Happy 100th Birthday to Black History Month

Posted on February 14, 2026

by Megan G

In February of 1926, historian Carter G. Woodson—best known for The Miseducation of the Negro—established what was then called Negro History Week. He deliberately chose the second week of February to coincide with the birthdays of Frederick Douglass (Feb. 14, 1818) and Abraham Lincoln (Feb. 12, 1809), anchoring the observance in both Black self-liberation and national reckoning.

As Woodson explained, Negro History Week was “set aside by the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASALH) for the purpose of emphasizing what has already been learned about the Negro during the year.” The intention was never confinement, but concentration—an annual pause to acknowledge, collect, and amplify a history too often ignored or distorted. Several books that capture and capitulate this folk-ethos—where history, myth, and lived experience meet—include:

Book Jacket: Roots

roots by Alex Haley

A foundational text that blends genealogy, oral tradition, and historical research to trace lineage from Africa through enslavement and beyond.

Book Jacket: Barracoon

barracoon by Zora Neale Hurston

The firsthand account of Cudjo Lewis, one of the last known survivors of the transatlantic slave trade, told in his own voice.

Book Jacket: Beloved

beloved by Toni Morrison

A haunting exploration of memory, motherhood, and the psychological afterlives of enslavement, grounded in both history and the supernatural.

Book Jacket: The People Could Fly

the people could fly by Virginia Hamilton

A classic collection of Black American folktales, including the enduring legend of the enslaved who reclaimed flight as freedom.

Book Jacket: The Souls of Black Folk

the souls of black folk by W. E. B. Du Bois

A lyrical and analytical meditation on double consciousness, faith, music, and the spiritual strivings of Black America.

One hundred years after its founding, Black History Month remains exactly what Woodson envisioned: not a limit, but a lens—one that sharpens our understanding of the past while illuminating paths forward.

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