N°06 Editorial · Black History Month

What is Black History? Who are SickleKan?

A short essay on the historian who started it, the week that became a month, and why a charity for sickle cell sees itself in that lineage.

SickleKan editorial
Awareness desk · London
Published
23 Jan 2025
Read time
5 minutes
Filed under
Editorial · 06
From a week, to a month, to a movement

A short timeline of how Black History became a calendar fixture — and why awareness work like ours follows the same arc.

Origin
1926

Carter G. Woodson and Pastor Jesse E. Moorland establish Negro History Week in the United States.

Movement
1960s

The Civil Rights Movement reframes the week as a stage for Black identity, achievement and self-determination.

Expanded
1976

President Gerald Ford formally recognises Black History Month across the United States.

Crossed the ocean
1987

The UK marks its first Black History Month — held every October, distinct from the US's February.

SickleKan
2017

An Instagram page becomes a national platform for sickle cell awareness — a parallel mission, by the community, for the community.

Section 01 · The origins

It began as a week.

The inception of Black History Month started in the US, with historian Carter G. Woodson and Pastor Jesse E. Moorland, as Negro History Week. It was created as an appreciation for Black history, culture and identity. The founders believed in the importance of studying race within society — and in knowing the origins of one's identity at a moment when that knowledge was actively being erased.

They lived in a time when information was not easily accessible, yet was easily changed to suit those in power. "White-washing" was the norm. The achievements of other races and cultures were diminished as they were thought to be inferior. To set the record straight took a refusal to let the record be written without you.

Section 02 · Civil rights & identity

From a week, to a movement.

With the growing awareness of Black identity and the Civil Rights Movement, Negro History Week gave rise to what we know today as Black History — a celebration of achievement, a reflection on a long history of oppression, and an observance of the African diaspora. It moved from being a date in a diary to being a way of looking at the year itself.

Section 03 · Woodson, in his words
If a race has no history, it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated.
Carter G. Woodson
Historian · Founder of Negro History Week · 1875–1950
Section 04 · A parallel mission

SickleKan started with a similar vision.

SickleKan started with a similar vision — to educate and raise awareness of a disease that, even today, hasn't got the attention it deserves. We were founded by people who have sickle cell anaemia and are affected by it. That puts SickleKan in a unique position to educate, mentor and support others battling the disease — because we are them, and they are us.

Our mission

To give people a voice within their local and wider community — raising awareness from the perspective of sickle cell patients themselves.

With the NHS
Blood drives
With Kings College Hospital
Toy drives
With the Sickle Cell Society
Outreach & advocacy

We are continually looking to expand our reach, with the long-term goal of one day making a difference in the lives of every person living with sickle cell anaemia. As a charity, we rely on donations, volunteers and hard work to reach our objectives — and we are thoroughly appreciative of everything people do to get involved.

Section 05 · Part of the conversation

Until sickle cell, like Black History, is part of the conversation.

We will continue to move forward with our journey until one day, like Black History Month, sickle cell anaemia will also be part of the conversation — not a footnote, not a sidebar, not the thing patients have to explain on first dates and at A&E counters. Just known.

That's the work. That's the lineage. That's what brought you here.

SickleKan Black History feature
Who we are

SickleKan CIC

A community interest company founded in 2017, raising awareness of sickle cell disease through stories, education and partnership. Built by warriors, for warriors. We work alongside the NHS, Kings College Hospital and the Sickle Cell Society to bring patient voices into the rooms that have historically left them out.

§ 06   Get involved

Three ways to be part of it.