For over forty years, the Metropolitan Historical Commission and Tennessee State University have celebrated the contributions of African Americans to Nashville and Tennessee through the Nashville Conference on African-American History and Culture. Each February, Nashvillians come together to honor these individuals through historical and cultural presentations by historians, artists, students, dramatists, musicians, genealogists, and others interested in the history of our city and state. The long-running series, Profiles of African Americans in Tennessee, a collection of nearly two hundred short publications, makes the Conference research available to the public.
Be sure to check out the conference website for more content!
2025 Conference
On Friday, February 14, 2025, join Tennessee State University’s College of Liberal Arts and the Metropolitan Historical Commission for the 44th annual Nashville Conference on African American History and Culture (NCAAHC), a dynamic celebration of the contributions of African Americans to Nashville and Tennessee history. For over four decades, this award-winning conference has brought together historians, students, educators, community leaders and others interested in African American history and culture.
This year's conference will be held at the Tennessee State University's Avon Williams campus (virtual attendance option also available) and is packed with many new presenters, engaging sessions, and talented entertainers. Our theme this year is “Prismatic Revelations: African American Stories of Resilience."
Attendees will enjoy thoughtful sessions from seven distinguished speakers and will be treated to musical and theatrical entertainment. The registration fee covers access to the event and helps ensure that the conference continues for future generations. Registration is now open. We hope you will join us at the 44th annual Nashville Conference on African American History and Culture!
For more information about the 2025 conference, including the preliminary program and speaker bios, visit www.NCAAHC.org.
This year's conference will be held on Friday, February 14, 2025 from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
History of the Conference
In 1981, a group of Nashville historians began discussing the possibility of holding an all-day conference for the purpose of presenting papers, projects, and activities related to local African-American culture and history. Although African Americans had been vital to the growth and development of Nashville, little information about their contributions was readily available to the public. The founding members of the planning committee -- Bobby L. Lovett (Tennessee State University), Lois C. McDougald (Tennessee State University), May Dean Coop Eberling (Metropolitan Historical Commission), and Linda T. Wynn (Tennessee Historical Commission) -- conceived the conference as a way of bringing these stories to light through an event that would have broad appeal for the community. Through their efforts, the annual Afro-American Culture and History Conference began on September 9, 1981.
Renamed the Conference on African-American History and Culture in 2003, the Conference has continued to bring together historians, educators, students, and other individuals interested in how African Americans shaped the history of Nashville and Tennessee. Speakers come from all walks of life and include family historians, church historians, and high school teachers as well as college and university professors and graduate students. Each year's program blends information and enrichment with cultural entertainment.
The Conference differs from traditional academic gatherings in that cultural entertainment and art have always figured prominently in the program. Integrating cultural expressions of black history has involved students as performers from a variety of college and high school ensembles like the Fisk Jubilee Singers, the TSU Meistersingers, the Whites Creek High School Marching Band, and the Fisk University Stagecrafters. The Conference has also hosted professional entertainers of national acclaim, including the Princely Players and the Fairfield Four. Tennessee State University has always had a strong art program and through the efforts of several art professors and curators, the Conference has developed a special focus on visual arts. Many of the conference profiles and presentations have featured notable artists such as William Edmonson, Aaron Douglas, Frances Thompson, and Greg Ridley.
A primary aim of the conference is to encourage new scholarly research into local African American history and make that research accessible to all. Since the conference's inception, almost 200 profiles of African Americans in Nashville and Tennessee have been produced. Dr. Bobby L. Lovett and Linda T. Wynn edited a collection of 99 of these short publications for Profiles of African Americans in Tennessee, a bicentennial book project of the Conference published in 1996. An updated version of this publication, released in 2021, included an additional twenty-five years of scholarship. Profiles of African Americans in Tennessee and other resources are available on the conference website.