Andrew Carnegie Fellows Bookshelf: Must-Reads on Black History
Carter Godwin Woodson is credited with formalizing the field of academic Black history in America. (Credit: USPS)*

Andrew Carnegie Fellows Bookshelf: Must-Reads on Black History

Pivotal moments, unsung heroes, and an ongoing struggle for justice and equality

In 1921, Carter Godwin Woodson secured $25,000 in grants for the Association for Study of Negro Life and History from Carnegie Corporation of New York. Now called the Association for the Study of African American Life and History , the Corporation grants were used to support research and publication outlets for Black scholars and the dissemination of knowledge and information about Black life, history, culture, and achievements. In 1926, Woodson, the son of former slaves and the second African American to earn a Ph.D. at Harvard University, initiated the first Negro History Week, a celebration around the birthdays of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln. In 1976, the celebration was extended to include the entire month of February, now referred to as Black History Month.

Through its Andrew Carnegie Fellows Program , the Corporation continues to invest in the study of Black history with philanthropic support for high-caliber research in the humanities and social sciences. The program has supported the work of many historians whose research projects cover everything from the challenges to Black economic equality in Reconstruction America to the historically inequitable use of lethal punishment on Black women in the United States.

In the reading list below, five Andrew Carnegie Fellows — all historians specializing in Black history — recommend a selection of books that commemorate the resilience, achievements, and contributions of the Black community. Read on for a deeper understanding of pivotal moments in Black history, unsung heroes, and the ongoing struggle for justice and equality.


by Keisha N. Blain, Ph.D.


by Dr. Marcia Chatelain


by Melissa L. Cooper, PhD


by Sarah J. Jackson


by Justene Hill Edwards, Ph.D.


* TOP: Carter Godwin Woodson is credited with formalizing the field of academic Black history in America. This stamp is part of the Black Heritage Stamp Series. Initiated in 1978, the United States Postal Service continues to issue a stamp featuring a notable Black American every February in conjunction with Black History Month and at other times during the year. (Credit: Copyright United States Postal Service. All rights reserved)

This story was first published on carnegie.org .

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