Black History, Civil Rights & Cultural Heritage Timeline
From the earliest days of the transatlantic slave trade through emancipation, the Civil Rights movement, and modern cultural milestones, this timeline traces the events, legislation, and people that shaped Black history and the African diaspora. Each entry links back to deeper coverage on the Educational CyberPlayGround.
Carib People Settle St. Croix
The Carib, originally from the Guiana region of South America, gained control of St. Croix from the Tainos and Arawaks. They were the indigenous people who would greet Columbus on his arrival.
Read more →The Slave Trade Begins
Prince Henry of Portugal sent sailors to West Africa in search of gold. Within two years they brought back Africans. It took 40 more years to establish the slave trade from Africa's Guinea coast town of "Elmina" — Portuguese for "the mine."
Read more →Columbus Lands on St. Croix
On November 14, 1493, Christopher Columbus visited St. Croix on his second voyage, naming the island Santa Cruz (Holy Cross). The Salt River landing site is the only positively documented Columbus site on present-day U.S. territory.
Read more →First Slaves Shipped to the Americas
A few slaves were sent from Portuguese settlements in Africa into the Spanish colonies in America. In 1511, Ferdinand V of Spain permitted them to be carried in great numbers, launching the transatlantic slave trade.
Read more →Britain Enters the Slave Trade
Captain John Hawkins carried out the first British importation of enslaved Africans during the reign of Elizabeth I. Queen Elizabeth warned that kidnapping Africans "would be detestable, and call down the vengeance of heaven," but Hawkins broke his promise.
Read more →Dutch and English Settle St. Croix
Both the Dutch and English established presence on St. Croix alongside a small number of French Protestants. This began centuries of European colonial competition over the island, passing through Dutch, English, Spanish, French, and Danish hands.
Read more →The Triangle Trade at Its Height
British ships sailed a triangular route: manufactured goods to Africa, enslaved people across the Middle Passage to the Americas, and slave-produced sugar, cotton, and rum back to Britain. By the 18th century, 30,000 enslaved Africans per year passed through Elmina alone.
Read more →"An Englishman Tastes the Sweat of an African"
A French publication included an engraving by Serge Daget depicting the dehumanizing inspection of enslaved people at market — showing buyers licking captives' skin to assess their health and age before purchase.
Read more →Denmark Purchases St. Croix from France
On June 13, 1733, the Danish West Indies Company bought St. Croix from France, adding it to the Danish West Indies alongside St. Thomas and St. John. Under the leadership of Frederik Moth, a new town at Christiansted was planned within the first year. English planters flocked to St. Croix, attracted by inexpensive land. The Danish divided the island into plantations — sugar and tobacco sold to Danish merchants made St. Croix one of the wealthiest and busiest trading ports in the Caribbean.
Read more: Arawak history → St. Croix USVI history →Stono Rebellion — Largest Colonial Slave Uprising
On September 9, twenty Black Carolinians met near the Stono River, southwest of Charleston. The uprising was the largest slave revolt in the British mainland colonies before the American Revolution — more than 20 white and nearly 40 Black Carolinians were killed.
Read more →St. Croix Slave Lists Begin
Organized by owner, the St. Croix Slave Lists (1772-1821) contain more than 500,000 names of enslaved and free individuals, with information on age, death, birth, runaways, occupations, and family relations — a critical genealogical resource.
Read more →Parliament Debates the Slave Trade
In July 1788, Liverpool slave traders testified to Parliament that conditions aboard ships were comfortable. Under cross-examination, the truth emerged: captives had 5.5 feet by 16 inches each, were chained in pairs, and suffocated in holds during storms.
Read more →Haitian Revolution Begins
The revolution in Saint-Domingue sent shockwaves through the slaveholding world. Its success terrified Caribbean and American plantation owners and inspired enslaved people across the hemisphere, influencing uprisings from Jamaica to Louisiana.
Read more →Mexico Abolishes Slavery
On September 15, Mexican President Vicente Guerrero abolished slavery. Texas secured a temporary exemption, but the decree meant that Mexico became a destination for thousands of fugitive slaves fleeing the American South — an "Underground Railroad" running south.
Read more →Denmark Abolishes Slavery in the Virgin Islands
Governor General Peter von Scholten abolished slavery in the Danish colonies on July 3, 1848, after 21 years in office. By 1803, St. Croix had 30,000 people — 26,500 of them enslaved. Increasing revolts and the collapse of sugar prices forced his hand.
Read more →Fugitive Slave Act
The act forced northern states to return escaped enslaved people and pushed the Underground Railroad further north into Canada. Thousands of enslaved people also fled south into Mexico, where an estimated 3,000-5,000 fugitives eventually settled.
Read more →13th Amendment Passes the Senate
The U.S. Senate passed the 13th Amendment on April 8, 1864, outlawing slavery and involuntary servitude except as punishment for crime. The House followed on January 31, 1865, and the amendment was ratified by December 1865.
Read more →Black Codes Enacted
Southern states enacted Black Codes immediately after the Civil War, attempting to return freed people to bondage in legal fact if not official terminology. These codes were distinct from — and preceded — the Jim Crow laws that began in 1890.
Read more →Jim Crow Era Begins
A system of state and local laws enforcing racial segregation across the American South took hold, institutionalizing discrimination in schools, transportation, public facilities, and voting rights for the next seven decades.
Read more →Creole Plantation Folktales Published
Alcee Fortier, a teenage neighbor of the Laura Plantation in Louisiana, collected stories from enslaved people's descendants in the cabins and published them as "Louisiana Folktales." A year later, Joel Chandler Harris republished the very same stories as "The Tales of B'rer Rabbit."
Read more →Virginia McLaurin Born
Virginia McLaurin was born in 1910, when the world was a vastly different place. She would live to see 106 years of transformation — from the era of Jim Crow to dancing with the first Black President in the White House.
Read more →U.S. Purchases the Danish Virgin Islands
The United States purchased St. Croix, St. Thomas, and St. John from Denmark for $25 million. The transfer was motivated by military strategy during World War I — preventing Germany from acquiring a Caribbean naval base.
Read more →Negro History Week Established
Carter G. Woodson and the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History established Negro History Week in February, choosing a week that encompassed the birthdays of both Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. It evolved into Black History Month in 1976.
Read more →Born in Slavery — Slave Narratives Project
The Federal Writers' Project (1936-1938) collected firsthand narratives from formerly enslaved Americans, preserving voices that might otherwise have been lost. The Library of Congress holds this irreplaceable archive of lived experience under bondage.
Read more →Brown v. Board of Education
The Supreme Court unanimously ruled that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional, overturning the "separate but equal" doctrine of Plessy v. Ferguson (1896). The decision catalyzed the modern Civil Rights movement.
Read more →Motown Founded — The Funk Brothers Begin
Berry Gordy founded Motown Records in Detroit. The Funk Brothers — the uncredited studio musicians including Joe Hunter, James Jamerson, Joe Messina, and others — played on more #1 hits than the Beatles, Beach Boys, Rolling Stones, and Elvis combined.
Read more →Ralph Moses Paiewonsky — USVI Governor
Ralph Paiewonsky (1907-1991), the son of Jewish Lithuanian immigrants to St. Thomas, became the ninth civilian governor of the U.S. Virgin Islands (1961-1969). A businessman and politician, he served as the islands' longest-serving governor.
Read more →Martin Luther King Jr. — "I Have a Dream"
On August 28, Dr. King delivered his historic speech at the March on Washington before 250,000 people. The full text, courtesy of the National Archives, remains one of the most powerful addresses in American history.
Read more →Civil Rights Act Signed
President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, outlawing discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. The landmark legislation ended Jim Crow segregation in public accommodations and employment.
Read more →Voting Rights Act
Following the Selma-to-Montgomery marches, President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act, prohibiting racial discrimination in voting. The act dismantled literacy tests, poll taxes, and other barriers that had disenfranchised Black voters for a century.
Read more →Karen Ellis Collects Folksongs on St. Croix
Karen Ellis collected the "Ding Dong Song" and other children's folksongs on St. Croix, USVI, preserving Caribbean oral traditions. This fieldwork became the foundation for the Educational CyberPlayGround's folk music curriculum and the Domino project.
Read more →Martin Luther King Jr. Day First Observed
The first federal MLK Day was observed on January 20, 1986. Stevie Wonder helped create the holiday through his 1981 campaign and song "Happy Birthday," which became an anthem for the movement to honor King's legacy.
Read more →Mississippi "Ratifies" the 13th Amendment
Mississippi voted to ratify the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery — 130 years after its adoption. However, a clerical error left the ratification unresolved. The paperwork was not officially filed until February 2013.
Read more →"Standing in the Shadows of Motown" Released
The documentary film about the Funk Brothers — the uncredited musicians behind Motown's greatest hits — premiered on November 15. The film brought long-overdue recognition to artists like Joe Messina, Bob Babbitt, Jack Ashford, and James Jamerson.
Read more →Benin Ambassador Apologizes for Slavery
Ambassador Cyrille Oguin of Benin — the nation once called Dahomey, which supplied more than 3 million people to slave traders — began a tour of U.S. cities to formally apologize. "It's so easy to say white man did it to us, but we share in the responsibility."
Read more →Funk Brothers Win Grammy
The Funk Brothers won a Grammy Award, finally receiving mainstream recognition for their extraordinary contribution to American music. They had played on more #1 records than any other group in history.
Read more →Barack Obama Inaugurated
Barack Obama was sworn in as the 44th President of the United States — the first African American to hold the office. The moment was a culmination of centuries of struggle, from slavery through the Civil Rights movement.
Read more →Mississippi Finally Ratifies 13th Amendment
On February 18, 2013, Mississippi's ratification of the 13th Amendment became official — almost 150 years after its adoption. The state had voted in 1995, but a clerical error left the paperwork unfiled until a private citizen's inquiry prompted action.
Read more →Virginia McLaurin Dances at the White House
At 106 years old, Virginia McLaurin fulfilled her dream of visiting the White House and danced with President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama during a Black History Month celebration. Born in 1910, she had lived through the full arc of modern Black history.
Read more →