Self-Guided Tours

Explore Our Online Exhibits

If you are reaching toward repair and reconciliation, click on the golden links within the captions under the logos of the groups below to connect and learn more.
Racial Repair and Reconciliation: How Can We Achieve Them?
Jan Buchler, who recently retired as the director of a community-based organization, served as a facilitator of one of the diverse dialog groups at the 100th Birthday Celebration for Dr. James Cameron: A Gathering for Racial Repair and Reconciliation. (James Causey, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)
The 2014 Gathering for Racial Repair and Reconciliation – Live!
I'm holding hands with Virginia Huston, a descendant of Elmer Jackson. She was the first representative of the lynching victims to be at the memorial.
Shaking the Family Tree: My Journey of Recovery, Repair and Renovation
Engene Crawford, center, grandson of lynching victim Anthony Crawford, and his family react during a reconciliation service at Friendship Worship Center Tuesday in Abbeville, S.C. (Mary Ann Chastain  /  AP)
Tour: Racial Repair, Reconciliation And Redemption
Working with young civil rights activists before a demonstration, 1964. New York World-Telegram & Sun photo by Ed Ford. Library of Congress.
Bayard Rustin: Unsung Architect of the Civil Rights Movement
EJI video explains how racial injustice persists since slavery
Why Racial Injustice Persists Today: A Very Brief Video History
A sign in Detroit, Michigan, where a race riot took place in 1943.
Sundown Towns: Racial Segregation Past and Present
RaceLogoFace
“Race” – The History of a Persistent Myth
LA prisoners NewOrleansTimesPicayune
War on Drugs – or War on Blacks?
Chicago Defender page
By Us, For Us: The Crucial Role of the Black Press
This woodcut, published in 1831 with a story about the Southampton Rebellion, was titled "Horrific Massacre in Virginia."
Nat Turner’s Rebellion: Horrific or Heroic?

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This Virtual Museum contains over 4600 history exhibits and news stories! Choose to tour a specific topic important to you!  Here's how:

In this gallery, you will find a variety self-guided tours to help you better understand issues and topics related to the African Diaspora, regardless of when they took place. By doing so, we provide you new ways to discover all this museum offers. Through our navigation, you can find chronological History Exhibits by era, read the latest Breaking News, and find upcoming local and global Events.

But most important issues do not arise and get resolved at a single point in time. Indeed, many of the issues that Black Americans struggle with have remained with us over decades ––  if not centuries!

Therefore, our self-guided tours provide you two additional ways to explore this museum and better understand issues that continue to impact the descendants of kidnapped Africans:

  • By individual topics (for example, Juneteenth Day or how the concept of "race" came to be)
  • By ABHvM's Four Themes (Remembrance, Resistance, Redemption, and Reconciliation)

Introductory pages in each tour give you general background on the tour's content. Below the introduction, we display exhibits about different aspects of the topic. Clicking links in the exhibits will bring up additional related information to help you see how topics are connected. Pages automatically update each time we add new content.

Check back soon for even more self-guided tours!

Browse By Our Museum's Four Themes

Below, you explore the History Exhibits, Events, and Breaking News articles in each of the Four Themes.

We remember important historical events and people. Some of these are well-known, but most are not. The stories told in most of ABHvM's exhibits have been left out of our history books or been told incompletely.

People of African descent in this country have been targets of injustice for five hundred years, but they have not been simply victims. At ABHvM we also remember the many ways that black people and freedom-loving white people have resisted injustice.

Redemption is the act of saving – or being saved – from sin, error, or evil. Sometimes one person redeems another, or many others. Sometimes people redeem themselves. We tell the stories of both kinds of redemption.

Our founder, Dr. James Cameron, encouraged us to remember and to speak honestly and respectfully about our shared racial history,  believing this would lead to racial reconciliation.

or Browse by Specific Topic

If you prefer, you can browse exhibits and articles by specific topic to learn about:

Black Lives Matter, sometimes shortened to “BLM,” is an anti-racist movement that highlights racism and the disparities that evolve from racism.

The COVID-19 pandemic has killed nearly 7 million people since 2020, and has highlighted racial inequalities in healthcare and jobs.

The lynching of Emmett Till is among the most infamous lynchings in the United States. 

June 19th, also known as Juneteenth, is a day that recognizes the end of slavery in the United States.

Milwaukee is Wisconsin's city, site of ABHM, and home to a large Black community where racial issues play out often.

Race is a social construct that categorizes people based on different physical features, specifically skin color. It has been used to justify mistreatment from slavery to redlining. 

White supremacy is the belief that white people are better than those of other races and includes actions that preserve power for white people.