Skip to main content
Search in
All Fields
Title
Creator
Institution
Keyword
for
Search
Help
About
Get Involved
Contact Us
Toggle facets
Limit your search
Keyword
African Americans
154,712
People Individuals
95,162
Black Academy Of Arts And Letters (Dallas, Tex.)
93,331
Tbaal
93,331
more
Keyword
»
Creator
Brown, Jirard
40,020
Dukes, Kevin
14,682
Peppler, Jim
12,440
University of Mississippi. Bureau of Educational Research
9,411
more
Creator
»
Type
image
[remove]
363,521
Contributing Institution
University of North Texas
95,244
Library of Congress
45,905
California State University, Northridge
18,330
National Archives and Records Administration
14,760
more
Contributing Institution
»
Collection
Civil War
12,292
Jim Peppler Southern Courier Photograph Collection
11,743
Miscellaneous Items in High Demand
4,405
Alabama Media Group Collection
2,795
more
From Collection
»
Location
Massachusetts
2,890
New York
189
Alabama
105
Virginia
40
Mississippi
39
Louisiana
35
California
33
Connecticut
33
Georgia
32
Florida
30
more
Location
»
Search Constraints
Start Over
You searched for:
Type
image
Remove constraint Type: image
Start Over
|
« Previous |
1
-
100
of
363,521
|
Next »
Sort by relevance
relevance
year
creator
title
Number of results to display per page
100 per page
10
per page
20
per page
50
per page
100
per page
View results as:
List
Gallery
Search Results
View
Commencement Day at Howard University, Washington, D.C. (page153)
View
The Negro Silent Parade. Fifth Avenue, New York City. (page 243)
View
Negro Silent Protest Parade - first line of marchers
View
photo of Langston Hughes
View
Langston Hughes at work
View
Langston Hughes in Chicago on set of Raisin in the Sun
View
The Almeda Gardner Industrial School and the 1927 Mississippi Flood
View
A c.-1840 slave (and later tenant-farmer) plantation cabin at the LSU (Louisiana State University) Rural Life Museum, part of the Burden Museum and Gardens complex in Baton Rouge, the capital city of Louisiana
View
A mural honoring Jesse Owens in an African American neighborhood of St. Louis, Missouri
View
A portion of the interior of the "Adair Cabin," the headquarters of firebrand abolitionist John Brown owned by his brother-in-law, Samuel Lyle Adair, now (as of 2021) part of the John Brown Museum State Historic Site in [Osawatomie], Kansas
View
A portion of the interior of the "Adair Cabin," the headquarters of firebrand abolitionist John Brown owned by his brother-in-law, Samuel Lyle Adair, now (as of 2021) part of the John Brown Museum State Historic Site in [Osawatomie], Kansas
View
A portion of the interior of the "Adair Cabin," the headquarters of firebrand abolitionist John Brown owned by his brother-in-law, Samuel Lyle Adair, now (as of 2021) part of the John Brown Museum State Historic Site in [Osawatomie], Kansas
View
A portion of the interior of the "Adair Cabin," the headquarters of firebrand abolitionist John Brown owned by his brother-in-law, Samuel Lyle Adair, now (as of 2021) part of the John Brown Museum State Historic Site in [Osawatomie], Kansas
View
Art of Healing, Woodhull Hospital, Marcus Garvey Blvd. by Broadway, Brooklyn
View
A "shoo-fly fan," also called by the East Indian name "Punkah", once manually operated by slaves, dominates the dining room scene at the Oakley Plantation, constructed in 1815 at the Audubon Memorial State Park in Louisiana's West Feliciana Parish city of St. Francisville
View
A "shoo-fly fan," also called by the East Indian name "Punkah", once manually operated by slaves, dominates the dining room scene at the Oakley Plantation, constructed in 1815 at the Audubon Memorial State Park in Louisiana's West Feliciana Parish city of St. Francisville
View
Atlah World Missionary Church sign, W. 123rd St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Billboard, Barack Obama Leadership Academy, E. Warren Ave. at Conner St., Detroit
View
Billo and Princess Kalia, Malcolm X Blvd. at West 125th St., Harlem
View
Black Lives Matter, Bus Stop, Albany Ave. at Woodland St., Hartford
View
Broadway and Marcus Garvey Blvd., Brooklyn
View
Day Care, Frederick Douglass at W. 114th St., Harlem
View
Delivery man riding an electric cargo bike, Frederick Douglass at W. 142nd St., Harlem
View
Emergency medical technicians with ambulance. Malcolm X Blvd. at West 116th St., Harlem
View
Former St. Nicholas Greek Church, now The Willing Heart Community Center. 555 Martin Luther King Blvd., Newark
View
Frederick Douglass at W. 125th St., Harlem
View
Free COVID vaccine, Barack Obama Leadership Academy, E. Canfield St. and Montclair St., Detroit
View
2020 graduating class, Thurgood Marshall Academy, W. 135th St. at Adam Clayton Powell Blvd., Harlem
View
Hanifa tending the school vegetable garden behind the Barack Obama Leadership Academy, E. Canfield St. and Montclair St., Detroit
View
"Have you been vaccinated." Members of NYC Test and Trace Corps, Frederick Douglass at W. 125th St., Harlem
View
I am not your scapegoat
View
I did not make you sick
View
I still believe in our city
View
Juneteenth, Sylvia's Restaurant, 328 Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Kansas City artist Michael Young created the Brown v. Board of Education mural inside the Kansas Capitol in Topeka in 2018 to depict the legacy of the 1954 landmark U.S. Supreme Court desegregation case that had its roots in Topeka
View
King Barka Jamaica Restaurant, 2733 Frederick Douglass Blvd., Harlem
View
Kryme, W. 145th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Latino Coffee House, Elizabeth Ave. and Martin Luther King Blvd., Manhattan
View
Malcolm X Blvd. at West 125th St., Harlem
View
Malcolm X Blvd. at West 125th St., Harlem
View
Man who had a seizure being carried to an ambulance. Malcolm X Blvd., at W. 124th St., Harlem
View
Man who had a seizure being carried to an ambulance. Malcolm X Blvd., at W. 124th St., Harlem
View
NE corner of Malcolm X Blvd. and W. 125th St., Harlem
View
Owners Patricia and Ralph Stewart relax while awaiting customers outside their colorfully named Ragamuffin Collectibles & Flea store in the little town of [Osawatomie], Kansas
View
People on some form of public assistance getting free phones. Rand Transportation Center, Broadway at Martin Luther King, Camden, New Jersey
View
People waiting for the bus. Rand Transportation Center; City Hall raises behind. Broadway at Martin Luther King, Camden, New Jersey
View
Red Rooster Restaurant, 310 Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Rutgers University students playing baseball. Downtown Newark seen from Warren St. and Martin Luther King Blvd., Newark
View
Salvador, Mexican delivery man, W. 139th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
SW corner of Malcolm X Blvd. at W. 125th St., Harlem
View
SW corner of Malcolm X Blvd. at W. 125th St., Harlem
View
SW corner of Malcolm X Blvd. at W. 125th St., Harlem
View
Tag, W. 126th St. at Frederick Douglass Blvd., Harlem
View
Terrence and his niece distributing bags of food to a woman. Saint James Social Services Corporation, 604 Martin Luther King Blvd., Newark
View
Testing, W. 124th St. and Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Testing, W. 118th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Testing, W. 115th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
The "Battle of Pilot Knob" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
View
The "Battle of the Huzzah" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
View
The Community Building in Lecompton, a tiny town that was the pro-slavery legal capital of Kansas from 1855 to 1861 when it was a U.S. territory
View
The "Confederates in Cuba" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
View
The Constitution Hall State Historic Site in Lecompton, a tiny town that was the pro-slavery legal capital of Kansas from 1855 to 1861 when it was a U.S. territory
View
The "Destroying the Fort" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
View
The George Boyer Vachon Research Center of St. Louis African American Culture in that Missouri city
View
The Griot Museum of Black History in St. Louis, Missouri
View
The historic Ritchie House in the Kansas capital city of Topeka
View
The "Meeting in Missouri" along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, named after the island of Cuba in 1857 for reasons that are murky today
View
The old Bald Eagle Mercantile, a general store in Lecompton, a tiny town that was the pro-slavery legal capital of Kansas from 1855 to 1861 when it was a U.S. territory
View
The old Monroe Elementary School, now (as of 2021) a national historic site in the Kansas capital city of Topeka, was an important player in the monumental Brown v. Board of Education U.S. Supreme Court case of 1954, in which the Court ruled that "separate educational facilities are inherently unequal"
View
The "Rescue at Leasburg" mural is one of several murals along the historic, mostly two-lane, U.S. Route 66 in Cuba, Missouri, depicting battles between Union and Confederate forces in the U.S. Civil War of the 1860s, when Missouri was officially a noncombatant border state that nonetheless saw fierce fighting
View
The territorial capitol building, now (as of 2021) a museum in Lecompton, a tiny town that was the pro-slavery legal capital of Kansas from 1855 to 1861 when it was a U.S. territory
View
This is one of three adjacent homes in a lower-income neighborhood of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that might be called "art houses" for their exuberant exterior drawings
View
This is one of three adjacent homes in a lower-income neighborhood of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that might be called "art houses" for their exuberant exterior drawings
View
This is one of three adjacent homes in a low-income neighborhood of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that might be called "art houses" for their exuberant drawings
View
This is our home too
View
Two Coca-Cola signs dominate one side of the 1888 McPherson Opera House in McPherson, Kansas, which was founded in 1872 and named after Union Civil War General James Birdseye McPherson
View
Vaccination advertisement targeted to the Hispanic community. Malcolm X Blvd. at W. 145th St., Harlem
View
Vaccination site, Harlem Hospital, Malcolm X Blvd. and West 135th St., Harlem
View
Valentine's Day gifts and PPE, Malcolm X Blvd. at W. 125th St., Harlem
View
Valentine's Day, Schomburg Center, W. 135th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
View north along Malcolm X Blvd. from W. 125th St., Harlem
View
View north along Malcolm X Blvd. from W. 125th St., Harlem
View
Voices of Prophecy playing at 292 Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Voices of Prophecy playing at 292 Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
We belong here
View
Wells Fargo Bank, 288 Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
West 125th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
West 125th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Whole Foods entrance, W. 125th St. and Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Woman exiting Woodhull Hospital, Marcus Garvey Blvd. by Broadway, Brooklyn
View
W. 125th St. at Malcolm X Blvd., Harlem
View
Young Black man taking to an ambulance by emergency workers. SW cornner of W. 125th St. and Lexington Ave., Harlem
View
James Donald speaking at Luncheon on February 25, 2020
View
Linnie Willis and Noel Wilkin at Luncheon on February 25, 2020
View
Linnie Willis at Luncheon on February 25, 2020
View
Carolyn Gillelyn, Doris Young, Joyce Banks-Davidson, Patricia Brassel, Jackie Faye Roberts Ammons
View
Commemorative Ceremony, February 24, 2020
View
Commemorative Ceremony in front of Fulton Chapel, February 24, 2020
View
Donald Cole, James Donald, Theron Evans and Patricia Brassel at Commemorative Ceremony, February 24, 2020
View
Donald Cole, Linnie Willis, and Provost Noel Wilkin, February 24, 2020
Download JSON
« Previous
Next »
1
2
3
4
5
…
3,635
3,636
About
|
Get Involved
|
Contact Us
|
#UmbraSearch