Black history names include the extraordinary names of extraordinary achievers.
African-American history is full of the (interesting) names of people who have made breakthroughs by being the first to achieve something, whether it be in the arena of government, Civil Rights, scholarship, the professions, sports, or the arts. It’s sobering to see how recently some of these firsts occurred.
These names would serve as a beautiful tribute to the remarkable contributions of the Black community, especially for a child born around Juneteenth.
Juneteenth, celebrated on June 19th, marks the date in 1865 when General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, and officially proclaimed freedom for all enslaved people in the state. This signaled the end of slavery in the United States and became a symbol of hope, liberation, and progress.
Today, Juneteenth is a day to honor the resilience, strength, and indomitable spirit of those who endured the hardships of slavery and fought for their freedom. Choosing a name inspired by Black history, particularly names associated with Juneteenth, can be a powerful way to pay tribute to this pivotal moment and the generations of people who paved the way — and are continuing to fight — for progress and equality.
Here are some outstanding Black history names:
Alexia Canada
First female African-American neurosurgeon (1984)
Althea Gibson
First Black player to win a major tennis title (1956) and first Black woman to play on the Ladies PGA golf tour (1964)
Aretha Franklin
First Black woman inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame (1986)
Aulana Peters
First Black woman appointed to the Securities and Exchange Commission (1984)
Bessie Coleman
First Black woman aviator (1921)
Biddy Mason
First known Black female property owner in L.A. (1866)
Camilla Williams
First Black woman to sing with the New York City Opera (1945)
Charlotta Bass
Considered the first Black woman newspaper publisher (1912), and the first African-American to run for vice-president (1952)
Condoleezza Rice
First female head of the National Security Council (2001), first Black woman Secretary of State (2005)
Constance Baker Motley
First Black woman federal judge (1966)
Cora M. Brown
First Black woman in the US to be elected to a state senate (1952)
Della Reese
First Black woman to host a TV variety show (1969)
Dorothea Towles
First professional Black female model (1949)
Dorothy Dandridge
First Black woman nominated for an Oscar in a leading role (1955)
Ella Fitzgerald
First Black woman to win a Grammy (1959)
Euzham Palcy
First Black woman director of a feature film for a major studio (1989)
Gwendolyn Stewart King
First Black woman commissioner of Social Security (1989)
Hazel Johnson
First Black female army general (1979)
Hazel Scott
First Black entertainer to host her own TV show (1950)
Ida Rollins
First Black woman dentist (1890)
Jewel Plummer Cobb
First Black woman president of a California State University (1981)
Joycelyn (born Minnie) Elders
First Black female Surgeon General of the U.S. (1993)
Kamala Harris
First Black and Asian-American Vice President of the United States (2021)
Katherine Dunham
First Black choreographer to work at the Metropolitan Opera House (1963)
Lorraine Hansberry
First African-American to win the NY Drama Critics Award (1959)
Lucy Ann Stanton
First Black woman college graduate (1850)
Maggie Lena Walker
First Black woman bank president (1903)
Mamie Smith
First Black woman to make a recording (1920)
Marvel Jackson Cooke
First full-time Black reporter on a mainstream paper (1950)
Maude Rutherford
Dancer who first introduced the Charleston on Broadway (1922)
Maya Angelou (born Marguerite)
First Black woman to have a nonfiction bestseller (1970); first Black inaugural poet (1993)
Michelle Obama
First African-American first lady (2009)
Minnie M. Geddings Cox
First Black US postmistress (1891)
Minyon Moore
First Black woman political director of the National Democratic Committee (1995)
Octavia Butler
First published female Black science fiction writer (1976)
Opal Lee
Considered the "Grandmother of Juneteenth", Opal Lee campaigned for decades so that Juneteenth would be a national holiday. At age 94, she was at the White House when President Biden signed it into law. (2021)
Oprah Winfrey
First Black woman to host a nationally syndicated weekday talk show (1986)
Otelia Cromwell
First Black woman to graduate from Smith College (1900)
Phillis Wheatley
Published the first book of poetry by an African-American (1773)
Susie King Taylor
First Black army nurse (1863)
Toni Morrison
First African-American to win the Nobel Prize for literature (1993)
Zina Garrison
First Black Olympic winner in tennis (1988)
Alexander Lucius Twilight
First known Black graduate from an American college (1823)
Arsenio Hall
First Black host of a talk show on national TV (1989)
Asa T. Spalding
First Black actuary in the U.S. (1932)
Atoy Wilson
First Black American ice skater to win a figure skating title (1966)
August Wilson
First Black American to have two plays running on Broadway (1985)
Azie Taylor Morton
First Black treasurer of the United States (1977)
Barack Obama
First African-American president of the United States (2009)
Booker T. Washington
First president of Tuskegee Institute (1881), first Black guest to dine at the White House (1901), first Black person on a US stamp (1940) and coin (1946)
Briton Hammon
Wrote the first known enslaved person autobiography (1760)
Coleman Young
Detroit’s first Black mayor (1973)
Colin Powell
First Black National Security Advisor (1987), chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1989), Secretary of State (2001)
Cornelius Johnson
Set an Olympic high jump record (1936)
Crispus Attucks
Crispus Attucks, a stevedore who was Black and Native American, was the first person killed in the Revolutionary War.
Derrick Albert Bell Jr
First Black law professor at Harvard Law School (1969)
Ebenezer Don Carlo Bassett
First African-American diplomat (1869)
Emmett Ashford
First Black umpire in the major leagues (1966)
Gordon Parks
First Black photojournalist on Life staff (1949)
Guion Stewart Bluford, Jr
First Black American to make a space flight
Hiram Rhodes Revels
First African-American U.S. senator (1870)
Jacob Lawrence
First Black artist represented by a New York gallery (1941)
Jupiter Hammon
First African-American published writer (1760)
Kobe Bryant
At 18, the youngest basketballer to play with the NBA (1996)
Langston Hughes
Wrote the first play by an African-American to be a Broadway hit (1935)
Lemuel Haynes
First Black person to receive an honorary degree in the US (1804)
Levi Jackson
First Black football captain at Yale (1948)
Lincoln Perry (aka Stepin Fetchit)
First Black actor to receive feature billing in movies (1926)
Lionel Hampton
First Black musician to play at a presidential inauguration (1949)
Lloyd Richards
First Black director of a play on Broadway (1959)
Lucas Santomee
First trained Black physician in New Amsterdam (1667)
Macon B. Allen
First African-American admitted to the bar in any state (1845)
Mordecai Johnson
First Black president of Howard University (1926)
Moses Fleetwood Walker
First Black player in major league baseball (1881)
Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback
First Black governor of any state (1872)
Rafer Johnson
First Black person to carry an American flag at an Olympic event (1960)
Rojo Black
First Black auto racer (1923)
Roscoe Robinson, Jr
First US Black four-star general (1982)
Salem Poor
First Black soldier to win a battle commendation (1775)
Satchel Paige (born Leroy)
First Black baseball player to pitch in a World Series game (1948)
Sidney Poitier
First African-American to win the Best Actor Oscar (1963)
Simeon Booker
First full-time African-American reporter on the Washington Post (1952)
Solomon Carter Fuller Jr
The nation’s first Black psychiatrist (1897)
Spottswood Robinson
The Court of Appeals’ first Black judge (1966)
Theophilos Thompson
Earliest documented Black American chess expert (1800s)
Thomy Lafon
Considered the first Black millionaire (1890)
Thurgood Marshall
First Black US solicitor general (1965), first Black Supreme Court Justice (1967) and first Black Cabinet secretary (1997)
Wynton Marsalis
First jazz artist to win a Pulitzer Prize (1997)
York
First — and only — Black member of Lewis and Clark's expedition (1804)
There are, of course, hundreds of other barrier-breakers, who just happened to have more common names. To find out more, I recommend the book Black Firsts: 4,000 Ground-Breaking and Pioneering Historical Events by Jessie Carney Smith.
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