Faye Clarke co-founded the Educate the Children Foundation, which was created to support rural and impoverished school districts with donations of educational materials.
Anita Marie Pointer is an original member of the singing group the Pointer Sisters. Pointer’s parents were Arkansas natives and she attended school in Arkansas for a few years during her childhood.
Yuri Kochiyama was incarcerated during World War II at the Jerome Relocation Center in Arkansas. She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2005.
In this week’s installment of “Take a Hike,” we explore Millwood State Park and talk to Zhana Gentle about her love of the outdoors.
Arkansas native Kathryn Hall-Trujillo is a public health expert and advocate who focuses on healthcare for African American women.
Eliza Ann Ross Miller was an African American businesswoman and educator, as well as the first woman to build and operate a movie theater in Arkansas.
Arkansas native Dorothy McFadden Hoover was a pioneer in the field of aeronautical mathematics and research.
Arkansas native Sister Rosetta Tharpe was one of gospel music’s first superstars. She has been cited as an influence by several musicians including Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash.
Maria Christina Moroles is the founder of Santuario Arco Iris, an intentional land community in Ponca designed specifically as a “sacred land space” for marginalized women and children of color.
In this week’s installment of “Take a Hike,” we explore Mammoth Spring State Park and talk to Latambria Hampton about her love of the outdoors.
Joycelyn Elders was director of the Arkansas Department of Health and the U.S. surgeon general in President Bill Clinton’s administration.
Evangeline K. Brown was a longtime educator and activist in the Arkansas Delta who served as a plaintiff in a lawsuit that helped create new majority Black districts for the Arkansas House of Representatives and the Arkansas Senate.
Organizations around the state are celebrating Women’s History Month with a variety of in-person and virtual events throughout March.
Educator, author and lecturer Daisy Graham Anderson is best known for being one of the last surviving widows of the American Civil War.
The Momentary’s newest exhibition “Diana Al-Hadid: Ash in the Trade Winds” is on view March 5 though June 13.
A private donation is helping support 500 Little Rock students who can attend the virtual HBCU Awareness Foundation College Fair for free.
In this week’s installment of “Take a Hike,” we explore Moro Bay State Park and talk to Patrick Graham about his love of the outdoors.
Elizabeth “Quatie” Ross was the first wife of Cherokee chief John Ross. She traveled through Arkansas on the Trail of Tears.
Former Ebony and Jet Magazine owner Linda Johnson Rice is the featured speaker at a virtual Women’s History Event hosted by UAPB tonight.
Edith Irby Jones was the first African American accepted at any medical school in the South. She graduated from the University of Arkansas Medical School.
Juanita Jackson Mitchell was a pioneering African-American attorney who was the first Black woman to practice law in Maryland.
Edomae Boone Watson was a prominent African-American civic and education leader in Jonesboro who helped develop the Head Start program in the city.
The Fayetteville Film Fest is funding five projects through the inaugural Micheaux Award, which supports BIPOC filmmakers.
Florence Price was the first African-American female composer to have a symphonic composition performed by a major American symphony orchestra.