When Carter G. Woodson established Negro History week in 1926, he realized the importance of providing a theme to focus the attention of the public. The intention has never been to dictate or limit the exploration of the Black experience, but to bring to the public’s attention important developments that merit emphasis.

For those interested in the study of identity and ideology, an exploration of ASALH’s Black History themes is itself instructive. Over the years, the themes reflect changes in how people of African descent in the United States have viewed themselves, the influence of social movements on racial ideologies, and the aspirations of the black community.

The changes notwithstanding, the list reveals an overarching continuity in ASALH–our dedication to exploring historical issues of importance to people of African descent and race relations in America.

The Origins of Black History Month


2025 THEME

2025 – African Americans and Labor

BHB Vol.87 No.3 Poster3 Print

The 2025 Black History Month theme, African Americans, and Labor, focuses on the various and profound ways that work and working of all kinds – free and unfree, skilled, and unskilled, vocational and voluntary – intersect with the collective experiences of Black people. Indeed, work is at the very center of much of Black history and culture. Be it the traditional agricultural labor of enslaved Africans that fed Low Country colonies, debates among Black educators on the importance of vocational training, self-help strategies and entrepreneurship in Black communities, or organized labor’s role in fighting both economic and social injustice, Black people’s work has been transformational throughout the U.S., Africa, and the Diaspora. The 2025 Black History Month theme, “African Americans and Labor,” sets out to highlight and celebrate the potent impact of this work.

Considering Black people’s work through the widest perspectives provides versatile and insightful platforms for examining Black life and culture through time and space. In this instance, the notion of work constitutes compensated labor in factories, the military, government agencies, office buildings, public service, and private homes. But it also includes the community building of social justice activists, voluntary workers serving others, and institution building in churches, community groups, and social clubs and organizations. In each of these instances, the work Black people do and have done have been instrumental in shaping the lives, cultures, and histories of Black people and the societies in which they live. Understanding Black labor and its impact in all these multivariate settings is integral to understanding Black people and their histories, lives, and cultures.

Africans were brought to the Americas to be enslaved for their knowledge and serve as a workforce, which was superexploited by several European countries and then by the United States government. During enslavement, Black people labored for others, although some Black people were quasi-free and labored for themselves, but operated within a country that did not value Black life. After fighting for their freedom in the Civil War and in the country’s transition from an agricultural based economy to an industrial one, African Americans became sharecroppers, farm laborers, landowners, and then wage earners. Additionally, African Americans’ contributions to the built landscape can be found in every part of the nation as they constructed and designed some of the most iconic examples of architectural heritage in the country, specifically in the South.

Over the years to combat the superexploitation of Black labor, wage discrepancies, and employment discrimination based on race, sex, and gender, Black professionals (teachers, nurses, musicians, and lawyers, etc.) occupations (steel workers, washerwomen, dock workers, sex workers, sports, arts and sciences, etc.) organized for better working conditions and compensation. Black women such as Addie Wyatt also joined ranks of union work and leadership to advocate for job security, reproductive rights, and wage increases.

2025 marks the 100-year anniversary of the creation of Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and Maids by labor organizer and civil rights activist A. Philip Randolph, which was the first Black union to receive a charter in the American Federation of Labor. Martin Luther King, Jr incorporated issues outlined by Randolph’s March on Washington Movement such as economic justice into the Poor People’s Campaign, which he established in 1967. For King, it was a priority for Black people to be considered full citizens.

The theme, “African Americans and Labor,” intends to encourage broad reflections on intersections between Black people’s work and their workplaces in all their iterations and key moments, themes, and events in Black history and culture across time and space and throughout the U.S., Africa, and the Diaspora. Like religion, social justice movements, and education, studying African Americans’ labor and labor struggles are important organizing foci for newinterpretations and reinterpretations of the Black past, present, and future. Such new considerations and reconsiderations are even more significant as the historical forces of racial oppression gather new and renewed strength in the 21st century.

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THEMES

2030: Black Economics

2029: Sustaining and Saving Black Land and Property

2028: TBD

2027: African Americans in the Digital Age

2026: A Century of Black History Commemorations

2025: African Americans and Labor

2024: African Americans and the Arts

2023: Black Resistance

2022: Black Health and Wellness

2021: The Black Family: Representation, Identity, and Diversity

2020: African Americans and the Vote

2019: Black Migrations

2018: African Americans in Times of War

2017: The Crisis in Black Education

2016: Hallowed Grounds: Sites of African American Memories

2015: A Century of Black Life, History, and Culture

2014: Civil Rights in America

2013: At the Crossroads of Freedom and Equality: The Emancipation Proclamation and the March on Washington

2012: President Barack Obama National Black History Month Proclamation

2012: Black Women in American Culture and History

2011: African Americans and the Civil War

2010: The History of Black Economic Empowerment

2009: The Quest for Black Citizenship in the Americas

2008: Carter G. Woodson and the Origins of Multiculturalism

2007: From Slavery to Freedom: Africans in the Americas

2006: Celebrating Community: A Tribute to Black Fraternal, Social, and Civil Institutions

2005: The Niagara Movement: Black Protest Reborn, 1905-2005

2004: Before Brown, Beyond Boundaries: Commemorating the 50th Anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education

2003: The Souls of Black Folks: Centennial Reflections

2002: The Color Line Revisited: Is Racism Dead?

2001: Creating and Defining the African American Community: Family, Church Politics and Culture

2000: Heritage and Horizons: The African American Legacy and the Challenges for the 21st Century

1999: Legacy of African American Leadership for the Present and the Future

1998: Black Business

1997: African Americans and Civil Rights; a Reprisal

1996: Black Women

1995: Reflections on 1895: Douglass, Du Bois & Washington

1994: Empowering Black Americans

1993: Afro-American Scholars: Leaders, Activists and Writers

1992: African Roots Experience New Worlds, Pre-Columbus to Space Exploration

1991: Educating America: Black Universities and Colleges, Strengths and Crisis

1990: Seventy-Five Years of Scholarly Excellence: A Homage to Our Forebearers

1989: Afro Americans and Religion

1988: Constitutional Status of Afro Americans in the 21st Century

1987: Afro Americans and the Constitution from Colonial Times to the Present

1986: Afro American Experience: International Connection

1985: Afro American Family

1984: Afro Americans and Education

1983: Afro Americans in the United States

1982: Afro American Survival

1981: Black History: Role Model for Youth

1980: Heritage for America

1979: History: Torch for the future

1978: Roots, Achievements and Projections

1977: Heritage Days: The Black Perspective; the Third Century

1976: America for All Americans

1975: Fulfilling America’s Promise: Black History Month

1974: Helping America Understand

1973: Biography Illuminates the Black Experience

1972: African Art, Music, Literature; a Valuable Cultural Experience

1971: African Civilization and Culture: A Worthy Historical Background

1970: 15th Amendment and Black America in the Century (1870-1970)

1969: Changing the Afro American Image through History

1968: The Centennial of the Fourteenth Amendment Afro American History Week

1967: Negro History in the Home, School, and the Community

1966: Freedom from Racial Myths and Stereotypes Through Negro History

1965: Negro History: Freedom’s Foundation

1964: Negro History: A Basis for the New Freedom

1963: Negro History Evaluates Emancipation (1863-1963)

1962: Negro History and a New Birth of Freedom

1961: Freedom and Democracy for the Negro after 100 years (1861-1961)

1960: Strengthening America Through Education in Negro History and African Culture

1959: Negro History: A Foundation for a Proud America

1958: Negro History: A Factor in Nationalism and Internationalism

1957: Negro History

1956: Negro History in an Era of Changing Human Relations

1955: Negro History: A Contribution to America’s Intercultural Life

1954: Negro History: A Foundation for Integration

1953: Negro History and Human Relations

1952: Great Negro Educators (Teachers)

1951: Eminent Negroes in World Affairs

1950: Outstanding Moments in Negro History

1949: The Use of Spirituals in the Classroom

1948: The Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth

1947: Democracy Possible only Through Brotherhood

1946: Let us Have Peace

1945: The Negro and Reconversion

1944: The Negro and the New Order

1943: The Negro in the Modern World

1942: The Negro in Democracy

1941: The Career of Frederick Douglass

1940: Negro Labor

1939: Special Achievements of the Race: Religion, Education, Business, Architecture, Engineering, Innovation, Pioneering

1938: Special Achievements of the Race: Oratory, Drama, Music, Painting, Sculpture, Science and Inventions

1937: American Negro History from the Time of Importation from Africa up to the Present Day

1936: African Background Outlined

1935: The Negro Achievements in Africa

1934: Contribution of the Negro in Poetry, in Painting, in Sculpture and in Science

1933: Ethiopia Meets Error in Truth

1932: What George Washington Bicentennial Commission Fail to Do

1931: Neglected Aspects of Negro History

1930: Significant Achievements of the Negro

1929: Possibility of Putting Negro History in the Curriculum

1928: Civilization: A World Achievement