On November 10, 1898, white supremacists led the only successful U.S. coup, overthrowing Wilmington’s Black-led government in the ‘Wilmington Massacre.’ Its full toll and legacy remain unknown.
At 88, historian David Levering Lewis, a biographer of W.E.B. DuBois, has filled in gaps in his knowledge of his own family ...
Regular readers of this column may remember my interest in the so-called Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence dated May 20, 1775, a date enshrined on North Carolina’s state flag.
According to a report in The Daily Tar Heel, archaeologists Heather Lapham and Mary Elizabeth Fitts and their students are ...
Several communities across the state are celebrating the 200th year anniversary of a French general’s farewell tour through North Carolina, now through next month.
Feb. 12, 1825, to be exact — Muscogee Creek Nation Chief William McIntosh signed a treaty with the United States that would ...
Manny Herzig, longtime Falls High School teacher, resident of Ranier and avid outdoorsman, recently returned from a vacation stay in San Salvador, El Salvador. Herzig accompanied his daughter Linda ...
Liz Moore's novel is set in the Adirondacks and follows internal struggle of a family dealing with the disappearance of their daughter.
This year, Doves Rest Cabins, located in Palo Duro Canyon, is celebrating 10 years of blending luxury, adventure and ...
Linsey Davis interviews Lee Hawkins, a journalist, about his searing new memoir, "I Am Nobody's Slave: How Uncovering My ...
From humor to a historical setting, Cristina Henríquez's 2024 work of literary fiction, The Great Divide, has something for everyone.
Kay Sohini's graphic memoir, This Beautiful, Ridiculous City, tells a story of migration and redefinition. Gay Talese gathers ...
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