Special Sections:
Farm Workers in Washington State
This multi-media special section details the history of farm workers from the 1890s to the present and explores their labor activism from the IWW to the UFW. [more]
The Ku Klux Klan in Washington State, 1920s
With thousands of members and dangerous ambitions, the KKK became an important political force in Washington in the early 1920s, electing mayors and officials in several cities. This special section includes rare pictures, documents, and a detailed history of the Klan's effort to take power [more]
Seattle Black Panther Party
The Black Panther Party made a major impact on Seattle. Committed to armed self defense, the Panthers showed that struggles for racial justice had moved beyond nonviolent protest. This special section includes video interviews with Party veterans and hundreds of photographs, newspaper articles, documents. [more] Filipino Cannery Unionism
Across Three Generations 1930s-1980s
Seattle's Filipino-American community created one of the most important examples of civil rights unionism on the West Coast. Starting in 1933, the unionization of workers in the Alaska canneries gave Filipinos an important tool to fight for better working conditions and also for civil rights. [more]
Chicano/a Movement in Washington
The
Chicano
movement in
Washington emerged in the Yakima Valley, home to
most of the state's Latinos, and in Seattle and the University of
Washington, where Chicano students launched many new initiatives.
[more]
The 1907 Bellingham Riots
In 1907, a vicious race riot drove South Asian saw mill workers out of Bellingham. Soon other Asians were driven away, leaving Bellingham an all-white city until the late 20th Century. This section includes the documentary film, Present in All That We Do, rare photographs, newspaper articles, [more]
CORE and the Central Area Civil Rights Campaigns 1960-1968
In the 1960s, CORE, NAACP, and the Central Area Civil Rights Committee spearheaded campaigns against employment discrimination, police brutality, school segregation, and for open housing. Here are video oral histories, photos, newspaper articles, [more]
The Black Student Union at UW:
Black Power on Campus
The BSU was founded in 1968 when very few black students attended UW. It led campaigns that transformed the University and reshaped opportunities for young people of color throughout Washington state. This special section includes video interviews, photographs, newspaper articles, documents. [more] |