









Featured stories—Trending
The Writer America Buried Before It Could Read Him
Henry Dumas died at 33, shot by a New York transit
How Leonardo Drew Made Disorder Speak
Raised between public housing and a landfill, cour
The Steward of the Second Generation
Charles Steele Jr. inherited more than a famous su
The Mobile Network Committed To Us
The 2025 launch of Love Mobile by Koddi Dunn and W
Before the Nation Learned Her Name, It Ignored Another
Mary Louise Smith helped force the legal collapse
The HBCU Surge
Since the Court struck down race-conscious admissi
After Orangeburg, Before the Reckoning
For decades, Cleveland Sellers’s life stood at t
David Richmond: The Quiet Man at the Counter
How David Richmond helped ignite the Greensboro si
The Lesson George Dawson Carried Across a Century
George Dawson became famous as a literacy miracle,
The Writer America Buried Before It Could Read Him
Henry Dumas died at 33, shot by a New York transit policeman in 1968. The poetry and fiction he left behind—mythic, musical, prophetic, and rooted in Black life from Arkansas to
How Leonardo Drew Made Disorder Speak
Raised between public housing and a landfill, courted as a teenage comic-book prodigy, and shaped by Black abstraction’s hard-won lineage, Drew has spent a lifetime transforming
The Steward of the Second Generation
Charles Steele Jr. inherited more than a famous surname. Across Tuscaloosa, Montgomery, Atlanta, and the long afterlife of the civil-rights movement, he tried to turn legacy into s
The Mobile Network Committed To Us
The 2025 launch of Love Mobile by Koddi Dunn and Wade Dunn Jr. asks a distinctly Black political question inside a telecom business model: not just whether a service works, but who
Before the Nation Learned Her Name, It Ignored Another
Mary Louise Smith helped force the legal collapse of bus segregation in Montgomery, yet her story was pushed to the margins. What happened to her tells a deeper truth about memory,
The HBCU Surge
Since the Court struck down race-conscious admissions, Black students and their families have turned with sharper intention toward historically Black colleges—institutions that w
After Orangeburg, Before the Reckoning
For decades, Cleveland Sellers’s life stood at the intersection of protest, punishment, memory, and the unfinished business of American democracy.
John E. Dowell Jr.: The Visible and the Unsaid
Dowell Jr. has built a singular American practice—part printmaker’s discipline, part musician’s improvisation, part ancestral witness.
David Richmond: The Quiet Man at the Counter
How David Richmond helped ignite the Greensboro sit-ins, altered the grammar of protest in America, and paid a private price for a public act the nation still celebrates.
The Lesson George Dawson Carried Across a Century
George Dawson became famous as a literacy miracle, but his real significance lies deeper: in the precision of his memory, the force of his witness, and the unsettling plainness wit

How New Yorker Howard Bennet fought to make Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday a national holiday
On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was shot as he stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. This ended the life of one of the 20th century’s most revered and influential figures.

How New Yorker Howard Bennet fought to make Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday a national holiday
On April 4, 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was shot as he stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. This ended the life of one of the 20th century’s most revered and influential figures.
Black entpreneurs and business leaders who help shape and drive our economies.
Where the Neighborhood Reads Aloud
Uncle Bobbie’s Coffee & Books is a Germantown storefront built like a living room—part café, part bookstore, part civic commons—where Marc Lamont Hill’s public intellectua
The Hot Dog Gospel In OKC
Monte’s Gourmet Dogs serves friendship first—and then, if you’re lucky, the best gator étouffée you didn’t know you needed.
The Crown Makers: Historic and Contemporary Black-Owned Milliners
The Crown Makers: Historic and Contemporary Black-Owned Milliners
Rooms of Our Own
Black hoteliers across the United States are quietly remaking the hospitality industry—one Brooklyn brownstone, Virginia horse farm and Mississippi inn at a time.
Brewing Black Futures: How Five Black-Owned Cafés Are Redefining American Coffee Culture
From Oakland to Chicago, these entrepreneurs are stitching community, culture and commerce into every latte — proving that for many Black business owners, a café is more than ju
Inside the Quiet Dismantling of America’s Only Minority-Business Agency — and the Entrepreneurs Left Stranded
The Quiet Dismantling of America’s Only Minority-Business Agency AND the Entrepreneurs Left Stranded Share fb tw ln pin fb tw ln pin By KOLUMN Magazine The first sign that someth
Where the Neighborhood Reads Aloud
Uncle Bobbie’s Coffee & Books is a Germantown storefront built like a living room—part café, part bookstore, part civic commons—where Marc Lamont Hill’s public intellectua
The Hot Dog Gospel In OKC
Monte’s Gourmet Dogs serves friendship first—and then, if you’re lucky, the best gator étouffée you didn’t know you needed.
The Crown Makers: Historic and Contemporary Black-Owned Milliners
The Crown Makers: Historic and Contemporary Black-Owned Milliners
Rooms of Our Own
Black hoteliers across the United States are quietly remaking the hospitality industry—one Brooklyn brownstone, Virginia horse farm and Mississippi inn at a time.
Brewing Black Futures: How Five Black-Owned Cafés Are Redefining American Coffee Culture
From Oakland to Chicago, these entrepreneurs are stitching community, culture and commerce into every latte — proving that for many Black business owners, a café is more than ju
Inside the Quiet Dismantling of America’s Only Minority-Business Agency — and the Entrepreneurs Left Stranded
The Quiet Dismantling of America’s Only Minority-Business Agency AND the Entrepreneurs Left Stranded Share fb tw ln pin fb tw ln pin By KOLUMN Magazine The first sign that someth
This month, the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) in Montgomery is recognizing Claudette Colvin in visual fashion through its acquisition of “Rooted”, an artistic tribute to the civil rights pioneer by Traci Mims, the talented multi-genre artist represented by Black Art in America.

