HBCU ORIGINAL
Boston City Council Eyes Bringing HBCU Presence to the City

Boston could soon see the establishment of its first historically Black college or university (HBCU) presence, as city leaders take steps to explore the creation of a satellite campus.
City Council Vice President Brian Worrell recently introduced a proposal calling for a hearing focused on bringing an HBCU satellite campus to Boston. The effort, he said, would not only expand educational opportunities but also serve as a beacon for young Black students in the city.
âAn HBCU presence would provide role models for current Black students by showing them a tangible pathway to success,â Worrell said. âBoston led the way in educating Black students in the first half of the 19th century, with the opening of the Abiel Smith School, and we need to discover that trailblazing spirit once again.â
Despite being home to more than 25 colleges and universities, Boston currently lacks an HBCU. Worrell hopes to change that with support from initiatives like the Building Bridges HBCU program, which is actively working to attract a historically Black college to open a satellite campus in the city. An update on those efforts is expected later this year.
âThere are more than 100 historically Black colleges and universities in the country, with the vast majority of them located in southern states as a response to Jim Crow laws,â Worrell noted in his council order. âThe need for more culturally sensitive schools, such as HBCUs, has grown in the past decade based upon current rulings and the actions of the current federal administration.â
Worrell emphasized the vital role HBCUs play in Black advancement, stating that while HBCUs make up just 3% of colleges nationwide, they produce 40% of Black engineers, 50% of Black lawyers and doctors, 70% of Black dentists, and 40% of Black members of Congress.
Cory McCarthy, Chief of Student Support for Boston Public Schools, echoed the importance of this initiative.
âThe appetite for a HBCU has grown immensely within the last five years,â McCarthy said. âAn opportunity to bring a HBCU to Boston would further highlight the commitment and dedication of our city to create an educational ecosystem that values, elevates and develops opportunities for Black students to be successful.â
The City Council has referred the proposal to the Committee on Education, with a hearing expected to take place in the fall.
Story credit: Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald ©2025 MediaNews Group, Inc. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Visit bostonherald.com
Events
MEAC Girls on the Gridiron 2025 | HBCU Original Covers Empowering Flag Football Clinic at Morgan State**

Hosted by the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) in collaboration with the NFL, Wells Fargo, and Morgan State University, this empowering clinic gave young girls the opportunity to engage with football fundamentals through drills, mentorship, and coaching from MEAC staff and student-athletes.
These young ladies got the chance to run routes, gain confidence, and build a sisterhood that reflects the heart of HBCU culture and the power of sports.
From the sidelines to the spotlight â girls are making their mark on the gridiron! đȘđŸ
đ Subscribe to HBCU Original for more coverage from the culture, on and off the field!
đ Location: Hughes Stadium, Morgan State University
đ Date: July 20, 2025
đ€ Coverage by: HBCU Original
đ MEAC Football Programs Represented:
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Howard University Bison
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Morgan State University Bears
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Norfolk State University Spartans
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North Carolina Central University Eagles
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South Carolina State University Bulldogs
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Delaware State University Hornets
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University of Maryland Eastern Shore (Note: currently no football team)
HBCU ORIGINAL
đ„ A New Era Begins: Delaware State University Breaks Ground with $20M Athletic Field House

DOVER, DE â A bold new chapter is being written at Delaware State University. With the announcement of a $20 million investment into a groundbreaking athletic field house, the Hornet Nation is preparing for a transformation that will elevate campus life, inspire future athletes, and strengthen community pride.
đ A Dream in Motion
Itâs not just a buildingâitâs a movement. The new 70,000-square-foot field house will be a game-changing addition to the DSU landscape, offering cutting-edge facilities designed to rival top-tier institutions. Located beside Alumni Stadium, this modern indoor facility will include:
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A 50-yard turf field for multi-season training
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Locker rooms and film rooms to support team development
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Academic lounges and tutoring areas for student-athlete success
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A fueling station/café focused on athlete nutrition and wellness
đ§ Vision for the Future
This isnât just about football or facilitiesâitâs about identity. The field house will be a central part of the universityâs strategy to raise its national athletic profile, expand student opportunities, and build a legacy of excellence.
With rising expectations and renewed school spirit, Delaware State is investing in more than sportsâitâs investing in a culture of success.
đ A Coach, A Culture, A Comeback
With the arrival of former NFL superstar DeSean Jackson as head football coach, DSU has sent a strong message to the world: Weâre here to compete. The new facility is the perfect foundation to support this cultural shift. From elite-level training to recruitment advantages, Delaware State is positioning itself as a destination for athletes who want more than just a jerseyâthey want to be part of something bigger.
đ Beyond the Sidelines
While the field house will support athletics, it will also serve the broader university and surrounding community. Student organizations will have access to meeting spaces, and thereâs growing potential for hosting regional events, youth clinics, and indoor competitions.
This project is the first step in a larger vision that includes discussions around a new convocation centerâa modern space that could house everything from basketball games to commencements.
đ Construction & Momentum
The field house project is expected to be completed within 18â24 months. It will not only modernize DSUâs athletic capabilities but also energize the student body and attract partnerships from businesses, alumni, and local leaders.
đ Hornets, This Is Our Moment
Delaware Stateâs $20 million field house project is more than steel and turfâitâs a rallying point for the entire Hornet family. Students, alumni, faculty, and fans are witnessing a vision unfold thatâs been years in the making. This is about legacy. This is about leadership. This is about us.
â Join the Movement
Proud of where Delaware State is headed? Share this story. Talk about it. Tag #HornetNation in your posts and let the world know: Delaware State is risingâand weâre just getting started.
HBCU ORIGINAL
Three Hampton Womenâs Basketball Players Selected for AT&T WNBA All-Star 2025 Internship

HAMPTON, Va. (July 18, 2025) â Three standout student-athletes from Hampton Universityâs womenâs basketball team are gaining invaluable professional experience this summer as interns at the AT&T WNBA All-Star 2025 in Indianapolis.
Tyra Kennedy, Diamond Wiggins, and KiKi McElrath were selected to participate in a groundbreaking internship initiative created in partnership between the WNBA and Mielle Organics. This immersive opportunity allows them to work across various departments during the All-Star Weekend, which culminates with the marquee event at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Saturday, July 19.
The WNBA and Mielle Organics have launched this first-of-its-kind social impact program targeting students from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). The initiative aims to bridge the gap for HBCU studentsâespecially those passionate about sportsâby providing hands-on experience in the professional sports industry.
As HBCU Event Interns, the selected students will be paired with department mentors, gaining behind-the-scenes access and shadowing professionals in key areas such as Player Development, Content/Marketing, Streaming, Events, and Marketing Partnerships. They will also engage in professional development workshops throughout the week.
The opportunity was brought to the players’ attention by Hampton Head Coach Tamisha Augustin, and after a competitive application and interview process, the three were selected as part of the programâs inaugural cohort. The trio departed for Indianapolis on July 15 and will spend five days working in their assigned departments.
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Tyra Kennedy (Tampa, Fla.) will intern with league operations. “I want to thank the WNBA and Mielle for this amazing opportunity,” she shared. “Iâm excited to be part of something so impactful.”
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Diamond Wiggins (Norfolk, Va.), a journalism major, is focused on social media and content development. “This is a chance to apply what Iâve learned in the classroom and gain real-world experience in sports media.”
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KiKi McElrath (Columbus, Ohio), a business management major and proud member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., will work in marketing. “Iâm looking forward to learning how major events like this come together and to build relationships with industry professionals.”
About Mielle Organics
Founded in 2014 by CEO Monique Rodriguez, Mielle Organics is a global beauty brand rooted in natural ingredients and designed for Black women. Black-founded and woman-led, the company is known for its âroots-to-resultsâ approach to beauty and wellness. Mielle products are sold in over 100,000 retail locations nationwide, including Ulta Beauty, Target, Walgreens, CVS, and Walmart.
Players Mentioned
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#10 Tyra Kennedy, G, 5’7″, Sophomore
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#5 Diamond Wiggins, G, 5’10”, Sophomore
HBCU ORIGINAL
“Disappearing Brothers: The Decline of Black Male Enrollment at HBCUs and Why It Matters”

Once the backbone of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Black men are slowly disappearing from the very spaces built to educate and empower them. Once nearly 38% of HBCU student bodies in 1976, Black male enrollment has now dropped to just 26%, according to the latest national figures.
This isnât just a statistic. Itâs a crisis. And itâs one that could have ripple effects for generations.
A Growing Gap: Where Are Our Brothers?
The decline in Black male college enrollment is not exclusive to HBCUsâitâs a nationwide problem. But the decline at HBCUs feels different. It feels personal. These are the institutions that have historically wrapped their arms around young Black men, provided safe spaces for growth, and launched some of the greatest leaders in Black history.
So why are fewer young Black men walking through those doors?
Whatâs Causing the Drop?
Letâs be clear: this isnât about lack of ambition. Itâs about the systems stacked against our young men before they even reach a college campus.
đč Systemic Inequities in K-12 Education
Black boys face disproportionate discipline, underfunded schools, and low expectations from educators. Far too many are underestimated long before they sit for their first college application.
đč Financial Barriers
College is expensiveâand for many Black families, the math doesnât add up. Rising tuition, limited financial aid, and immediate financial pressures at home often push Black men to skip college and head straight to the workforce.
đč Societal Pressures & Perception
Some Black men question the value of a degree when job prospects still feel limited post-graduation. The pressure to âstart making money nowâ often overshadows the long-term benefit of education.
đč The âBelief Gapâ
When teachers and counselors donât believe in Black boysâ potential, it shows. That lack of belief sinks in early and shapes how they see themselves.
đč Shifting Perceptions of HBCUs
Despite their rich legacy, some young people perceive HBCUs as outdated or less competitive, not realizing these institutions have beenâand still areâgame changers in Black academic success.
đč Gender Disparity
Today, Black women significantly outnumber Black men on HBCU campuses. While that reflects the incredible strides Black women are making, it also highlights the imbalance and isolation some Black men feel.
The Real-World Consequences
The fallout from these trends is more than academic:
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Reduced Economic Mobility: Without a degree, Black men face fewer opportunities for high-paying, sustainable careers.
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Strained HBCU Communities: Enrollment drops hit budgets, alter campus culture, and weaken the support networks that make HBCUs so special.
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National Impact: When fewer Black men enter higher education, entire communities lose out on leadership, innovation, and generational uplift.
What Can Be Done?
The good news? This trend is reversibleâbut only if we act with intention.
â Fix the Pipeline
Invest early in Black boys. That means mentorship, college prep programs, culturally responsive educators, and access to advanced coursework in middle and high school.
â Close the Financial Gap
Expand scholarships and financial aid targeting Black men. No one should have to choose between education and survival.
â Change the Narrative
We must amplify stories of Black men who succeed in and after college. Representation matters. College must be seen as a bridge to opportunity, not a detour from success.
â Support, Donât Just Recruit
Retention is as important as recruitment. That means mentorship programs, Black male faculty representation, mental health resources, and a culture that truly affirms their presence.
â Reimagine the HBCU Experience
HBCUs must reconnect with the needs and culture of todayâs young Black men. From curriculum to campus life to career readiness, HBCUs can reclaim their space as the go-to institutions for Black male empowerment.
Final Thoughts: This Is Bigger Than School
This is about saving futures. Itâs about equity. It’s about building a generation of leaders, fathers, entrepreneurs, and change-makers. If we let this trend continue, we risk losing more than studentsâwe risk losing the legacy.
So the question isnât just Where are our brothers?
The real question is: What are we doing to bring them backâand help them stay?
Join the movement. Share this message. Support a young brother. And letâs keep the doors of opportunity open.
#HBCUOriginal #BlackMaleEnrollment #SupportOurSons #HBCUVoices #EducationCrisis #LegacyMatters
Events
Virginia State University Named Sole HBCU in 2025 NASA Lunabotics Challenge

Virginia State University proudly celebrates its Lunabotics Team from the College of Engineering and Technology for being the only Historically Black College or University (HBCU) selected to compete in the 2025 NASA Lunabotics Challenge.
From May 20â22, the VSU Lunabotics Team traveled to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida to participate in the prestigious national competition, which challenges university students to design, build, and operate robotic systems capable of performing tasks on simulated lunar terrain.
The Lunabotics Challenge is a rigorous, two-semester systems engineering competition hosted by NASA that immerses students in real-world applications of robotics, space exploration, and systems design.
âThe teamâs perseverance and collaborative spirit throughout this demanding challenge truly demonstrate their readiness for real-world engineering,â said Dr. Nasser Ghariban, Chair of the Department of Engineering and Faculty Advisor to the Lunabotics Team. âThis hands-on experience with NASA provided invaluable technical and professional development for their future careers.â
The VSU team, comprised of 15 students from Computer Engineering, Computer Science, Manufacturing Engineering, and Mechanical Engineering Technology, successfully designed and built a high-functioning robot that completed all the required competition tasks with precision and innovation.
Dr. Dawit Haile, Dean of the College of Engineering and Technology, added, âThe exceptional performance of our Lunabotics team showcases their innovation, dedication, and technical excellence. Being the only HBCU represented in this competition highlights Virginia State Universityâs unwavering commitment to STEM leadership and student success.â
VSU congratulates these talented students for their outstanding achievement and for representing HBCUs nationwide on a national stage. Their efforts reflect the University’s mission to empower students with transformative learning experiences in engineering and computer science.
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