Lycée Victor-Schœlcher (1902- )

The Lycée Victor-Schœlcher is a secondary school located in Fort-du-France, Martinique. Initially built in 1902, the Lycée Victor-Schœlcher has served as the foundational home for significant intellectual figures of Caribbean literary, political, and philosophical traditions including Aimé Césaire, Léon-Gontran Damas, and Frantz Fanon. It is considered the first high school of Martinique. The school’s name refers to nineteenth-century French abolitionist […]

Davey Yarborough (1953- )

Composer, conductor, flutist, saxophonist, and pedagogic Davey Yarborough was born in 1953 in Washington, DC. He attended Paul and Rabaut Junior High Schools, and in 1971, Yarborough graduated from Coolidge Senior High School in the city. Afterward, he enrolled in the University of the District of Columbia (UDC) and completed the Bachelor of Arts in Music Education. He also earned […]

How universities can address the lack of Black scholars in academia Ifedapo Francis Awolowo, Senior Lecturer in Accounting, Sheffield Hallam University on December 22, 2023 at 12:05 pm

Drazen Zigic/Shutterstock In the UK, out of 164 university vice-chancellors, only two are Black. Professor David Mba was recently appointed as the first Black vice-chancellor at Birmingham City University. There are 165 Black professors in the UK – out of 23,515. The disparity becomes even more alarming when examining the representation of Black female professors. Only 61 UK professors are […]

Pay gaps and less chance of a top degree: the unequal experience of ethnic minority staff and students at English universities David Mba, Vice-Chancellor, Birmingham City University on December 22, 2023 at 12:05 pm

fizkes/Shutterstock A 2020 report on racial harassment published by industry body Universities UK drew attention to the “institutional racism and systemic issues that pervade the entire higher education sector”. In the same year, the Black Lives Matter movement drew attention to inequality faced by Black people across society. UK universities pledged to do more to root out racism. In 2022, […]

Alessandro Sinigaglia (1902-1944)

Alessandro Sinigaglia was among several notable anti-fascist and anti-Nazi partisan fighters in Europe during World War II who were of African descent. Sinigaglia, born in the town of Fiesole near Florence, Italy, on January 2, 1902, was the son of an Italian Jew, David Sinigaglia, a mechanic from Mantua, and an African American maid from St. Louis, Missouri, Cynthia White. […]

Ben Enwonwu (1917-1994)

The most celebrated African artist of the 20th century was the modernist sculptor-painter from Onitsha, Anambra, Nigeria, born Odinigwe Benedict Chukwukadibia Enwonwu on July 14, 1917. One of the twin sons of cloth merchandiser Chinyelugo Nweze and Omenka Enwonwu, an engineer with the Royal Niger Company, he inherited a love for sculpting from his father, who delighted in carving wood […]

Chris Brown (1989- )

R&B superstar, rapper, lyricist, actor, and dancer Chris Brown, one of the most successful contemporary artists of the 21st century, was born Christopher Maurice Brown on May 5, 1989, in Tappahannock, Virginia to Clinton Brown and Joyce Hawkins. He has one older sister, Lytrell Bundy. Brown began performing for his church choir and community extravaganzas in Tappahannock as a child. […]

M’Balia Camara (1929-1955)

Guinean national political independence martyr, women’s rights activist, and national heroine of the Democratic Party of Guinea, M’Balia Camara was born in 1929 in the village of Posséya, Guinea, near Gonga Khimbéli and Yenguissa. Despite humble beginnings, she refused to allow herself to be limited and restricted to domestic activities. Instead, she joined and campaigned with anti-colonialist activists calling for […]

The Golden 14 (1918-1919)

The Golden 14 were the first Black women to muster into the United States Navy. First recognized by scholar Kelly Miller in his 1919 book “Kelly Miller’s History of the World War for Human Rights,” but subsequently nearly lost to history after the war, the women were latter dubbed the Golden 14 in homage to World War II’s Golden 13, […]

Olga (Ollie) Burgoyne (1879-1974)

Olga “Ollie” Burgoyne, also known as Ollie Burgoyne-Calloway, was a singer and dancer specializing in Russian and other ethnic dances. She was also an actress and businesswoman who gained popularity during the Harlem Renaissance and left her mark among the most influential African American dancers and choreographers of the time. Ollie Burgoyne was born in Chicago, Illinois on June 13, […]