XCast: Voices of the Unforgotten
Podcast
Lucy Parsons — The Voice They Tried to Silence - Episode 12
March 28, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed for grades K–12 to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here: 👉🏿https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1BfcB4bjw6t28ueb8Smhfi68B1Emy-xrw?usp=sharingLucy Parsons was one of the most radical and fearless voices in American labor history.And for that reason — she was also one of the most targeted.Born in the mid-1800s and believed to have been of African, Mexican, and Native ancestry, Parsons lived in a time when simply existing as a Black woman in public life was dangerous. But she didn’t just exist — she spoke, organized, and challenged systems of power directly.She became a leading labor activist and a key figure connected to the events surrounding the Haymarket Affair, one of the most significant labor conflicts in U.S. history.After her husband, Albert Parsons, was executed following the Haymarket incident — despite controversial and widely criticized legal proceedings — Lucy Parsons did not retreat.She got louder.She traveled, spoke, and organized across the country, advocating for workers’ rights, free speech, and economic justice. Her speeches drew crowds. Her words drew attention. And her presence drew surveillance.Authorities often labeled her as dangerous.Not because she committed crimes.But because she challenged power.Lucy Parsons believed that working people deserved dignity, fair conditions, and the right to organize. She criticized wealth inequality and spoke against systems that kept people trapped in poverty while others profited.Because of this, she was frequently monitored, harassed, and even banned from speaking in certain places.But she didn’t stop.This episode explores:• Lucy Parsons’ role in the labor movement• The events and aftermath of the Haymarket Affair• How activism can be labeled “dangerous” when it challenges power• And why some voices are intentionally pushed out of mainstream historyLucy Parsons reminds us of something uncomfortable — but true:History often labels people as dangerous when they threaten the status quo.And sometimes, being called dangerous is exactly what happens when you refuse to stay silent.This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults exploring labor and civil rights history• Educators and students examining activism and resistance• Listeners who value bold truth and historical complexity🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
March 21, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed for grades K–12 to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here:👉🏿https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1_7n89RryLMsepJ24OwecIW4NL_fCxaHb?usp=sharingMost people know the name Rosa Parks.But before Rosa Parks, there was a 15-year-old girl.On March 2, 1955, Claudette Colvin refused to give up her seat on a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama — nine months before the moment that would become one of the most recognized acts in American history. She was arrested, handcuffed, and removed from that bus for one reason:She refused to accept injustice.But her story didn’t become the headline.Because movements are not just built on courage — they are shaped by strategy.At the time, civil rights leaders made a calculated decision. Claudette was young. She was a teenager. And in a society already looking for ways to discredit Black resistance, they chose someone they believed the public would accept more easily.So when history was written, her name was pushed aside.But the truth didn’t disappear.Claudette Colvin became one of the key plaintiffs in Browder v. Gayle, the federal case that ultimately led to the Supreme Court ruling that declared bus segregation unconstitutional. That means this:Her courage didn’t just inspire a movement.It helped change the law.This episode explores:• Why Claudette Colvin’s story was overshadowed• The difference between recognition and impact• How strategy shapes who becomes the “face” of a movement• And why reclaiming overlooked figures mattersClaudette Colvin reminds us of something powerful:History doesn’t always highlight the first.But the first still matters.Sometimes the person who sparks change isn’t the one remembered for it — but without them, the movement doesn’t happen.This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults exploring Civil Rights history• Educators and students examining hidden figures• Listeners who value truth beyond the headlines🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
March 14, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed for grades K–12 to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here:👉🏿https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1zSXld4APnSO7rIlitrfbrElhfXwcN31m?usp=sharingThe Teacher Who Helped a Movement Learn to FightMost people learn about the Civil Rights Movement through famous marches, speeches, and protests.But behind many of those moments was a teacher.Septima Clark believed that education was one of the most powerful weapons against injustice. Long before many people could safely protest in the streets, Clark was teaching ordinary citizens the skills they needed to claim their rights.Born in Charleston, South Carolina in 1898, Clark spent decades as a teacher before becoming one of the most influential grassroots organizers of the Civil Rights Movement. She believed that literacy and civic education could transform communities — and she proved it. Clark helped develop the Citizenship Schools, a network of community-based classes that taught Black adults how to read, write, and understand their rights as citizens. These lessons helped people pass discriminatory literacy tests that were used across the South to prevent Black Americans from voting. But these schools did more than teach reading.They built leaders.Students learned how to register to vote, organize their communities, and challenge systems designed to silence them. Over time, thousands of people passed through these programs, and many became local leaders in the growing movement for civil rights. Clark’s work eventually became part of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, where she served as director of education and helped expand the Citizenship School model throughout the South. Her influence reached far beyond classrooms.Many activists who later helped lead the Civil Rights Movement were trained or inspired through these programs. Leaders including Rosa Parks participated in workshops connected to Clark’s educational work before key moments in the movement. Because of this impact, Clark became widely known as the “Mother of the Movement.” While the cameras followed marches and demonstrations, Septima Clark was quietly preparing the people who made those movements possible.This episode explores:• How education became a strategy for civil rights• The creation of the Citizenship Schools• How literacy helped thousands claim the right to vote• Why grassroots teaching built the foundation of the Civil Rights MovementSeptima Clark understood something powerful:Freedom requires preparation.And education is often the first step toward justice.This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults exploring Civil Rights history• Educators and students studying grassroots leadership• Listeners who value the connection between knowledge and empowerment🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
Mary McLeod Bethune - Episode 9
March 7, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed for grades K–12 to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here:👉 https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1KlKm0n-6WARx5X9HbTESVjbC68dGHWKu?usp=sharingMary McLeod Bethune understood something many people overlook:Education is power.Born in 1875 to parents who had been enslaved, Bethune grew up in a world where opportunities for Black Americans — especially Black women — were intentionally limited. But she believed knowledge could break barriers that laws and prejudice tried to enforce.With just $1.50 and an unshakable vision, Bethune opened a small school for Black girls in Daytona Beach, Florida in 1904. What began with a handful of students and homemade desks made from crates eventually grew into what we now know as Bethune-Cookman University.But her impact did not stop in the classroom.Bethune became a national leader, advisor, and organizer who believed education and political power had to work together. She founded organizations, mentored young leaders, and built networks that strengthened the fight for civil rights across the country.Her leadership eventually brought her into the inner circle of Franklin D. Roosevelt, where she served as a key advisor and director of the National Youth Administration’s Division of Negro Affairs. In that role, she helped expand education and employment opportunities for thousands of Black youth during the Great Depression.Bethune didn’t chase recognition.She built institutions.She believed real change required preparation, knowledge, and the courage to lead even when the system resisted progress.This episode explores:• How education became Bethune’s most powerful tool• The founding and growth of her historic school• Her influence on national policy and youth programs• Why leadership and learning were inseparable in her visionMary McLeod Bethune shattered ceilings of gender, race, education, and federal authority all at once. She didn’t seek validation — her results validated her. She didn’t chase the spotlight — she built foundations that made the spotlight possible for others.Her legacy reminds us that knowledge is not just information.It is preparation for freedom.This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults interested in Black history and leadership• Educators and students exploring the role of education in civil rights• Listeners who value legacy, leadership, and empowerment🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
February 28, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed for grades K–12 to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here:👉 https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xpvTgIQRlJTXA8K2ys3peywvAlT-9UIs?usp=sharingMost people use the name “Uncle Tom” as an insult.But almost no one has read the original story.In this episode, we unpack the truth behind one of the most weaponized labels in American culture. We go back to 1852 and examine how Uncle Tom was originally written — a man who refused to betray other enslaved people, even when the price was his own life.So how did a character who died protecting others become shorthand for betrayal?Because the book did not stay a book.It became stage entertainment.It was distorted through minstrel-style performances.It was reshaped for profit.And over time, that distortion became political language.This episode breaks down:• The difference between “Book Tom” and “Stage Tom”• How entertainment culture rewrote the character• How the insult migrated into political and community language• Why the word still carries emotional power today• And what it means to reclaim distorted historyThis is not a defense of weakness.It is a correction of history.When we use the term “Uncle Tom” casually, we repeat a version shaped by caricature — not the original narrative.The question is simple:Are we repeating distortion, or are we repeating truth?This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults interested in cultural language and identity• Educators and students examining historical distortion• Listeners who value context over shortcuts🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
MARY ELLEN PLEASANT “The Woman Who Financed Freedom” Episode 7
February 21, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed for grades K–12 to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here:👉🏿 https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xpvTgIQRlJTXA8K2ys3peywvAlT-9UIs?usp=sharingMary Ellen Pleasant was one of the most powerful — and most misunderstood — Black women of the 19th century.A formerly enslaved woman who became a wealthy entrepreneur in Gold Rush–era California, Pleasant used her financial influence to fund abolitionist efforts, support freedom fighters, and challenge discriminatory laws in court. She was not just surviving in a system built against her — she was strategically building power within it.Often called the “Mother of Civil Rights in California,” Pleasant quietly financed anti-slavery causes, supported legal challenges to segregation, and helped shape early civil rights victories on the West Coast.But history tried to bury her.Smear campaigns, racial hostility, and sexist narratives attempted to reduce her legacy to scandal rather than strategy. Yet the facts remain: she leveraged intelligence, business, and legal action to disrupt injustice long before it was popular — or safe — to do so.This episode explores how Mary Ellen Pleasant built influence in silence, why economic power matters in movements for justice, and how legacy can be distorted when it threatens the powerful.Her story is a reminder that resistance does not always shout. Sometimes it invests. Sometimes it plans. Sometimes it wins in court.This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults interested in hidden Black history• Educators and lifelong learners• Listeners who want to understand strategy, economics, and civil rights foundations🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
February 14, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here:👉🏿 https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xpvTgIQRlJTXA8K2ys3peywvAlT-9UIs?usp=sharingHenry Box Brown did something almost unimaginable.In 1849, enslaved in Virginia, he placed himself inside a small wooden shipping crate and mailed himself to freedom. For 27 hours, confined in darkness with barely enough air to survive, he trusted that courage and faith would carry him to Philadelphia — and to liberty.But his story does not end with escape.After arriving in the North, Brown became a powerful abolitionist speaker, using his own body and testimony as evidence against the brutality of slavery. He turned his experience into activism, performance, and protest — refusing to let America look away from the truth.This episode explores not only his daring escape, but the emotional cost of bondage, the risks of resistance, and the power of imagination when survival demands it.Henry Box Brown reminds us that freedom has always required vision — the ability to see beyond confinement, even when the walls feel permanent.This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults who care about Black history and resistance• Educators, parents, and independent learners• Listeners who value courage, strategy, and legacy🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
February 7, 2026
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📚 Companion Learning ResourceThis episode includes a FREE downloadable worksheet designed to deepen understanding and reflection.Download here:👉🏿 https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ViZxAPw_OOob_CW8-Qtddp63pHXjxxe_?usp=sharingIda B. Wells was more than a journalist — she was a truth-teller in an era where telling the truth could get you killed.In this episode, we explore how Ida B. Wells used investigative journalism as a weapon against lynching, racial terror, and silence. At a time when lies were law and violence was protected, she documented the truth with precision, courage, and zero apology.Her work challenged powerful institutions, exposed false narratives, and laid the foundation for modern civil rights journalism — all while she faced threats, exile, and constant danger.This episode is for listeners who want to understand how courage looks when the stakes are life and death, and how one voice — armed with facts — can disrupt an entire system.This episode is designed for:• Adults and young adults who care about Black history and social justice• Educators, parents, and lifelong learners• Podcast listeners who value truth, resistance, and legacy🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
January 31, 2026
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📄 Download the Lewis Latimer Episode Worksheets (K–12):👉🏿https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1fdezbA--H3SqRbD-NDSLsi7xoh5nG-Us?usp=sharingThese worksheets are designed for classrooms, homeschool, and independent learners.This episode is for listeners who want to understand the untold truths of American history and the people whose intellect and innovation shaped the modern world.It’s designed for:Adults and young adults who care about Black history, science, and innovationEducators, parents, and lifelong learners seeking stories left out of textbooksPodcast listeners who value storytelling with purpose, not entertainment without meaningPeople who believe brilliance can exist even when recognition is deniedThis episode speaks to those who want to learn, reflect, and pass knowledge forward — because remembering Lewis Latimer isn’t just about inventions and patents, it’s about how genius, persistence, and quiet excellence helped power the world we live in today.🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown
FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS HARPER - EPISODE 3
January 24, 2026
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📄 Download the Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Episode Worksheets (K–12):👉🏿 https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/159CD5v4iW0UoY231TcR3v9RPsAkYWMM3?usp=sharingThese worksheets are designed for classrooms, homeschool, and independent learners.This episode is for listeners who want to understand the untold truths of American history and the people whose voices shaped change through words, courage, and conviction.It’s designed for:Adults and young adults who care about Black history, literature, and social justiceEducators, parents, and lifelong learners seeking stories left out of textbooksPodcast listeners who value storytelling with purpose, not entertainment without meaningPeople who believe words can challenge systems and move generationsThis episode speaks to those who want to learn, reflect, and pass knowledge forward — because remembering Frances Ellen Watkins Harper isn’t just about poetry and prose, it’s about how truth, intellect, and moral courage can confront injustice and reshape a nation.🔗 Explore more from XKNOWN:👉🏿 https://linktr.ee/xknown