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Texas history

The Walls Prison Break–50 Years Later

Questions linger about Fred Gomez Carrasco’s escape attempt and the killings that followed.

by Joseph Tovares

Keep Reading

Return to Kíłááhíí

by Darcie Little Badger

The Banality of Border Evil

by Gus Bova

Standing Up for All Texans’ Stories

by Josephine Lee

The facade of a shop in a row of shops, with a sign reading "bookshop" in clear block letters. Books and an Open sign are displayed in the window. Texas bookstores, and books about Texas, thrived in 2022. Dec 26, 2022

Last Dance with Ann Richards: Best Texas Books of 2022

How Galvestonians used to dance until they dropped (for fun), a former figure skater turned journalist, and other Lone Star State stories.

by Lise Olsen

A double exposure shows Lillian Jones, 70, stitching together an item for a friend at her home workshop in Converse overlaid with her quilt, “The Tex Mex Underground Railroad,” on display at the Carver Center in San Antonio on Nov. 17 Dec 07, 2022

‘Underground Railroad’ Quilt Weaves Black Liberation History

African American fiber artists in San Antonio are challenging revisionist histories through artful storytelling.

by Briana Blueitt

The home that once belonged to the Robinson family in Palestine. Nov 14, 2022

Frank J. Robinson’s Ghost Haunts East Texas

This civil rights leader’s death led to probes by state and national agencies. But documents that might have proven he was murdered have vanished.

by David Martin Davies

The logo of the podcast "The Ghost of Frank J. Robinson" shows a faded image of half of Frank J. Robinson's face. Robinson was an older Black man, dressed in a white button down and suit jacket, with old-fashioned glasses. Oct 28, 2022

Preview: The Ghost of Frank J. Robinson

Presented in partnership with Texas Public Radio, an investigation of the death of an iconic civil rights leader, ruled a suicide by local police. Documents proving he was murdered mysteriously vanished.

by David Martin Davies

In this historical black and white photo, a group of Black people disembark from a bus, wearing 1960s era clothing. Sep 28, 2022

Racist Busing Rides Again

Moving migrants from Texas to Democratic strongholds is not new. The Reverse Freedom Rides of the 1960s hold lessons for activists of today.

by Matthew Van Meter

Fish swim under water in Spring Lake. Sep 21, 2022

Time Traveling in a Glass-Bottomed Boat

In Edwards Aquifer country, as goes the blind salamander, so go we all.

by Delger Erdenesanaa

A group of reproductive rights proteters stand in front of the granite Texas capitol building, holding signs such as "Bans Off Our Bodies" and "We're Mad + We'll Vote!" Jul 11, 2022

Before ‘Roe’—and After

What criminalized abortion looked like in Texas before 1973, and what it may look like after 2022.

by Justin Miller and Michelle Pitcher

Ann Richards smiles as she speaks at a microphone. Jul 11, 2022

Ann Richards’ Legacy Is a Light for Dark Times

The "One Ann Only," a new collection of photographs and quotes, captures the unforgettable singularity of Texas’ last Democratic governor.

by Julie Poole

In a black & white photo, women demonstrate in favor of repealing abortion legislation in Texas. In the foreground, one woman holds a handwritten sign which reads "Stop using women for population control by killing them with coathanger abortions. Repeal Abortion Laws" Jul 07, 2022

Roe’s Grassroots Beginnings

Student organizations at the University of Texas at Austin played a key role in the landmark court case.

by Laura Morales

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