Find out more about the history of Slavery in America, including videos, interesting articles, pictures, historical features and more. ... read more
Though the Emancipation Proclamation didn’t officially end all slavery in America—that would happen with the passage of the 13th Amendment after the Civil War’s end in 1865—some 186,000 black soldiers would join the Union Army, and about 38,000 lost their lives. read more
Their goal has always been to minimize, delegitimize, and or erase anything positive that a black person has contributed to America (or their capability to do so) because (aside from their self hatred and hatred for black people) while they claim to be the so called rightful owners of a White Christians only society, black people in reality are among the "original Americans," from the 15th century, unlike those coming in waves of immigration 400 years later in the 19th Century. read more
Brutal black-on-black slavery was common in Africa for thousands of years. True, in the sense that the phenomenon of human beings enslaving other human beings goes back thousands of years, but not just among blacks, and not just in Africa. Most slaves brought to America from Africa were purchased from black slave owners. read more