From forgotten war heroes to overlooked inventors, dive into some of the most fascinating stories from the annals of Black history.

Throughout American history, Black cowboys have roamed the plains, Black explorers have traveled to unseen lands, and Black women have broken barriers as doctors and activists. Black history is American history. And these 33 Black history facts are just the tip of the iceberg.

In the gallery below, you can explore the stories of some truly remarkable Black Americans. From Bass Reeves, the deputy who fearlessly patrolled the Wild West, to Hazel Scott, the musician who successfully played two pianos at once, these little-known Black history facts shed light on the past like never before.

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1 of 34Lonnie Johnson spent his childhood tinkering with objects, including his sister’s doll. After earning a scholarship to attend Tuskegee University, he found a job at NASA — and then invented an iconic water gun while puzzling over a different project in the 1980s. Thomas S. England/Getty Images 2 of 34For over 30 years, Daryl Davis has been approaching white supremacists with one simple question: “How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?” He’s convinced hundreds of KKK members to give up their robes for good.YouTube 3 of 34While comforting a suicidal man, Muhammad Ali told him, “You’re my brother! I love you, and I couldn’t lie to you.” Ali eventually convinced him not to jump off a building — and then took him to the hospital. Los Angeles Public Library 4 of 34Before he became a world-famous actor, Samuel L. Jackson fought tirelessly to improve conditions for Black students on his college campus — even holding Martin Luther King Sr. hostage to draw attention to the issues at the school. While administrators agreed to some much-needed changes, Jackson was kicked out of school.Samuel L. Jackson/Hollywood Reporter 5 of 34The brilliant musician Hazel Scott spoke out against racism whenever she encountered it throughout her career and refused to play at segregated clubs. She once said, “Why would anyone come to hear me, a Negro, and refuse to sit beside someone just like me?“YouTube 6 of 34Born Oluale Kossola, Cudjo Lewis was on the last, illegal slave ship to the United States in 1860. He endured four years of slavery before he was freed — and then decided to create his own community.University of South Alabama 7 of 34Actor Morgan Freeman imported 26 hives from Arkansas to his ranch and planted magnolia, clover, lavender, and bee-friendly fruit trees so that the bees could thrive. YouTube 8 of 34Dubbed the “Harlem Hellfighters” by the cowed Germans and the “Men of Bronze” by the grateful French, the 369th Infantry Regiment proved its mettle during World War I. They were feted as heroes with a New York City parade when they returned home but also found American racism solidly in place. Wikimedia Commons 9 of 34Eugene Bullard was such a skilled pilot during World War I that the French called him “Black Swallow,” but the U.S. Air Service denied him entry. And even though Bullard was seen as a hero in France, he spent his final years in the U.S. by working as an elevator operator. Wikimedia Commons 10 of 34After escaping from slavery by punching his master, Bass Reeves became one of the most effective lawmen of the Wild West. He arrested 3,000 and killed 14, once shooting an outlaw from a quarter-mile away. And some believe that his exploits inspired the Lone Ranger.Wikimedia Commons 11 of 34Known as “Baby Esther,” Esther Jones delighted audiences as a young singer and dancer in the 1920s and 1930s. She was especially beloved for her signature phrase “Boop, Boop-a-Doop.” But Jones eventually faded into obscurity, and a white performer named Helen Kane started copying her act, catching the eye of the cartoonist who later created Betty Boop. And though the cartoon took off, Jones never received credit or royalties.Public Domain 12 of 34Standing six feet tall, “Stagecoach Mary” Fields was said to have the “temperament of a grizzly bear.” Tough as nails, she drove over 300 miles each week to deliver mail and was beloved in her town of Cascade, Montana. Public Domain 13 of 34Claudette Colvin later said that civil rights activists considered using her case to challenge Montgomery’s segregation laws, but ultimately passed because she was young, dark-skinned, and pregnant. Wikimedia Commons 14 of 34"He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it,” said Shannon LaNier, Thomas Jefferson’s sixth great-grandson. But despite his feelings about his ancestor, he agreed to pose alongside a portrait of Jefferson for a photographer — as long as he didn’t have to wear a wig. Wikimedia Commons/Drew Gardner 15 of 34With just $1.25, Madam C.J. Walker launched “Madam Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower” as an enormously successful hair product for Black women in 1905. And as her star rose, she used her fame to advocate for anti-lynching legislation. Public Domain 16 of 34Despite being enslaved by explorer William Clark, York was a crucial member of Clark’s expedition alongside Meriwether Lewis. At one point, York even saved Clark, Sacagawea, and her son, when they got caught in a flash flood. But after they completed the journey, Clark denied York’s requests for freedom until decades later. Pinterest 17 of 34Though she received pushback for her role as a house slave named Mammy, Hattie McDaniel often said: “I’d rather play a maid than be one.“Wikimedia Commons 18 of 34"My notes would have been highly compromising had they been discovered, but who would dare search Josephine Baker to the skin?” Josephine Baker later said. “When they asked me for papers, they generally meant autographs.“Wikimedia Commons 19 of 34Mary McLeod Bethune was known as “The First Lady Of Negro America” and “The First Lady Of The Struggle” — and later went on to advise five presidents. Public Domain 20 of 34Not only did Ann Lowe have to fight to use the front door at Jackie Kennedy’s wedding, but Kennedy also dismissed her as a “colored woman dressmaker” when she was asked who had created her wedding dress — and never even named Lowe as the designer.Bettmann Archive/Getty Images 21 of 34"It wasn’t hard,” Doris Miller later said. “I just pulled the trigger and she worked fine. I had watched the others with these guns. I guess I fired her for about fifteen minutes. I think I got one of those Jap planes. They were diving pretty close to us.“US Navy/Wikimedia Commons 22 of 34The descendent of African people who had once been enslaved by the Muscogee Nation, Sarah Rector was eligible to receive land from the U.S. government when Oklahoma became a state in 1907. Though the young girl was given a plot of so-called undesirable land, it turned out to be rich with oil. By the time she turned 18, her net worth was estimated at over $1 million — about $28 million today.Wikimedia Commons 23 of 34"Henson must go all the way,” wrote Matthew Henson’s partner Robert Edwin Peary of their North Pole trek. “I can’t make it there without him.” The pair had tried to reach the Arctic Circle several times before they finally succeeded in 1909, and Henson claims he was the first of their crew to do so. But his incredible achievement went largely ignored for years because of his race. Wikimedia Commons 24 of 34Set along the present-day western edge of Central Park, between 83rd and 89th Street in Manhattan, Seneca Village grew to have a population of about 300 people before it was ultimately razed. New York Public Library 25 of 34Black historian Carter G. Woodson created Negro History Week after noticing the blatant absence of Black history in his master’s and Ph.D. history programs.

“If a race has no history,” Woodson wrote, “it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated.“Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34Harriet Tubman was one of the most famous “conductors” on the Underground Railroad, who proudly stated that she never lost a “passenger.“Wikimedia Commons 27 of 34Black women were banned from service during the Civil War — but many served anyway as scouts, nurses, and spies.Public Domain 28 of 34Rebecca Lee Crumpler earned her medical degree in 1864 at age 33. And after the Civil War ended, she traveled to the former capital of the Confederacy to treat newly emancipated slaves. She primarily focused on women and children, but she cared for any vulnerable patient in need — regardless of their ability to pay.Twitter 29 of 34Of the roughly 10.7 million enslaved Africans who survived the treacherous Middle Passage, most of them were sent to the Caribbean or South America. About 388,000 were sent directly to North America. Wikimedia Commons 30 of 34Native Americans were allegedly the first to call the men “Buffalo Soldiers”. This was perhaps because of their curly hair — or because the Native Americans admired their might, just like they did from the buffalo. John C. H. Grabill/True West Magazine 31 of 34Between 1882 and 1968, at least 4,743 lynchings occurred in the United States. Most of these lynching victims were Black. They were often tortured by angry mobs before being hanged, decapitated, or burned alive in front of an enthusiastic audience. Library of Congress 32 of 34Going by the name “William Cathay,” Cathay Williams served alongside an all-Black regiment after the Civil War. Traveling with the famous Buffalo Soldiers in the Wild West for three years, Williams saw more of America than most women of her time. But when she came down with smallpox, her gender was revealed to her fellow soldiers and she was honorably discharged. US Army 33 of 34Martin Luther King Jr. had used the line “I Have A Dream” before the 1963 March on Washington and an advisor suggested that he not use it again because it was “trite” and “cliché.”

But during his speech, a gospel singer and a friend of King’s named ​Mahalia Jackson called, “Tell them about the dream, Martin. Tell them about the dream.” So, King did. Getty Images 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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33 Little-Known Facts About Black History That You Didn’t Learn In School View Gallery

In the Black history facts gallery, you can also learn about Black Americans who turned their backs on racism in the United States and found fame abroad. Eugene Bullard became the first Black American fighter pilot by fighting for the French during World War I. He famously flew with a plane painted with the words “All Blood Runs Red.”

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1 of 34Lonnie Johnson spent his childhood tinkering with objects, including his sister’s doll. After earning a scholarship to attend Tuskegee University, he found a job at NASA — and then invented an iconic water gun while puzzling over a different project in the 1980s. Thomas S. England/Getty Images 2 of 34For over 30 years, Daryl Davis has been approaching white supremacists with one simple question: “How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?” He’s convinced hundreds of KKK members to give up their robes for good.YouTube 3 of 34While comforting a suicidal man, Muhammad Ali told him, “You’re my brother! I love you, and I couldn’t lie to you.” Ali eventually convinced him not to jump off a building — and then took him to the hospital. Los Angeles Public Library 4 of 34Before he became a world-famous actor, Samuel L. Jackson fought tirelessly to improve conditions for Black students on his college campus — even holding Martin Luther King Sr. hostage to draw attention to the issues at the school. While administrators agreed to some much-needed changes, Jackson was kicked out of school.Samuel L. Jackson/Hollywood Reporter 5 of 34The brilliant musician Hazel Scott spoke out against racism whenever she encountered it throughout her career and refused to play at segregated clubs. She once said, “Why would anyone come to hear me, a Negro, and refuse to sit beside someone just like me?“YouTube 6 of 34Born Oluale Kossola, Cudjo Lewis was on the last, illegal slave ship to the United States in 1860. He endured four years of slavery before he was freed — and then decided to create his own community.University of South Alabama 7 of 34Actor Morgan Freeman imported 26 hives from Arkansas to his ranch and planted magnolia, clover, lavender, and bee-friendly fruit trees so that the bees could thrive. YouTube 8 of 34Dubbed the “Harlem Hellfighters” by the cowed Germans and the “Men of Bronze” by the grateful French, the 369th Infantry Regiment proved its mettle during World War I. They were feted as heroes with a New York City parade when they returned home but also found American racism solidly in place. Wikimedia Commons 9 of 34Eugene Bullard was such a skilled pilot during World War I that the French called him “Black Swallow,” but the U.S. Air Service denied him entry. And even though Bullard was seen as a hero in France, he spent his final years in the U.S. by working as an elevator operator. Wikimedia Commons 10 of 34After escaping from slavery by punching his master, Bass Reeves became one of the most effective lawmen of the Wild West. He arrested 3,000 and killed 14, once shooting an outlaw from a quarter-mile away. And some believe that his exploits inspired the Lone Ranger.Wikimedia Commons 11 of 34Known as “Baby Esther,” Esther Jones delighted audiences as a young singer and dancer in the 1920s and 1930s. She was especially beloved for her signature phrase “Boop, Boop-a-Doop.” But Jones eventually faded into obscurity, and a white performer named Helen Kane started copying her act, catching the eye of the cartoonist who later created Betty Boop. And though the cartoon took off, Jones never received credit or royalties.Public Domain 12 of 34Standing six feet tall, “Stagecoach Mary” Fields was said to have the “temperament of a grizzly bear.” Tough as nails, she drove over 300 miles each week to deliver mail and was beloved in her town of Cascade, Montana. Public Domain 13 of 34Claudette Colvin later said that civil rights activists considered using her case to challenge Montgomery’s segregation laws, but ultimately passed because she was young, dark-skinned, and pregnant. Wikimedia Commons 14 of 34"He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it,” said Shannon LaNier, Thomas Jefferson’s sixth great-grandson. But despite his feelings about his ancestor, he agreed to pose alongside a portrait of Jefferson for a photographer — as long as he didn’t have to wear a wig. Wikimedia Commons/Drew Gardner 15 of 34With just $1.25, Madam C.J. Walker launched “Madam Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower” as an enormously successful hair product for Black women in 1905. And as her star rose, she used her fame to advocate for anti-lynching legislation. Public Domain 16 of 34Despite being enslaved by explorer William Clark, York was a crucial member of Clark’s expedition alongside Meriwether Lewis. At one point, York even saved Clark, Sacagawea, and her son, when they got caught in a flash flood. But after they completed the journey, Clark denied York’s requests for freedom until decades later. Pinterest 17 of 34Though she received pushback for her role as a house slave named Mammy, Hattie McDaniel often said: “I’d rather play a maid than be one.“Wikimedia Commons 18 of 34"My notes would have been highly compromising had they been discovered, but who would dare search Josephine Baker to the skin?” Josephine Baker later said. “When they asked me for papers, they generally meant autographs.“Wikimedia Commons 19 of 34Mary McLeod Bethune was known as “The First Lady Of Negro America” and “The First Lady Of The Struggle” — and later went on to advise five presidents. Public Domain 20 of 34Not only did Ann Lowe have to fight to use the front door at Jackie Kennedy’s wedding, but Kennedy also dismissed her as a “colored woman dressmaker” when she was asked who had created her wedding dress — and never even named Lowe as the designer.Bettmann Archive/Getty Images 21 of 34"It wasn’t hard,” Doris Miller later said. “I just pulled the trigger and she worked fine. I had watched the others with these guns. I guess I fired her for about fifteen minutes. I think I got one of those Jap planes. They were diving pretty close to us.“US Navy/Wikimedia Commons 22 of 34The descendent of African people who had once been enslaved by the Muscogee Nation, Sarah Rector was eligible to receive land from the U.S. government when Oklahoma became a state in 1907. Though the young girl was given a plot of so-called undesirable land, it turned out to be rich with oil. By the time she turned 18, her net worth was estimated at over $1 million — about $28 million today.Wikimedia Commons 23 of 34"Henson must go all the way,” wrote Matthew Henson’s partner Robert Edwin Peary of their North Pole trek. “I can’t make it there without him.” The pair had tried to reach the Arctic Circle several times before they finally succeeded in 1909, and Henson claims he was the first of their crew to do so. But his incredible achievement went largely ignored for years because of his race. Wikimedia Commons 24 of 34Set along the present-day western edge of Central Park, between 83rd and 89th Street in Manhattan, Seneca Village grew to have a population of about 300 people before it was ultimately razed. New York Public Library 25 of 34Black historian Carter G. Woodson created Negro History Week after noticing the blatant absence of Black history in his master’s and Ph.D. history programs.

“If a race has no history,” Woodson wrote, “it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated.“Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34Harriet Tubman was one of the most famous “conductors” on the Underground Railroad, who proudly stated that she never lost a “passenger.“Wikimedia Commons 27 of 34Black women were banned from service during the Civil War — but many served anyway as scouts, nurses, and spies.Public Domain 28 of 34Rebecca Lee Crumpler earned her medical degree in 1864 at age 33. And after the Civil War ended, she traveled to the former capital of the Confederacy to treat newly emancipated slaves. She primarily focused on women and children, but she cared for any vulnerable patient in need — regardless of their ability to pay.Twitter 29 of 34Of the roughly 10.7 million enslaved Africans who survived the treacherous Middle Passage, most of them were sent to the Caribbean or South America. About 388,000 were sent directly to North America. Wikimedia Commons 30 of 34Native Americans were allegedly the first to call the men “Buffalo Soldiers”. This was perhaps because of their curly hair — or because the Native Americans admired their might, just like they did from the buffalo. John C. H. Grabill/True West Magazine 31 of 34Between 1882 and 1968, at least 4,743 lynchings occurred in the United States. Most of these lynching victims were Black. They were often tortured by angry mobs before being hanged, decapitated, or burned alive in front of an enthusiastic audience. Library of Congress 32 of 34Going by the name “William Cathay,” Cathay Williams served alongside an all-Black regiment after the Civil War. Traveling with the famous Buffalo Soldiers in the Wild West for three years, Williams saw more of America than most women of her time. But when she came down with smallpox, her gender was revealed to her fellow soldiers and she was honorably discharged. US Army 33 of 34Martin Luther King Jr. had used the line “I Have A Dream” before the 1963 March on Washington and an advisor suggested that he not use it again because it was “trite” and “cliché.”

But during his speech, a gospel singer and a friend of King’s named ​Mahalia Jackson called, “Tell them about the dream, Martin. Tell them about the dream.” So, King did. Getty Images 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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33 Ancient History Facts You Definitely Didn’t Learn In School

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The Real History Of The First Thanksgiving That You Didn’t Learn In School

1 of 34Lonnie Johnson spent his childhood tinkering with objects, including his sister’s doll. After earning a scholarship to attend Tuskegee University, he found a job at NASA — and then invented an iconic water gun while puzzling over a different project in the 1980s. Thomas S. England/Getty Images 2 of 34For over 30 years, Daryl Davis has been approaching white supremacists with one simple question: “How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?” He’s convinced hundreds of KKK members to give up their robes for good.YouTube 3 of 34While comforting a suicidal man, Muhammad Ali told him, “You’re my brother! I love you, and I couldn’t lie to you.” Ali eventually convinced him not to jump off a building — and then took him to the hospital. Los Angeles Public Library 4 of 34Before he became a world-famous actor, Samuel L. Jackson fought tirelessly to improve conditions for Black students on his college campus — even holding Martin Luther King Sr. hostage to draw attention to the issues at the school. While administrators agreed to some much-needed changes, Jackson was kicked out of school.Samuel L. Jackson/Hollywood Reporter 5 of 34The brilliant musician Hazel Scott spoke out against racism whenever she encountered it throughout her career and refused to play at segregated clubs. She once said, “Why would anyone come to hear me, a Negro, and refuse to sit beside someone just like me?“YouTube 6 of 34Born Oluale Kossola, Cudjo Lewis was on the last, illegal slave ship to the United States in 1860. He endured four years of slavery before he was freed — and then decided to create his own community.University of South Alabama 7 of 34Actor Morgan Freeman imported 26 hives from Arkansas to his ranch and planted magnolia, clover, lavender, and bee-friendly fruit trees so that the bees could thrive. YouTube 8 of 34Dubbed the “Harlem Hellfighters” by the cowed Germans and the “Men of Bronze” by the grateful French, the 369th Infantry Regiment proved its mettle during World War I. They were feted as heroes with a New York City parade when they returned home but also found American racism solidly in place. Wikimedia Commons 9 of 34Eugene Bullard was such a skilled pilot during World War I that the French called him “Black Swallow,” but the U.S. Air Service denied him entry. And even though Bullard was seen as a hero in France, he spent his final years in the U.S. by working as an elevator operator. Wikimedia Commons 10 of 34After escaping from slavery by punching his master, Bass Reeves became one of the most effective lawmen of the Wild West. He arrested 3,000 and killed 14, once shooting an outlaw from a quarter-mile away. And some believe that his exploits inspired the Lone Ranger.Wikimedia Commons 11 of 34Known as “Baby Esther,” Esther Jones delighted audiences as a young singer and dancer in the 1920s and 1930s. She was especially beloved for her signature phrase “Boop, Boop-a-Doop.” But Jones eventually faded into obscurity, and a white performer named Helen Kane started copying her act, catching the eye of the cartoonist who later created Betty Boop. And though the cartoon took off, Jones never received credit or royalties.Public Domain 12 of 34Standing six feet tall, “Stagecoach Mary” Fields was said to have the “temperament of a grizzly bear.” Tough as nails, she drove over 300 miles each week to deliver mail and was beloved in her town of Cascade, Montana. Public Domain 13 of 34Claudette Colvin later said that civil rights activists considered using her case to challenge Montgomery’s segregation laws, but ultimately passed because she was young, dark-skinned, and pregnant. Wikimedia Commons 14 of 34"He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it,” said Shannon LaNier, Thomas Jefferson’s sixth great-grandson. But despite his feelings about his ancestor, he agreed to pose alongside a portrait of Jefferson for a photographer — as long as he didn’t have to wear a wig. Wikimedia Commons/Drew Gardner 15 of 34With just $1.25, Madam C.J. Walker launched “Madam Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower” as an enormously successful hair product for Black women in 1905. And as her star rose, she used her fame to advocate for anti-lynching legislation. Public Domain 16 of 34Despite being enslaved by explorer William Clark, York was a crucial member of Clark’s expedition alongside Meriwether Lewis. At one point, York even saved Clark, Sacagawea, and her son, when they got caught in a flash flood. But after they completed the journey, Clark denied York’s requests for freedom until decades later. Pinterest 17 of 34Though she received pushback for her role as a house slave named Mammy, Hattie McDaniel often said: “I’d rather play a maid than be one.“Wikimedia Commons 18 of 34"My notes would have been highly compromising had they been discovered, but who would dare search Josephine Baker to the skin?” Josephine Baker later said. “When they asked me for papers, they generally meant autographs.“Wikimedia Commons 19 of 34Mary McLeod Bethune was known as “The First Lady Of Negro America” and “The First Lady Of The Struggle” — and later went on to advise five presidents. Public Domain 20 of 34Not only did Ann Lowe have to fight to use the front door at Jackie Kennedy’s wedding, but Kennedy also dismissed her as a “colored woman dressmaker” when she was asked who had created her wedding dress — and never even named Lowe as the designer.Bettmann Archive/Getty Images 21 of 34"It wasn’t hard,” Doris Miller later said. “I just pulled the trigger and she worked fine. I had watched the others with these guns. I guess I fired her for about fifteen minutes. I think I got one of those Jap planes. They were diving pretty close to us.“US Navy/Wikimedia Commons 22 of 34The descendent of African people who had once been enslaved by the Muscogee Nation, Sarah Rector was eligible to receive land from the U.S. government when Oklahoma became a state in 1907. Though the young girl was given a plot of so-called undesirable land, it turned out to be rich with oil. By the time she turned 18, her net worth was estimated at over $1 million — about $28 million today.Wikimedia Commons 23 of 34"Henson must go all the way,” wrote Matthew Henson’s partner Robert Edwin Peary of their North Pole trek. “I can’t make it there without him.” The pair had tried to reach the Arctic Circle several times before they finally succeeded in 1909, and Henson claims he was the first of their crew to do so. But his incredible achievement went largely ignored for years because of his race. Wikimedia Commons 24 of 34Set along the present-day western edge of Central Park, between 83rd and 89th Street in Manhattan, Seneca Village grew to have a population of about 300 people before it was ultimately razed. New York Public Library 25 of 34Black historian Carter G. Woodson created Negro History Week after noticing the blatant absence of Black history in his master’s and Ph.D. history programs.

“If a race has no history,” Woodson wrote, “it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated.“Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34Harriet Tubman was one of the most famous “conductors” on the Underground Railroad, who proudly stated that she never lost a “passenger.“Wikimedia Commons 27 of 34Black women were banned from service during the Civil War — but many served anyway as scouts, nurses, and spies.Public Domain 28 of 34Rebecca Lee Crumpler earned her medical degree in 1864 at age 33. And after the Civil War ended, she traveled to the former capital of the Confederacy to treat newly emancipated slaves. She primarily focused on women and children, but she cared for any vulnerable patient in need — regardless of their ability to pay.Twitter 29 of 34Of the roughly 10.7 million enslaved Africans who survived the treacherous Middle Passage, most of them were sent to the Caribbean or South America. About 388,000 were sent directly to North America. Wikimedia Commons 30 of 34Native Americans were allegedly the first to call the men “Buffalo Soldiers”. This was perhaps because of their curly hair — or because the Native Americans admired their might, just like they did from the buffalo. John C. H. Grabill/True West Magazine 31 of 34Between 1882 and 1968, at least 4,743 lynchings occurred in the United States. Most of these lynching victims were Black. They were often tortured by angry mobs before being hanged, decapitated, or burned alive in front of an enthusiastic audience. Library of Congress 32 of 34Going by the name “William Cathay,” Cathay Williams served alongside an all-Black regiment after the Civil War. Traveling with the famous Buffalo Soldiers in the Wild West for three years, Williams saw more of America than most women of her time. But when she came down with smallpox, her gender was revealed to her fellow soldiers and she was honorably discharged. US Army 33 of 34Martin Luther King Jr. had used the line “I Have A Dream” before the 1963 March on Washington and an advisor suggested that he not use it again because it was “trite” and “cliché.”

But during his speech, a gospel singer and a friend of King’s named ​Mahalia Jackson called, “Tell them about the dream, Martin. Tell them about the dream.” So, King did. Getty Images 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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33 Ancient History Facts You Definitely Didn’t Learn In School

55 Interesting History Facts You Won’t Learn Anywhere Else

The Real History Of The First Thanksgiving That You Didn’t Learn In School

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1 of 34Lonnie Johnson spent his childhood tinkering with objects, including his sister’s doll. After earning a scholarship to attend Tuskegee University, he found a job at NASA — and then invented an iconic water gun while puzzling over a different project in the 1980s. Thomas S. England/Getty Images 2 of 34For over 30 years, Daryl Davis has been approaching white supremacists with one simple question: “How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?” He’s convinced hundreds of KKK members to give up their robes for good.YouTube 3 of 34While comforting a suicidal man, Muhammad Ali told him, “You’re my brother! I love you, and I couldn’t lie to you.” Ali eventually convinced him not to jump off a building — and then took him to the hospital. Los Angeles Public Library 4 of 34Before he became a world-famous actor, Samuel L. Jackson fought tirelessly to improve conditions for Black students on his college campus — even holding Martin Luther King Sr. hostage to draw attention to the issues at the school. While administrators agreed to some much-needed changes, Jackson was kicked out of school.Samuel L. Jackson/Hollywood Reporter 5 of 34The brilliant musician Hazel Scott spoke out against racism whenever she encountered it throughout her career and refused to play at segregated clubs. She once said, “Why would anyone come to hear me, a Negro, and refuse to sit beside someone just like me?“YouTube 6 of 34Born Oluale Kossola, Cudjo Lewis was on the last, illegal slave ship to the United States in 1860. He endured four years of slavery before he was freed — and then decided to create his own community.University of South Alabama 7 of 34Actor Morgan Freeman imported 26 hives from Arkansas to his ranch and planted magnolia, clover, lavender, and bee-friendly fruit trees so that the bees could thrive. YouTube 8 of 34Dubbed the “Harlem Hellfighters” by the cowed Germans and the “Men of Bronze” by the grateful French, the 369th Infantry Regiment proved its mettle during World War I. They were feted as heroes with a New York City parade when they returned home but also found American racism solidly in place. Wikimedia Commons 9 of 34Eugene Bullard was such a skilled pilot during World War I that the French called him “Black Swallow,” but the U.S. Air Service denied him entry. And even though Bullard was seen as a hero in France, he spent his final years in the U.S. by working as an elevator operator. Wikimedia Commons 10 of 34After escaping from slavery by punching his master, Bass Reeves became one of the most effective lawmen of the Wild West. He arrested 3,000 and killed 14, once shooting an outlaw from a quarter-mile away. And some believe that his exploits inspired the Lone Ranger.Wikimedia Commons 11 of 34Known as “Baby Esther,” Esther Jones delighted audiences as a young singer and dancer in the 1920s and 1930s. She was especially beloved for her signature phrase “Boop, Boop-a-Doop.” But Jones eventually faded into obscurity, and a white performer named Helen Kane started copying her act, catching the eye of the cartoonist who later created Betty Boop. And though the cartoon took off, Jones never received credit or royalties.Public Domain 12 of 34Standing six feet tall, “Stagecoach Mary” Fields was said to have the “temperament of a grizzly bear.” Tough as nails, she drove over 300 miles each week to deliver mail and was beloved in her town of Cascade, Montana. Public Domain 13 of 34Claudette Colvin later said that civil rights activists considered using her case to challenge Montgomery’s segregation laws, but ultimately passed because she was young, dark-skinned, and pregnant. Wikimedia Commons 14 of 34"He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it,” said Shannon LaNier, Thomas Jefferson’s sixth great-grandson. But despite his feelings about his ancestor, he agreed to pose alongside a portrait of Jefferson for a photographer — as long as he didn’t have to wear a wig. Wikimedia Commons/Drew Gardner 15 of 34With just $1.25, Madam C.J. Walker launched “Madam Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower” as an enormously successful hair product for Black women in 1905. And as her star rose, she used her fame to advocate for anti-lynching legislation. Public Domain 16 of 34Despite being enslaved by explorer William Clark, York was a crucial member of Clark’s expedition alongside Meriwether Lewis. At one point, York even saved Clark, Sacagawea, and her son, when they got caught in a flash flood. But after they completed the journey, Clark denied York’s requests for freedom until decades later. Pinterest 17 of 34Though she received pushback for her role as a house slave named Mammy, Hattie McDaniel often said: “I’d rather play a maid than be one.“Wikimedia Commons 18 of 34"My notes would have been highly compromising had they been discovered, but who would dare search Josephine Baker to the skin?” Josephine Baker later said. “When they asked me for papers, they generally meant autographs.“Wikimedia Commons 19 of 34Mary McLeod Bethune was known as “The First Lady Of Negro America” and “The First Lady Of The Struggle” — and later went on to advise five presidents. Public Domain 20 of 34Not only did Ann Lowe have to fight to use the front door at Jackie Kennedy’s wedding, but Kennedy also dismissed her as a “colored woman dressmaker” when she was asked who had created her wedding dress — and never even named Lowe as the designer.Bettmann Archive/Getty Images 21 of 34"It wasn’t hard,” Doris Miller later said. “I just pulled the trigger and she worked fine. I had watched the others with these guns. I guess I fired her for about fifteen minutes. I think I got one of those Jap planes. They were diving pretty close to us.“US Navy/Wikimedia Commons 22 of 34The descendent of African people who had once been enslaved by the Muscogee Nation, Sarah Rector was eligible to receive land from the U.S. government when Oklahoma became a state in 1907. Though the young girl was given a plot of so-called undesirable land, it turned out to be rich with oil. By the time she turned 18, her net worth was estimated at over $1 million — about $28 million today.Wikimedia Commons 23 of 34"Henson must go all the way,” wrote Matthew Henson’s partner Robert Edwin Peary of their North Pole trek. “I can’t make it there without him.” The pair had tried to reach the Arctic Circle several times before they finally succeeded in 1909, and Henson claims he was the first of their crew to do so. But his incredible achievement went largely ignored for years because of his race. Wikimedia Commons 24 of 34Set along the present-day western edge of Central Park, between 83rd and 89th Street in Manhattan, Seneca Village grew to have a population of about 300 people before it was ultimately razed. New York Public Library 25 of 34Black historian Carter G. Woodson created Negro History Week after noticing the blatant absence of Black history in his master’s and Ph.D. history programs.

“If a race has no history,” Woodson wrote, “it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated.“Wikimedia Commons 26 of 34Harriet Tubman was one of the most famous “conductors” on the Underground Railroad, who proudly stated that she never lost a “passenger.“Wikimedia Commons 27 of 34Black women were banned from service during the Civil War — but many served anyway as scouts, nurses, and spies.Public Domain 28 of 34Rebecca Lee Crumpler earned her medical degree in 1864 at age 33. And after the Civil War ended, she traveled to the former capital of the Confederacy to treat newly emancipated slaves. She primarily focused on women and children, but she cared for any vulnerable patient in need — regardless of their ability to pay.Twitter 29 of 34Of the roughly 10.7 million enslaved Africans who survived the treacherous Middle Passage, most of them were sent to the Caribbean or South America. About 388,000 were sent directly to North America. Wikimedia Commons 30 of 34Native Americans were allegedly the first to call the men “Buffalo Soldiers”. This was perhaps because of their curly hair — or because the Native Americans admired their might, just like they did from the buffalo. John C. H. Grabill/True West Magazine 31 of 34Between 1882 and 1968, at least 4,743 lynchings occurred in the United States. Most of these lynching victims were Black. They were often tortured by angry mobs before being hanged, decapitated, or burned alive in front of an enthusiastic audience. Library of Congress 32 of 34Going by the name “William Cathay,” Cathay Williams served alongside an all-Black regiment after the Civil War. Traveling with the famous Buffalo Soldiers in the Wild West for three years, Williams saw more of America than most women of her time. But when she came down with smallpox, her gender was revealed to her fellow soldiers and she was honorably discharged. US Army 33 of 34Martin Luther King Jr. had used the line “I Have A Dream” before the 1963 March on Washington and an advisor suggested that he not use it again because it was “trite” and “cliché.”

But during his speech, a gospel singer and a friend of King’s named ​Mahalia Jackson called, “Tell them about the dream, Martin. Tell them about the dream.” So, King did. Getty Images 34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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1 of 34Lonnie Johnson spent his childhood tinkering with objects, including his sister’s doll. After earning a scholarship to attend Tuskegee University, he found a job at NASA — and then invented an iconic water gun while puzzling over a different project in the 1980s. Thomas S. England/Getty Images

2 of 34For over 30 years, Daryl Davis has been approaching white supremacists with one simple question: “How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?” He’s convinced hundreds of KKK members to give up their robes for good.YouTube

3 of 34While comforting a suicidal man, Muhammad Ali told him, “You’re my brother! I love you, and I couldn’t lie to you.” Ali eventually convinced him not to jump off a building — and then took him to the hospital. Los Angeles Public Library

4 of 34Before he became a world-famous actor, Samuel L. Jackson fought tirelessly to improve conditions for Black students on his college campus — even holding Martin Luther King Sr. hostage to draw attention to the issues at the school. While administrators agreed to some much-needed changes, Jackson was kicked out of school.Samuel L. Jackson/Hollywood Reporter

5 of 34The brilliant musician Hazel Scott spoke out against racism whenever she encountered it throughout her career and refused to play at segregated clubs. She once said, “Why would anyone come to hear me, a Negro, and refuse to sit beside someone just like me?“YouTube

6 of 34Born Oluale Kossola, Cudjo Lewis was on the last, illegal slave ship to the United States in 1860. He endured four years of slavery before he was freed — and then decided to create his own community.University of South Alabama

7 of 34Actor Morgan Freeman imported 26 hives from Arkansas to his ranch and planted magnolia, clover, lavender, and bee-friendly fruit trees so that the bees could thrive. YouTube

8 of 34Dubbed the “Harlem Hellfighters” by the cowed Germans and the “Men of Bronze” by the grateful French, the 369th Infantry Regiment proved its mettle during World War I. They were feted as heroes with a New York City parade when they returned home but also found American racism solidly in place. Wikimedia Commons

9 of 34Eugene Bullard was such a skilled pilot during World War I that the French called him “Black Swallow,” but the U.S. Air Service denied him entry. And even though Bullard was seen as a hero in France, he spent his final years in the U.S. by working as an elevator operator. Wikimedia Commons

10 of 34After escaping from slavery by punching his master, Bass Reeves became one of the most effective lawmen of the Wild West. He arrested 3,000 and killed 14, once shooting an outlaw from a quarter-mile away. And some believe that his exploits inspired the Lone Ranger.Wikimedia Commons

11 of 34Known as “Baby Esther,” Esther Jones delighted audiences as a young singer and dancer in the 1920s and 1930s. She was especially beloved for her signature phrase “Boop, Boop-a-Doop.” But Jones eventually faded into obscurity, and a white performer named Helen Kane started copying her act, catching the eye of the cartoonist who later created Betty Boop. And though the cartoon took off, Jones never received credit or royalties.Public Domain

12 of 34Standing six feet tall, “Stagecoach Mary” Fields was said to have the “temperament of a grizzly bear.” Tough as nails, she drove over 300 miles each week to deliver mail and was beloved in her town of Cascade, Montana. Public Domain

13 of 34Claudette Colvin later said that civil rights activists considered using her case to challenge Montgomery’s segregation laws, but ultimately passed because she was young, dark-skinned, and pregnant. Wikimedia Commons

14 of 34"He was a brilliant man who preached equality, but he didn’t practice it. He owned people. And now I’m here because of it,” said Shannon LaNier, Thomas Jefferson’s sixth great-grandson. But despite his feelings about his ancestor, he agreed to pose alongside a portrait of Jefferson for a photographer — as long as he didn’t have to wear a wig. Wikimedia Commons/Drew Gardner

15 of 34With just $1.25, Madam C.J. Walker launched “Madam Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower” as an enormously successful hair product for Black women in 1905. And as her star rose, she used her fame to advocate for anti-lynching legislation. Public Domain

16 of 34Despite being enslaved by explorer William Clark, York was a crucial member of Clark’s expedition alongside Meriwether Lewis. At one point, York even saved Clark, Sacagawea, and her son, when they got caught in a flash flood. But after they completed the journey, Clark denied York’s requests for freedom until decades later. Pinterest

17 of 34Though she received pushback for her role as a house slave named Mammy, Hattie McDaniel often said: “I’d rather play a maid than be one.“Wikimedia Commons

18 of 34"My notes would have been highly compromising had they been discovered, but who would dare search Josephine Baker to the skin?” Josephine Baker later said. “When they asked me for papers, they generally meant autographs.“Wikimedia Commons

19 of 34Mary McLeod Bethune was known as “The First Lady Of Negro America” and “The First Lady Of The Struggle” — and later went on to advise five presidents. Public Domain

20 of 34Not only did Ann Lowe have to fight to use the front door at Jackie Kennedy’s wedding, but Kennedy also dismissed her as a “colored woman dressmaker” when she was asked who had created her wedding dress — and never even named Lowe as the designer.Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

21 of 34"It wasn’t hard,” Doris Miller later said. “I just pulled the trigger and she worked fine. I had watched the others with these guns. I guess I fired her for about fifteen minutes. I think I got one of those Jap planes. They were diving pretty close to us.“US Navy/Wikimedia Commons

22 of 34The descendent of African people who had once been enslaved by the Muscogee Nation, Sarah Rector was eligible to receive land from the U.S. government when Oklahoma became a state in 1907. Though the young girl was given a plot of so-called undesirable land, it turned out to be rich with oil. By the time she turned 18, her net worth was estimated at over $1 million — about $28 million today.Wikimedia Commons

23 of 34"Henson must go all the way,” wrote Matthew Henson’s partner Robert Edwin Peary of their North Pole trek. “I can’t make it there without him.” The pair had tried to reach the Arctic Circle several times before they finally succeeded in 1909, and Henson claims he was the first of their crew to do so. But his incredible achievement went largely ignored for years because of his race. Wikimedia Commons

24 of 34Set along the present-day western edge of Central Park, between 83rd and 89th Street in Manhattan, Seneca Village grew to have a population of about 300 people before it was ultimately razed. New York Public Library

25 of 34Black historian Carter G. Woodson created Negro History Week after noticing the blatant absence of Black history in his master’s and Ph.D. history programs.

“If a race has no history,” Woodson wrote, “it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated.“Wikimedia Commons

26 of 34Harriet Tubman was one of the most famous “conductors” on the Underground Railroad, who proudly stated that she never lost a “passenger.“Wikimedia Commons

27 of 34Black women were banned from service during the Civil War — but many served anyway as scouts, nurses, and spies.Public Domain

28 of 34Rebecca Lee Crumpler earned her medical degree in 1864 at age 33. And after the Civil War ended, she traveled to the former capital of the Confederacy to treat newly emancipated slaves. She primarily focused on women and children, but she cared for any vulnerable patient in need — regardless of their ability to pay.Twitter

29 of 34Of the roughly 10.7 million enslaved Africans who survived the treacherous Middle Passage, most of them were sent to the Caribbean or South America. About 388,000 were sent directly to North America. Wikimedia Commons

30 of 34Native Americans were allegedly the first to call the men “Buffalo Soldiers”. This was perhaps because of their curly hair — or because the Native Americans admired their might, just like they did from the buffalo. John C. H. Grabill/True West Magazine

31 of 34Between 1882 and 1968, at least 4,743 lynchings occurred in the United States. Most of these lynching victims were Black. They were often tortured by angry mobs before being hanged, decapitated, or burned alive in front of an enthusiastic audience. Library of Congress

32 of 34Going by the name “William Cathay,” Cathay Williams served alongside an all-Black regiment after the Civil War. Traveling with the famous Buffalo Soldiers in the Wild West for three years, Williams saw more of America than most women of her time. But when she came down with smallpox, her gender was revealed to her fellow soldiers and she was honorably discharged. US Army

33 of 34Martin Luther King Jr. had used the line “I Have A Dream” before the 1963 March on Washington and an advisor suggested that he not use it again because it was “trite” and “cliché.”

But during his speech, a gospel singer and a friend of King’s named ​Mahalia Jackson called, “Tell them about the dream, Martin. Tell them about the dream.” So, King did. Getty Images

34 of 34Like this gallery?Share it:

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33 Little-Known Facts About Black History That You Didn’t Learn In School View Gallery

33 Little-Known Facts About Black History That You Didn’t Learn In School View Gallery

33 Little-Known Facts About Black History That You Didn’t Learn In School View Gallery

33 Little-Known Facts About Black History That You Didn’t Learn In School View Gallery

33 Little-Known Facts About Black History That You Didn’t Learn In School

View Gallery

Josephine Baker was another Black American who moved to France. There, she thrived as a dancer before she emerged as one of the French Resistance’s most important spies during World War II.

But while many of these Black history facts are inspiring, some of them are heartbreaking, such as the tragic statistics that show how common lynching was in the United States during the Jim Crow era — and how many millions of people were stolen from Africa during the transatlantic slave trade.

The gallery above includes facts like these and more. From the lost history of Manhattan’s Seneca Village to how Martin Luther King Jr. changed his famous “I Have A Dream” speech at the last moment, discover the most revealing Black history facts that don’t show up in most textbooks.

After looking through these little-known Black history facts, read about unsung civil rights leaders who never got their due. Then, check out the forgotten stories of the most fascinating Black cowboys of the Wild West.