Black History Month has deep roots in education, community organizing, and a push to correct what was missing from mainstream history teaching. The observance traces back to historian Dr. Carter G. Woodson and the early 20th-century effort to ensure Black history was studied, shared, and treated as essential American history.
How It Started
In 1926, Woodson and the organization now known as the Association for the Study of African American Life and History, ASALH, launched Negro History Week, aligning it with the birthdays of Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass.
The observance grew over time, shaped by educators, students, civic groups, and cultural movements. In 1976, President Gerald R. Ford issued a message recognizing Black History Month, marking a major milestone in national recognition.
Why It Still Matters
Black History Month also matters because Black communities are living, evolving institutions, not historical artifacts. Preserving neighborhoods, businesses, cultural spaces, and local leadership protects the networks that pass down opportunity, identity, and mutual support. In a time when displacement, unequal investment, and erasure can happen quietly, sustained attention helps ensure those communities keep shaping the present and future on their own terms.
Black History Month continues to serve two important purposes:
- Recognition: highlighting contributions that shaped the nation, from science and medicine to labor, arts, civic leadership, military service, and entrepreneurship.
- Context: understanding how policy, opportunity, resistance, and community building interact over time.
That context is not abstract. It influences health outcomes, wealth patterns, education access, and workplace experiences today.
Protecting Inclusion In Culture and Risk Management
Workplace equality depends on whether people feel safe using benefits and reporting concerns. Insurance touches sensitive areas such as privacy, mental health, disability, caregiving, and medical leave, so inclusion requires confidentiality, consistent decision-making, and leadership follow-through.
- Confidentiality That Employees Trust: People avoid care or skip leave when they think personal details will spread. Limit who can access information, train managers on privacy, and enforce consequences for breaches. Trust determines whether benefits are used.
- Manager Training On Leave and Accommodations: Inconsistent handling creates unequal outcomes. Train supervisors to follow policy, document decisions, and escalate complex issues to HR or the proper specialist. Consistency protects employees and reduces risk.
- Anti-Retaliation Practices That Work: Employees should be able to report discrimination, harassment, or benefits issues without fear of retaliation. Provide multiple reporting options, track outcomes, and show follow-through while protecting confidentiality. Rules without enforcement do not protect anyone.
- Vendor and Carrier Accountability: Carriers and vendors affect equity through service quality, claim handling, and network access. Evaluate partners using performance data, not just price. Poor service drives frustration and turnover.
- Inclusive Safety and Wellness Programs: One-size wellness programs can exclude people. Offer multiple ways to participate, including preventive care support, stress resources, and practical access tools. Programs should meet employees where they are.
Bringing It Home
Black History Month began as an education project, a deliberate effort to tell the fuller story. That same spirit translates well into modern decision-making. Learn the history, recognize the contributions, and keep building structures that make opportunity durable. The best step forward is the one that continues in March, April, and every month after.
If you want help reviewing coverage options that support your household or workplace goals, call your local agent. A quick conversation can clarify where protection is strong, where gaps may exist, and which adjustments fit your budget.




