News

A Ladies Auxiliary Women’s History Museum is planned near the National A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum in Pullman.
In a historic moment for Chicago's Pullman neighborhood, ground has been broken for the nation's first Women's History Museum ...
In 1925, the Pullman Porters formed the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first all-Black union in the country. “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 ...
A. Phillip Randolph and Milton P. Webster were key figures who led the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Their legacy ...
The story of the organizing of the first black trade union - The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters - provides an account of African American working life between the Civil War and World War II.
Asa Philip Randolph founded and became the leader of The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP), an African-American trade union. Randolph and his fellow porters were low paid, worked long ...
It once belonged to a Pullman Company sleeping-car porter, an African-American man—the headpiece to a pristine white uniform. Patricia Heaston got it from a friend, whose father was a porter ...