Utah Black History Museum

Utah Black History Museum Utah has Black History and Black History Matters 🖤 Use when you see us!🚌

OUR MISSION
Utah Black History Museum is committed to promote the understanding, appreciation, and advancement of the Black experience in Utah through programming, exhibits, and activities that teach local and national Black history and celebrate the culture of the African Diaspora in the United States. ABOUT US
Utah Black History Museum’s gigantic museum on wheels features informative and inspiri

ng traveling exhibits highlighting both local and national Black history. It is time for Utah’s students, citizens, and visitors to learn Black history — real Black history. With our state’s population growing in diversity, Utahns are in need of more equitable representation amongst their organizations, especially in the form of educational institutions. While the state continues to celebrate its pioneer heritage with enthusiasm, these celebrations do not fully represent all members of both our historical and modern community. The Utah Black History Museum is here to offer a non-discriminatory and more complete history of our citizens. We are here to represent the underrepresented in our school curriculums and community organizations who have been overlooked for centuries. We tell the stories of Black frontiersmen, writers, musicians, leaders, and many more whose history has, until now, been rarely heard. During the pandemic, with limitations on social activities, our natural-gas-powered museum also offers a completely innovative and accessible outdoor or indoor learning experience. With children’s limited field trip options, the UBHM bus has the unique ability to bring field trips to the students! The beautifully painted bus, provides individuals of all ages a museum experience they will never forget.

03/03/2026

in 1913, more than 5,000 women marched down Pennsylvania Avenue in D.C. to demand the right to vote, marking the first suffrage parade and the first large, organized march on Washington for political purposes. The 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession through Washington, D.C. changed the way protests were viewed and carried out by the American public, and laid the foundation for future marches.

The Procession, unprecedented in both its scale and its tactics, was a major turning point for the woman suffrage movement in the United States. Suffrage leader Alice Paul, who was recently elected head of the National American Woman Suffrage Association’s Congressional Committee, devised the idea for a large-scale public demonstration. Paul, who had spent time in England, witnessed the more militant tactics that the British suffragists used to draw attention to their cause.

Parade organizers strategically selected March 3, 1913 for the march. Woodrow Wilson was to be inaugurated as the new President the following day, and national press was in town and idly awaiting the inaugural festivities.

Paul insisted that the parade march down Pennsylvania Avenue, deliberately following the same route that the inaugural parade would take the next day. The contrast between the two parades would prove striking. Reporters flocked to the suffrage parade, leaving Wilson to arrive at the train station unheralded.

Despite the chaos and violence that initially ensued during the parade, Paul declared the event a success. The parade made national headlines and once again captured the public’s interest in the suffrage movement. Even those who opposed votes for women acknowledged that, as citizens, the women had the right to peacefully assemble.

03/03/2026

The estate of Henrietta Lacks has reached a settlement with Novartis over claims the company benefited from the unauthorized use of her cells in medical research for decades following her death.

The terms of the settlement remain confidential, but the agreement brings an end to the legal dispute between Novartis and the estate of Henrietta Lacks, Fierce Pharma reported.

The victory comes two years after a federal lawsuit was filed in Baltimore in August 2024 against Novartis and Viatris, where the family sought a jury trial, and the full profits they alleged were earned through the companies’ use of Lacks’ cells without consent.

https://www.blackenterprise.com/henrietta-lacks-estate-wins-settlement-against-novartis/

03/03/2026
SIX amazing YEARS🎉100 Black History months CELEBRATED👏🏾📚100 MORE to go!♾️🚌💨
02/27/2026

SIX amazing YEARS🎉
100 Black History months CELEBRATED👏🏾📚
100 MORE to go!♾️🚌💨

🎉✨ **Happy 6th Birthday to the First Ever-Utah Black History Museum!** 🚌💨Six years ago, we made history as the *first of...
02/27/2026

🎉✨ **Happy 6th Birthday to the First Ever-
Utah Black History Museum!** 🚌💨

Six years ago, we made history as the *first of its kind* in Utah — and today, we celebrate six powerful years of preserving, sharing, and honoring Black history across our state.👏🏾

We are proud to be **the** mobile museum, bringing the exhibit directly to YOU. This journey has been incredibly challenging — but worth every single mile, every late night, and every moment. We’ve grown, we’ve learned, and we’ve pushed forward so that history is remembered and never repeated.

Thank you to everyone who has made this possible:
🖤 Our dedicated volunteers, you make the exhibit possible
🖤 Everyone who has operated our beloved museum bus, *Marge* and our lovely Board of Directors
🖤 Every donor who continues to invest in the future of the museum

Because of you, we are still rolling 🚌💨

All donations directly support the maintenance of our mobile museum and its exhibit— and help us dream bigger. We would love a permanent brick-and-mortar location. We would love to complete Phase Two of our museum. And with your continued support, we can make it happen.

📲 Keep donating.
📲 Keep sharing.
📲 Follow our social media to see what exciting changes are coming next.

**History matters. Representation matters. Community matters.**

We’re excited to celebrate our 6th anniversary🎂 at Edison House ( ) in Salt Lake City, surrounded by incredible local Black artists and musicians. Thank you to Cultura ( ) for creating such a gorgeous space at Edison House and including us on our special day!

Here’s to six years of impact in Utah 📍— and 100 years of celebrating Black History month. 📚🥹🚌💨


02/27/2026

From Sheila Spencer Lange
"What a great day for Statesville!
Statesville Convention & Visitors Bureau, in partnership with the City of Statesville, hosted a public unveiling this morning of a Civil Rights Marker honoring the 1960 Woolworth’s lunch counter sit-in.
The marker was secured through an application to the NC African American Heritage Commission as part of its statewide initiative to identify and physically mark sites critical to the Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina.

Proud of this town."

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1H5rwo4VvD/

02/27/2026
02/27/2026

One hundred years ago, Dr. Carter G. Woodson broadened public awareness of Black history when he established “Negro History Week,” the precursor of Black History Month.

Woodson was born in 1875 to formerly enslaved parents who moved to West Virginia after the Civil War. Their family valued education, and while Woodson often had to leave school to help his family on the farm, he excelled academically. He earned degrees from Berea College, University of Chicago, and Harvard University.

Woodson believed education could counter racism, and he dedicated his life to publishing and lecturing about Black history.

In 1915, he founded the Association for the Study of African American Life and History to study, preserve, and share Black history and culture. One year later, the organization began publishing the scholarly publication now known as the “Journal of African American History.”

This photograph of Woodson was taken in Washington, DC and is in the collection of our National Museum of American History.

02/27/2026

How should we celebrate? 🥹

02/27/2026

It's almost our birthday 🥹

02/27/2026

This , we honor Shirley Chisholm and her legacy of fighting for a fairer world .

Address

Salt Lake City, UT

Website

https://bit.ly/3CMVvF1

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