Frustrated that the American Railway Union had refused to accept Black railway workers, which by 1925 had swelled to more that 10,000 porters, Randolph led a push to form the Brotherhood of Sleeping ...
A century ago this year, on Aug. 25, 1925, 500 Pullman Co. railroad porters secretly gathered in New York City’s Harlem for a ...
Inside the B&O Railroad Museum, you'll find centuries' worth of railroad history. Much of it is also Black history.
A host of tributes across America recognize the achievements of pioneering Black union leader A. Philip Randolph — his ...
Since 1995, the National A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum has served as the only Black labor history museum in the ...
The little-known story of the wives and maids who helped propel the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters to a groundbreaking agreement with the Pullman Company. Rosina Corrothers-Tucker had spent days ...
Denver Heights was known as a predominantly African American neighborhood full of doctors, lawyers, teachers, lawmakers and ...