A charity organisation based in the United States has constructed 50 mechanised boreholes worth more than GH¢1 million in 50 communities across the country.
Comments How Negro History Week Became Black History Month and Why It Matters NowSkip to Comments
The comments section is closed. To submit a letter to the editor for publication, write to letters@nytimes.com.
How Negro History Week Became Black History Month and Why It Matters Now
Feb. 24, 2021
8
Black History Month has been celebrated in the United States for close to 100 years. But what is it, exactly, and how did it begin?
In the years after Reconstruction, campaigning for the importance of Black history and doing the scholarly work of creating the canon was a cornerstone of civil rights work for leaders like Carter G. Woodson. Martha Jones, a professor of history at Johns Hopkins University and the Society of Black Alumni Presidential Professor, explained: “These are men [like Woodson] who were trained formally and credentialed in the ways that all intellectuals and thought leaders of the early 20th century were trained at Harvard and places like that. But