For younger readers especially: Judge Landis was Baseball’s first Commissioner, holding office from 1920 until his death in ...
New Jersey has approved the first round of sites for the state’s Black Heritage Trail, and they’re getting brand-new historic ...
A fundraiser for the Scarboro 85 Monument in Oak Ridge was held in early December and featured former ORHS players and ...
On her debut album, “Angie,” in 1978, Bofill made stunning tonal choices, which stretch from pale apology to shuddering ...
James Meredith, who desegregated the University of Mississippi in 1962, was honored with a historical marker on Dec 20.
The National Baseball Hall of Fame will announce the ... but he never got a chance to show it in the majors because of segregation. Research credits him with over 420 wins and 5,200 strikeouts ...
The death of the 24-year-old, who was driving in western Kenya in February when his car rolled over, left the athletics world ...
Long before U.S. owners descended on the Premier League, Doug Ellis hatched a plan to sell the club - it failed but links ...
Recently slated for demolition to make way for new townhomes, the historic hotel in the Rosemary District has officially been ...
Yet his hometown, New York City, is also the birthplace of an alternative political story – one of compassion for ethnic, racial and class differences. And this history offers important lessons for ...
Alexis de Tocqueville was a French political philosopher who visited the United States in the 1830s with a view to discovering why the American experiment in republican democracy was becoming so ...
One of Kokomo's newest downtown murals, titled “Hometown Heroes,” honors one of its most overlooked contributions to American ...