)
  • African America’s First Protest Meeting: Black Philadelphians Reject the American Colonization Society Plans for Their Resettlem
  • Charlotte Ray (First African American Woman Lawyer)
  • History of Black Civil Rights in America
  • Second Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry Regiment (1863-1865)
  • Reuben V. Anderson is appointed a judge
  • National Baptist Convention
  • Saint James AME Church, Helena, Montana (1888- )
  • Mother African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church [Harlem] (1796- )
  • 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)