Charleston

For nearly nine years, since June 17, 2015, the spire atop Mother Emanuel Church has watched over Charleston, South Carolina, and served as a reminder of the horrors of racial violence. Nine Black churchgoers were killed when a white supremacist walked into one of the South’s oldest Black churches, intent on starting a race war. […]

CHARLESTON, S.C. —  Courting Black voters he needs to win reelection, President Biden on Monday denounced the “poison” of white supremacy in America, saying at the site of a deadly racist shooting at a South Carolina church that such ideology has no place in America, “not today, tomorrow or ever.” Biden spoke from the pulpit of […]

President Biden plans to reach out to disaffected Black supporters on Monday by taking his campaign to the site of one of the most horrific hate crimes of recent years and decrying the racism and extremism that have shaped U.S. politics. Mr. Biden will fly from Wilmington, Del., where he spent the weekend at his […]

36 Hours in Charleston, South Carolina: Things to Do and See  The New York Times Source link

The moment Melvin Graham learned three Black people were fatally shot in a racially motivated rampage at a Dollar General store in Jacksonville, Florida, he said his mind raced back to June 17, 2015. That was the day his sister and eight other congregants of the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, […]

The grand opening ceremony for the International African American Museum (IAAM) was held on Saturday, June 24, 2023. The museum is built on a portion of the former Gadsden’s Wharf in Charleston, South Carolina — an important spot in American history. “As I look out into Gadsden’s Wharf, into the harbor where 100,000 Africans first […]

Before Congress ended the transatlantic slave trade in 1808, the Port of Charleston was the nation’s epicenter of human trafficking. Almost half of the estimated 400,000 African people imported into what became the United States were brought to that Southern city, and a substantial number . . .

CHARLESTON, S.C. — Maude Callen, a Black nurse-midwife, delivered more than 800 infants across the South Carolina Lowcountry starting in the 1920s, when segregation made it difficult for Black people to get medical care. Although Callen isn’t commonly considered a household name, visitors passing through the new $120 million International African American Museum that opened […]

Charleston, S.C. — The first time I viewed the Charleston Harbor, I was standing at the former site of Gadsden’s Wharf, where more than 40% of the nation’s enslaved Africans had arrived centuries ago when they were forced into chattel slavery. I stood with my 12-year-old daughter facing the water at precisely the point where […]

New Charleston museum nods to historical roots of U.S. health disparities | Georgia Public Broadcasting Skip to main content Source link


Current track

Title

Artist