Her name was Marion King. Her story still matters.
What the FBI raid of the Fulton County election office means for 2026

Credit: (Ben Gray for the AJC)
Atlanta's and Decatur’s reparations committees are far from issuing recommendations for specific actions their cities should take.
Credit: Devinne Moses for the AJC
In 100 years of Black history commemoration, there are five consequential years when Atlanta’s Black history shifted course and left lasting marks on the city and the nation.
Credit: Mike Jordan
A series of racist experiences in the Southeast made Sidney Poitier avoid Atlanta. Love and a cluster of family, who made the metro Atlanta their home, kept him coming back.
Her name was Marion King. Her story still matters.
What the FBI raid of the Fulton County election office means for 2026
Credit: Northeast Georgia Health System
Credit: Getty
Credit: Wellstar Health System
Malcolm X had been a public critic of King and rejected the Nobel Peace Prize winner’s direction on race relations.
Credit: Bloomsbury
Today, Rembert’s painting of a lively scene inside a juke joint in his hometown of Cuthbert, “The Dirty Spoon Café,” is on display in the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.
Credit: Katelyn Myrick
Over its 150 year history, The Savannah Tribune, a Black-owned weekly, has overcome censorship, distribution challenges, an ill-timed closure, a legal challenge, even a fire.
Credit: Ronald Williams/AJC
The famed W.E.B. Du Bois and Martin Luther King Jr. biographer excavates his own complicated family story.
Credit: Jim Battles / AJC file
Empowering children to reach their potential is a community-wide investment, Alonzo Crim said.
Credit: Henri Hollis
In interviews with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Black servers at three acclaimed fine dining restaurants discussed their experiences in Atlanta and elsewhere.
Credit: Cornelius M. Battey
It can be argued that even before the Harlem Renaissance, the concept of Black intellectualism was born right here in Atlanta.
Credit: arvin.temkar@ajc.com
“When it comes to hats, it is a crown of glory. ... They are honestly symbols of both defiance and dignity.”
Enslaved griots were the originators of the tales of Bre’r Rabbit, sharing adapted West African fables after long days working. "This is Black history," says one historian.