Skip to main content

Utility Menu

  • Contact
  • Giving
  • Search
  • Subscribe

MIT Black History

Main menu

  • Archive
  • Stories
  • Publications
  • About
  • Contact
  • Giving
  • Search
  • MIT

Archive

Main sources for the MIT Black History Project include the Institute Archives, the MIT Museum, campus publications, and members of the MIT community. Oral history is also a valuable evidentiary tool, supplementing and enriching the store of more traditional historical evidence. Additionally, the project draws material from relevant collections and publications at large.
Question to MIT, 1968

Question to MIT, 1968

Three women students

Three women students, 1968

"Where do we stand?" banner

"Where do we stand?" in 1968

Youth Opportunity Program

Youth Opportunity Program, 1960s

Kakamega Secondary School students, 1961

Kakamega Secondary School students, 1961

Walter T. Joseph, ca. 1960s

Walter T. Joseph

Robert E. Efimba

Robert E. Efimba during Black History Week, 1960s

BSU leaders meet with MIT Admissions, ca. 1969

BSU leaders meet with MIT Admissions, ca. 1969

Filter By:

Timeline

  • 1870s (1)
  • 1880s (1)
  • 1890s (2)
  • 1900s (4)
  • 1910s (2)
  • 1920s (9)
  • 1930s (3)
  • 1940s (2)
  • 1950s (7)
  • (-) 1960s (8)
  • 1970s (31)
  • 1980s (11)
  • 1990s (2)
  • 2000s (3)
  • 2010s (25)
  • 2020s (2)

MIT School

  • School of Engineering (1)
  • School of Science (1)
  • Sloan School of Management (1)

MIT Department

  • Administration (2)
  • Civil and Environmental Engineering (1)
  • Management (1)
  • Mathematics (1)

Life@MIT

  • Black Students' Union (BSU) (1)

Career

  • (-) Business & Finance (1)
  • Community (6)
  • (-) Education (8)
  • Engineering (1)
  • Health & Medicine (1)
  • (-) Mathematics (1)
  • (-) Technology (1)

Object

  • Document (4)
  • (-) Image (8)
  • Video (1)

Collection

  • Activism (6)
  • Administrators (1)
  • Africa (4)
  • Canada (1)
  • Community Fellows Program (1)
  • Critical Mass 1955-1968 (11)
  • Data (2)
  • Exhibits (4)
  • Faculty (2)
  • Harvard (2)
  • HBCUs (1)
  • Howard University (1)
  • Integration and Differentiation 1969-1994 (3)
  • Latina/o and Latin America (2)
  • Magazine features (1)
  • Martin Luther King, Jr. (2)
  • Mentorship (1)
  • NASA (1)
  • Recruitment (3)
  • Staff (1)
  • STEM Education (2)
  • (-) Students (8)
  • Technique Yearbook (1)
  • Tuskegee (1)
  • Willard R. Johnson (1)
  • Women (2)
  • WTBS The Ghetto (1)

Have a piece of MIT black history to share?

The MIT Black History Project’s mission is to research, identify, and produce scholarly curatorial content on the MIT Black experience. If you have an important item you believe the project should consider for its collection, please start by contacting us on this website.
Tell us about your piece of MIT Black history

Follow Us

Twitter YouTube Sound Cloud Blogger

Connect with us

Contact

The mission of the MIT Black History Project is to research, identify, and produce scholarly curatorial content on the Black experience at MIT since the Institute opened its doors in 1865.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139

BlackHistory