Take some time to learn about another race and you just might learn something about yourself as well

Raising kids in one of the biggest melting pots in the world comes with a responsibility to acknowledge and celebrate all of our differences. From talking about the civil rights movement to exploring cultural traditions, it’s important we help kids learn about their own identities while also developing respect for those from other backgrounds. As a first step, visit one of these amazing historical sites and museums that help kids understand the complex realities of race and cultural appreciation.

Hibulb Cultural Center | Tulalip, WA

Kate Loweth

Driving north from Seattle you will notice all the cities and businesses named after the Snohomish, Snoqualmie, and Skykomish tribes and that tells you that the indigenous history is powerful in this area of the country. Head to the Hibulb Cultural Center where you can learn all about the history, traditional cultural values, and spiritual beliefs of the Tulalip Tribes (who are the successors in interest to the Snohomish, Snoqualmie, and Skykomish tribes and other tribes and bands signatory to the Treaty of Point Elliott). Start your visit in the longhouse where you can hear stories told by Tulalip’s storytellers before heading to the main gallery for interactive exhibits the kids will enjoy. 

National Museum of the American Indian - Washington, D.C.

National Museum of American Indian

ImagiNATIONS Activity Center at the National Museum of the American Indian was designed for kids to not only tucker themselves out but to also organically explore native culture and lifestyle. Little ones can weave a huge basket, surf a virtual river in a tippy kayak, or hunker down inside a real teepee. A library and kiddie craft center will keep bookworms engaged. The Mitsitam Cafe downstairs in the museum—serving native foods from around the Americas like fry bread and succotash—is well known and worth a visit.

Learn more: americanindian.si.edu

The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center - Cincinnati, OH

Courtesy of the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center

Located just a short walk from the beautiful Ohio River, this museum's mission is to "reveal stories of freedom's heroes, from the era of the Underground Railroad to contemporary times." From permanent exhibits to new and rotating exhibitions, the museum illuminates the concepts of freedom, what it means to be free, and issues of both historic and current slavery. Read the letters home from a Black soldier in WWII, see what a slave pen really looked like, and learn about the journey from being enslaved by a family to emancipation, in pictures and letters. You'll find an array of online learning resources including exhibits, lesson plans, and videos. 

Learn more at: freedomcenter.org

Civil Rights, Black History & Culture - Jackson, MS

Mississippi Civil Rights Museum courtesy Visit Jackson

Jackson, Mississippi, is famously known for the renowned Civil Rights Museum, But Jackson is also home to many lesser-known Civil Rights sites you can visit and more than one iconic walking trail, making it a great place to experience Black history any time of the year. You'll find the Mississippi Freedom Trail with ten important sites as well as the Mississippi Blues Trail which highlights the history and significance of the Blues in Jackson. 

Additional spots not to miss include the Smith Robertson Museum and Cultural Center, the International Museum of Muslim Cultures, countless historic churches, and, of course, some of the best eateries in all of Mississippi. 

Learn more at: visitjackson.com

 El Museo del Barrio - New York, NY

 El Museo del Barrio

At El Museo del Barrio, kids can learn the history of stickball, talk about Mexican social issues, celebrate Carnival, and view the artwork of everyday life in Puerto Rico. Plus, special ArteXplorers Activity Cards from the Museum help families identify and learn about the artworks in the galleries. Super Sabado (Free Third Saturdays) teaches the vibrancy and diversity of Latino Culture through free art-making workshops, storytelling, concerts, and more.

Learn more: elmuseo.org

Related: 12 Fantastic Books That Celebrate Native American Culture

The National Museum of African American Music - Nashville, TN

National Museum of African American Music, artist rendering

This highly-anticipated museum is the only museum dedicated to educating, preserving, and celebrating more than 50 music genres and styles that were created or inspired by African Americans. The 56,000-square-foot museum is in the heart of Nashville, and includes artifacts, objects, memorabilia, clothing, and state-of-the-art technology to showcase different narratives and genres. 

Learn more: nmaam.org

Wounded Knee Museum - Wall South, SD

On your way to Mt. Rushmore and the Black Hills, be sure to take a detour to the Wounded Knee Museum in Wall South. There you'll find exhibits and pictures that vividly present the massacre of over 300 men, women, and children from the Lakota nation by the 7th Calvary of the United States Army on December 29th, 1890. Your kids will see firsthand the tragic events that are, sadly, a common narrative in Native American history. You can also visit the actual historical site, geared up with information from the museum. The museum is also home to "Lakota Ways: A Cultural Experience," which celebrates the Lakota Nation, which is still active in the area today. 

Belle Meade Plantation- Nashville, TN

You’d think the last thing you’d want to do to understand race in America is to visit the grounds of a plantation that once used enslaved people to make its wealth. But after a recent visit to Belle Meade Plantation in the Nashville area, we can report first-hand that this historic property is at the forefront of talking with the public in a truthful way about the horrors of slavery while honoring the African-American history of the property. The Journey to Jubilee tour follows the story of the African-Americans who were brought to the plantation in 1807, but who stayed on the plantation through the early 1900s. It shows their vital presence on the property, their story of enslavement and provides visitors with an understanding of the times from the African-American viewpoint. This tour is not recommended for kids under 12 due to the graphic reality of slavery, however, the general tour of Belle Meade also incorporates the story of the African-Americans who came as enslaved people but stayed on as hired workers after the abolishment of slavery. The property itself is very kid-friendly and an excellent respite from the bustle of the city.

Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site - Little Rock, AR

Wikimedia Commons

The Little Rock Central High School was the most prominent example of the desegregation of public schools in 1954 when nine African-American students attended school here for the first time in history. You have to arrange a tour to enter the school, now designated a National Historic Site, but it’s relatively easy to do and a great way to help kids understand the significance of this school as well as the history of desegregation in the U.S.

Ellis Island - New York, NY

Ellis Island

A quick boat ride from the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island (now known as the Ellis Island National Museum of Immigration) is where 12 million immigrants were processed before moving on to New York City and beyond to make a new life between 1892 and 1954. The museum's showpiece is the Great Hall, where all of the immigrants were processed. The museum shows how the hall changed over the years, in addition to a slew of artifacts, photographs, prints, videos, and interactive displays. One of the coolest things about this museum is that thanks to the American Immigration History Center, you and the kids can try to trace your own heritage back to Ellis Island and a relative who may have been processed there. 

Angel Island - San Francisco, CA

Frank Schulenburg via Wikimedia Commons

Now a state park, Angel Island boasts some of the best views of San Francisco and Marin counties around, but don't just go for the photo opps. In 1905 an Immigration Station was constructed, which began operating in 1910. Because of the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, a law passed limiting the number of Chinese immigrants into the US, anti-Chinese sentiment, particularly in the San Francisco Bay Area and throughout California, was rampant. While the station at Angel Island was meant to be a processing center, many immigrants primarily from Asia (and most from China) were held for interrogation. While they were supposed to be held for just a few days, in some cases they were held for nearly two years. Detainees expressed their feelings in poetry carved into the wooden walls of the detention barracks, still legible today. The Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation is an excellent resource to learn more. Find our guide to Angel Island here

The Chickasaw Cultural Center - Sulphur, OK

Learn and connect with First American History at this center for arts and culture. Performances, reenactments, classes, demonstrations, collections, and interactive exhibits all work together beautifully to educate and inform visitors of the story of the Chickasaw people. This is one of the largest and most extensive tribal cultural centers in the United States and is operated entirely by the Chickasaw Nation. Located on 184 acres, you'll find not only the exhibit center but The Center for the Study of Chickasaw History and Culture, a theater, the Inchokka' Traditional Village as well as First-American foods and goods for purchase. 

Learn more at: chickasawculturalcenter.com

Related: Parent’s Guide to the National Museum of African American History and Culture

The Legacy Museum - Montgomery, AL

Legacy Museum

The museum depicts the history of black people in the United States, beginning with slavery, through Jim Crow laws and segregation, to current issues of mass incarceration. The memorial, a quick walk away, honors 4,000 victims of lynching and racial violence. By filling in the gaps in the history that many Americans learn in school, the content presented may help families initiate discussions related to race and inequality in the United States

Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site - Atlanta, GA

Wikimedia Commons

Take your kids back to where this leader of the Civil Rights Movement was once a kid. At the Martin Luther King Jr. site, you can visit his birth home, play where MLK played as a child, and learn all about his early years in the movement. Get inspired to fight inequality in your neck of the woods.

Tenement Museum - New York, NY

Wikimedia Commons

Get a recount of daily life from more than a hundred years ago in America in a preserved tenement building at the Lower East Side Tenement Museum. Tour the preserved building that housed 7,000 working-class Irish and Jewish immigrants from 1863 until 1935.

Museum of African Diaspora - San Francisco, CA

Museum of African Diaspora

Celebrating the universal connection of all people through their association with Africa, this must-visit museum showcases exhibitions aimed at representing work that may be under-represented in other U.S. museums. For example, as soon as you walk in, you're greeted by a three-story mural comprised of 2,100 photographs submitted by people of the Diaspora.

Chattanooga, TN

A visit to Chattanooga, TN is full of opportunities to learn about Black history. 

Founded in 1983 as the Chattanooga African American Museum, the Bessie Smith Cultural Center celebrates the African Diaspora and pays tribute to Chattanooga’s African American culture with an emphasis on Bessie Smith, “The Empress of the Blues.” While there, you can also visit the Ed Johnson Memorial, a permanent public site that strives to promote racial healing and reconciliation by acknowledging the lynching of Ed Johnson, honoring the courageous work of his attorneys, and recognizing the resulting U.S. Supreme Court case that established federal oversight of state-level civil rights issues.

National Museum of American Jewish History - Philadelphia, PA

National Museum of American Jewish History

Located on historic Independence Mall, this museum brings to life the 360-year history of Jews in America. Through more than 1,200 artifacts, films, and interactive exhibitions, this family-friendly museum tells the struggles of an immigrant population that ultimately flourished in a foreign land.

Civil Rights Lessons - Greensboro, NC

Annette Benedetti

In Greensboro, NC , your kids can visit the site of the first Civil Rights sit-in and learn about the A&T Four—four young Black students who sat at a “Whites Only” counter inside the Woolworth restaurant on Feb. 1, 1960, and refused to move. At the International Civil Rights Center & Museum, a guided tour helps your family learn and relearn important facts about America’s history before, during, and after the Civil Rights Movement. The Greensboro Cultural Arts Center houses the African America Atelier where you will find moving exhibits that the whole family will enjoy. And you'll want to visit the Guilford College Underground Railroad trail, which simulates how fugitives seeking freedom navigated in the woods of the Guilford College community with assistance from free and enslaved Black Americans and European-American Allies. 

Explore Richmond's Legacy - Richmond, VA

Dustin Klein Light Projection Courtesy Visit Richmond

Richmond is steeped in important Black history and here are just a few of the ways you can experience it with your kids.

Visit the home of Maggie Lena Walker, a newspaper editor, bank president, and champion of civil rights for Black Americans and women. Join a tour of her home and an exhibit hall, watch a short film about her life and walk in the footsteps of a great activist of the early 20th century. There's also a Maggie L. Walker Memorial Plaza

The Black History Museum & Cultural Center of Virginia celebrates the rich culture and history Black Americans in Virginia and has permanent exhibits that explore Jim Crow, Reconstruction, Emancipation, and more. 

You can also explore Richmond’s monuments: Virginia Civil Rights Memorial on the Capitol grounds, Slavery Reconciliation StatueHenry Box Brown, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson monument, and the Arthur Ashe monument on Monument Ave. There's also a self-guided Richmond Slave Trail: Walk along and discover seventeen different markers that display the somber truth about slavery in Richmond. 

At the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts entrance along historic Arthur Ashe boulevard, you'll find Rumors of War, a powerful sculpture by Black artist Kehinde Wiley. 

Discover even more at visitrichmondva.com 

National Museum of African-American History and Culture- Washington, D.C.

National Museum of African-American History and Culture

The stunning building, inspired by Yoruba art and filigree ironwork, is filled with presentations and artifacts that give visitors a glimpse at all aspects—the good and the gut-wrenching—of the African American experience. It’s a must-visit for the entire family. See our in-depth guide here.

Wing Luke Museum - Seattle, WA

Grace S. via yelp

"The Wing," as it is affectionately called by locals showcases the history, art, and culture of Asian Americans in the Pacific Northwest. Check out KidPlace, the Museum’s dedicated gallery to kids and families that is always open and filled with colorful and playful interactive exhibits. 

Rosa Parks Memorial - Montgomery, AL

Rosa Parks Memorial

Smack dab on the corner where Civil Rights activist Rosa Parks boarded a public bus and where she was infamously arrested for refusing to give up her seat to a white passenger, this museum focuses on Parks' story and its place in the Civil Rights Movement. The Museum includes a permanent exhibit, “The Cleveland Avenue Time Machine,” a replica city bus that uses fog, lighting, sound, hydraulics, and a robot bus driver to guide visitors on a series of “time jumps” from Jim Crow to “Separate But Equal.”

Japanese American National Museum - Los Angeles, CA

Japanese American National Museum

Whether your kids know very little about Japanese American culture or they have a budding interest in the country that invented sushi, this is a perfect place to begin their journey. JANM hosts both permanent and temporary exhibitions as well as Free Family Fun days to bring to life the interesting, fun, and sometimes grounding aspects of Japanese American history and culture.

Harriet Tubman National Historical Park - Auburn, NY

If your kids don’t already know who Harriet Tubman is, the national park that bears her name is the perfect place to learn all about this incredible woman who emancipated herself from slavery at the age of just 27 and went on to help dozens of slaves find freedom. Before you go, the kids can become an Underground Railroad Junior Ranger to learn about the system of secret houses and way stations that helped enslaved people find freedom in terms they can understand. Harriet Tubman National Historical Park includes her home, a visitor’s center, the Harriet Tubman Home for the Aged, and the church she raised funds to build. Her burial site is also nearby.

—additional reporting by Kate Loweth & Amber Guetebier

Inclusivity can be taught from a very young age and these companies are doing their part to make the toy landscape a diverse one. From a doll that looks like your child to one that teaches about their medical condition, diverse toys can make us feel valued as humans and show us that there’s a whole world beyond our front door.

Barbie Inspiring Women Series

Barbie Inspiring Women Series is diverse toy line

Showcasing women who've made the world a better place through determination and fighting for justice and equal opportunity, Barbie's Inspiring Women Series includes change makers like Eleanor Roosevelt, Dr. Maya Angelou, and Hellen Keller. Now the collection has a new doll: civil rights activities and women's suffragette, Ida B. Wells.

Wells co-founded the National Association of Colored Women’s Clubs and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) which fight for freedom, justice, and equal opportunity to this day. Not only does the doll pay homage to this history-making woman, but Barbie has also partnered with Girls Write Now, a non-profit organization that removes gender, race, age, and poverty barriers to mentor future writers and leaders. 

You can shop the entire collection here.

Teni and Tayo Creations

Teni and Tayo Creations are excited to share a piece of Africa with young children. Omobola Imoisili founded the brand after relocating to L.A. from Nigeria and wanting to give her small daughters something representative of their heritage while they attend school. Brand mascots Feyi Fay, a superhero fairy, and Captain Nosa, a Nigerian scientist, and superhero, encourage kids to do well in school and promote a love of learning in all the brand’s offerings. From STEM toys to books and apparel, there are diverse toys available for everyone. 

Shop the collection here

ISH Dolls

ISH Dolls creates diverse toys and clothing that celebrate culture and the Hindu faith. Their colorful plush dolls are designed to bring joy to children of all backgrounds and to introduce them to the avatars found in Hindu culture. This mom-owned business launched at the height of the pandemic in May 2020 with its first plush, Baby Krishna, and followed up with his companions Rahda, Durga and Baby Lakshmi.

IG: @ISHDOLLS 

Shop the collection here

Everyone Is Awesome LEGO Set

Everything—and everyone—is awesome! Inspired by the rainbow flag of the LGBTQIA+ community, LEGO's “Everyone is Awesome” 346-piece set features 11 unique monochrome figures with individual colors and hairstyles. Once completed, it’s the perfect size for a desk or window display, to bring a colorful pop to life every day.

Buy it here

https://www.instagram.com/p/CGXeLVlnOuX/?hidecaption=true

Qai Qai Doll from Serena Williams

Qai Qai is no ordinary doll; since appearing on social media alongside Serena Williams, Alexis Ohanian, and their daughter Olympia, Qai Qai has amassed thousands of followers of her own. According to Serena Williams, "When we first opened @RealQaiQai's account on Instagram two years ago, it was just supposed to be an inside joke, but we've come to realize that Qai Qai could be the beginning of a new kind of toy story, and one that we're excited to help bring to life so our daughter and millions of other children can see and play with more toys that look like them." 

Get your Qai Qai here

Creatable World Deluxe Character Kit Customizable Doll

We love these dolls from Creatable World as they let kids change the doll's looks with wigs and clothing. Celebrate all of our differences!

Shop the collection here

Red & Olive

Your heart will melt at the cute offerings from Red & Olive. Not only are the knit ethical dolls adorable, but they also help support the artisans who handmake each one. Each fair trade doll is handmade by Peruvian artists, empowering them to provide for themselves and their families. The companion dolls come with either matching beanies or bows.

Shop the collection here

Little Biscuits Dress-Me Notepad

inclusive notepad diverse

Part sketch pad, part paper dolls, kids can "dress up" the little people to look just like them or anything else they can imagine! 

Shop the collection here

Modi Toys

Celebrate the culture and traditions of India with Modi Toys. This family-owned small business offers plush diverse toys and gift baskets that feature Baby Ganesh, Baby Krishna, and Baby Hanuman along with books that explain their history. You can even personalize the plush toys with a baby's name—the perfect gift for a new arrival.

Shop the collection here

The Little Feminist Book Club

Diversify your child's bookshelf with the help of The Little Feminist Books Club. When you select the 7-9 age group, you will get two paperbacks or one hardcover book each month, along with a hands-on activity that goes along with the book, a discussion card, and a parent letter explaining why the book was chosen. 

Subscriptions start at $23/month. Get yours here

Healthy Roots Doll Zoe

The Healthy Roots Doll Zoe is a life-like 18” doll with hair uniquely designed with curl power that allows it to be washed and styled, giving kids the chance to learn more about how to care for their curls by practicing on hers. The inspiration for Zoe came from Yelitsa Jean-Charles, a young woman—who like many others—never had a doll that looked like her growing up.

Kids can use real products and try out countless styles from puffs to box braids! Zoe learned to love her hair after she did the big chop with her mom. Together they learned how to love every single one of her curls. Now she’s here to help other girls learn to love their curls.

Zoe is available here

Worldgirls

Check out these dolls for girls on a mission to change the world. Inspired by their upbringing in Brooklyn, New York, twin sisters Laken and Carlissa King sought to create dolls that spark creativity and celebrate togetherness.

Worldgirls are 18-inch dolls representing girls from around the world who are chosen to attend the top-secret school, Worldgirls Hall. Each Worldgirl is assigned 1 of 5 traits: WARRIOR, HEALER, EXPLORER, REBEL, and SCHOLAR. The company created the traits so children could connect with the dolls' unique passions rather than their looks.  

Shop the collection here

The Fresh Dolls

When Dr. Lisa Williams, CEO & Founder of the only Black-owned major doll company, saw the psychological implications of the importance of your toy box no matter your race or ethnicity, she created the Positively Perfect Dolls for younger children. In recent years her company has created The Fresh Dolls featuring black and multicultural fashion dolls and accessories. The Fresh Dolls were intentionally created with fuller hips and thighs, and a more realistic waistline, with trendy fashion pieces. New this year is their Wakanda Forever superhero line!

Shop the collection here.

MyFamilyBuilders

If you’ve ever had the frustration of finding dolls that look like your family (or friends!), you’ll LOVE this. Multiracial families, same-sex families, single-parent families, and adoptive families can now construct dolls that capture the beautiful reality of their households. MyFamilyBuilders is a unique, educational wooden diverse toy that is stackable and magnetic to create the perfect doll.

Shop the collection here

Nostalgia on the Go: Play Maysie

Play Maysie is diverse toy line

Created by single adoptive mom Kayla Lupean, Play Maysie is a portable, customizable world in a case for the pint-sized bunch. Noted as “everything a dollhouse should be,” this diverse toy is a gender-neutral classic childhood favorite that is made for adventures. Play Maysie’s design was inspired by the nostalgia of vintage tin lunchboxes. It folds out on both sides to showcase interchangeable, magnetic rooms with fixed wooden furniture—built for frustration-free play, less mess and no more lost pieces! With an eye on teaching sustainability, each Play Maysie is made of eco-friendly, renewable materials for indoor and outdoor play either at home or on the go.  

At the core of the company's mission, for every three Play Maysie cases purchased, they will donate another one to a child who is entering the foster care system. Their hope is, with an integral sense of ownership, foster youth can open their Play Maysie case at any time to create an experience where they feel safe, secure, and in control during a time where nearly everything in their world is unfamiliar.

Shop the collection here

Mouse Loves Pig's Melanin Magic Ribbon Wands

While you might be used to seeing ribbon wands in rainbow or pastel colors, the Melanin Magic Ribbon Wands are a celebration of melanin. Kids need to see all skin tones all together all on the same toy. Each ribbon deserves a place and the rainbow would look incomplete if it were missing one. These simple toys make a wonderful gross motor skills tool for dancing, twirling, jumping, and shaking. They also make a great conversation starter for kids. Purchasing one of these diverse toys support Brown Babes Rep Too, an organization dedicated to ensuring a diverse environment in small business advertising. 

You can find them here

Dolls with Autism, Dwarfism and Hearing Loss from Lottie Dolls

Lottie Dolls introduced a doll inspired by an autistic boy who loves astronomy. The diverse toy comes with an astronaut-in-training jumpsuit, companion dog, noise-reducing headphones, and sunglasses to reduce visual sensory overload. 

Lottie Dolls offers dolls that highlight diversity, including the Mia doll, a wildlife photographer with a cochlear implant, and the Sinead doll, the world's first doll with dwarfism.

Shop the collection here

Custom Dolls from Kay Customz

Crystal Kaye is the artist behind Kay Customz. Not only are Crystal’s custom dolls cute, but they’re also inclusive. She goes beyond creating dolls in a few different skin tones, and makes dolls with freckles (and not just the traditional two or three that are meant to look cute but don’t really represent what a normal person looks like freckles), vitiligo and albinism.

Shop the collection here

Build-a-Bear & Vermont Teddy Bear Company Amputee Bears

For kids with limb differences, Build-a-Bear and the Vermont Teddy Bear Company are there to create a bear with the same limb difference. Both offer customization that allows this treasured bear to match its owner. 

Differently-Abled Dolls from Barbie's Fashionistas Line

Barbie now has a diverse toy line of dolls

The Barbie Fashionistas line, which already includes Barbie dolls with various body types and hairstyles, also offers two differently-abled dolls. The first doll is in a wheelchair and the second is fitted with a prosthetic leg. “As a brand, we can elevate the conversation around physical disabilities by including them into our fashion doll line to further showcase a multi-dimensional view of beauty and fashion,” Mattel said.

Shop the collection here

Orijin Bees

To encourage their daughter's interest in African culture, two parents created this doll company with different shades of skin complexions and hair textures available. They even have a buy-one-gift-one program

Shop the collection here

Plastic Army Women from BMC Toys

Inspired by the letter from a six-year-old girl, the iconic green army men sold by BMC Toys now have an addition—women soldiers. They are available in four different military poses

Shop the collection here

Audio and Braille Instructions from LEGO

LEGO believes brick building should be inclusive for everyone, which is why LEGO Audio and Braille instructions were introduced in 2019.

The idea was inspired by Matthew Shifrin who was born blind and loved to play with LEGO bricks. As a child, he had a friend, Lilya who would painstakingly write down all of the LEGO building steps so that he could upload the written directions into a system that translated them in a Braille reader. For the first time in his life, he was able to build LEGO sets entirely on his own. 

When Lilya passed away, Shifrin decided he wanted to share his experience with others like him. A friend from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology introduced him to the Creative Play Lab at LEGO Group and his wonderful idea was developed into the LEGO Audio and Braille instruction. LEGO also has LEGO Braille bricks!

American Girl Truly Me Dolls

With dozens and dozens of looks to choose from in the Truly Me collection, your child can bring home an American Girl doll who brings out exactly who they are. From singing to soccer to so much more, every child can find outfits and accessories to match their interests.

Kids can even have their dolls fitted with a prosthetic leg by the company A Step Ahead Prosthetics.

Lakeshore Learning's People with Differing Abilities

We all want our kids to be open-minded, but in order to understand other people's differences, it's important that kids see those differences first-hand—and talk about them. Lakeshore Learning's People with Differing Abilities include people with realistic details and adaptive equipment—from a girl in a wheelchair to a boy with leg braces. For younger kiddos, Lakeshore also has a "Soft and Safe" version of these diverse toys that feature children with various disabilities.  

Shop the collection here.

Wonder Crew Boy Dolls

Wonder Crew is a diverse toy line

If you've got a superhero-loving kid who wants a doll—but not that kind of doll—Wonder Crew dolls are the perfect addition. The collection of boy dolls was designed to have the "adventure of an action figure with the emotional connection of the favorite stuffed animal." They're soft and perfect for cuddles, but they're also superheroes. What's even cooler? Each doll comes with two masks and capes: One for the doll and one for the kid who plays with it. Genius. 

Shop the collection here

Jerry the Bear Teaches Kids about Diabetes

By taking care of Jerry's diabetes, children gain hands-on practice with counting carbs, monitoring Jerry's blood sugar and dosing Jerry with insulin. Kids care for Jerry using the virtual diabetes tools and the digital pantry in the product's app.

Follow along with Jerry's journey to train for the All-Stars Games! All 21 interactive storybooks are paired with care tasks to reinforce important diabetes lessons. The curriculum is co-designed with doctors, educators and families to create educational content that kids love.

Learn more here.

Lammily Dolls with Realistic Proportions

Lammily Dolls are a diverse toy line
Lammily Dolls

Do you know what's not empowering? Dolls with body proportions that are impossible to have in real life. That's why the makers of Lammily Dolls decided to make a collection of dolls using proportions akin to the average 19-year-old American woman. That means everything from the hands, arms, and neck to the waist, legs, and feet are realistic. The makers hope that playing with "normal" dolls will help young girls see their own bodies more positively (because sadly, studies show girls start worrying about their looks by age five). 

Shop the collection here.

Maru and Friends

Diversity is the name of the game when it comes to this line of dolls. Maru and Friends dolls are making a statement, and it’s one that’s long overdue. These dolls are more than just pretty playthings. Maru and Friends tell the tale of life as an immigrant. And your child can learn Maru’s story, as well as what it’s like for her friends to grow up in America.

Shop the collection here 

Handmade Keepsake Dolls from HarperIman

This line of dolls and accessories was created by Cynthia Watkins and Kathryn Burnett, a mother-daughter duo, in 2017. Different skin tones, sizes, and hair types are available and each doll is handmade with painstaking detail given to outfits with the ability to match a specific outfit if desired. 

Get yours Shop the collection here

I Never Forget a Face Memory Game

A memory game that is a diverse toy for kids

This award-winning game matches faces to countries. Twenty-four pairs of illustrated cards depict the happy faces of children from all over the world and make for a fun and educational memory game. At times challenging, the game helps sharpen recognition and memory skills. The back of the game box shows which country each child is from. 

Buy it here

SunWorks Multicultural Construction Paper

SunWorks

Great for multicultural arts and crafts activities. This set includes 10 sheets of each of these five colors: Manila, Salmon, Light Brown, Brown and Dark Brown.

Buy it here

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When it comes to kids’ books, representation matters. This is especially true for minorities, immigrants and other marginalized people whose stories often don’t receive the same attention as “mainstream” white characters. Check out our roundup of just a few of our favorite books that feature strong Asian American protagonists. These books range from historical fiction to graphic novels to bilingual picture books and even chapter books for kids that’ll appeal to readers of all ages and backgrounds.


Arab Arab All Year Long!

$19 BUY NOW

"No matter where we are, no matter what we do, we're Arab, Arab, Arab the whole way through!" From January to December, there is always something fun to do in the Arab culture. Young readers will learn about maamoul, shopping for hijabs, Eid and more in this easy-to-read story by Cathy Camper. Ages: 3-7


American Desi

$19 BUY NOW

A beautiful symphony of both American and South Asian culture, Jyoti Rajan Gopal's story is a tribute. Desi loves her heritage just as much as her new culture, so can she have both? This sweet story embraces biculturalism and is accompanied by Supriya Kelkar's gorgeous illustrations. Ages: 4-8


I'll Go and Come Back

$19 BUY NOW

When Jyoti travelled cross the world to visit her grandma in India, she didn't expect to miss home. But then Sita Pati taught her tons of fun things to do in her native country. When it's time to go home, Jyoti suddenly didn't want to leave. This sweet tale of the special relationship between grandmother and granddaughter by Rajani LaRocca is beautifully accompanied by Sara Palacios' illustrations and will have every reader reminiscing about their family. Ages: 3-7


Love in the Library

$15 BUY NOW

Based on a true story about author Maggie Tokuda-Hall's grandparents, this story shares the reality of living in an incarceration camp during WWII. With illustrations by Yas Imamura, young readers follow Tama who works in the camp's library and her friend George while navigating life and love at Minidoka. Ages: 6-9


The Katha Chest

$28 BUY NOW

Young readers will learn the importance of Kathas for the people of Bangladesh in this story by Radhiah Chowdhury. When young Asiya visits Nanu, her favorite part is opening her chest filled with the old sari's that have been transformed into katha quilts. Along with mesmerizing illustrations by Lavanya Naidu, readers will also be entertained by the simple prose and inspiring story. Ages: 4-8


How Do You Say Good Night?

$4 BUY NOW

Pre-schoolers will enjoy learning how to say good night in 10 different languages, including Spanish, Mandarin Chinese, French, Italian, Portuguese, Swahili, Arabic, Vietnamese, German and Korean. This bedtime follow-up to author Cindy Jin’s How Do You Say I Love You? features adorable illustrations by Shirley Ng-Benitz and is the perfect way for parents to wish their little ones a good night’s sleep in any language.  Ages: 2-4


Chinese New Year Wishes: Chinese Spring and Lantern Festival Celebration

$11 BUY NOW

Written in English and simplified Chinese, Chinese New Year Wishes is a colorfully illustrated picture book that follows the adventures of a Chinese-American boy named Hong as he and his family prepare for and celebrate the Chinese New Year Festival. Author Jillian Lin and illustrator Shi Meng have created an enjoyable story behind one of the most important annual celebrations in many East Asian cultures, including interesting facts about the festival and recommended questions for discussion at the back of the book. Ages: 2-6


Dim Sum for Everyone!

$7 BUY NOW

If music is the food of love, then Grace Lin’s delightful sing-song love letter to dim sum will touch the hearts (and stomachs) of anyone who has ever sampled the delicious joys of these little Chinese dishes. The story follows a little girl and her family as they visit a bustling dim sum restaurant, picking their favorite dishes from steaming trolleys filled with dumplings, cakes, buns and tarts. With simple words written and expressed in both English and Chinese, this bilingual board book is a yummy read for any budding foodie. Ages: 3-6


Little Jagadish and the Great Experiment

$10 BUY NOW

This book by Ajali Joshi chronicles the journey of a young boy named Jagadish who sets out to find solutions to unanswered questions using the scientific method. Inspired by the life and work of Indian physicist, botanist, and author Jagadish Chandra Bose, this story encourages young readers to embrace their curiosity and unleash their inner scientist. Ages: 4+


The Many Colors of Harpreet Singh

$18 BUY NOW

Author Supriya Kelkar’s debut children’s book celebrates the life of an Indian-American boy named Harpreet Singh who is a practicing Sikh. Harpreet’s culture and religion are affirmed in the colorful patkas or head covering that he wears. When his family moves to a new city, everything feels gray for Harpreet, but by wearing a colorful patka to express his mood and suit different occasions, he is able to bring color to an otherwise dull world. Illustrator Alea Marley nicely depicts Harpreet’s joy and exuberance through simple yet powerful images. Ages: 3-7


children's books that encourage diversity the name jar

The Name Jar

$7 BUY NOW

Like many immigrants from non-English-speaking countries, the main character in The Name Jar has a name that her majority classmates find difficult to pronounce. Unhei recently moved to the U.S. from Korea, and instead of introducing herself on the first day of school, she tells her classmates that she will choose a new “American” name by the following week, with suggested new names placed into a jar. As Unhei makes friends, her naming path leads to embracing her culture, identity, and given name with the support of her new community.  Ages: 3-7


Super Satya Saves the Day

$20 BUY NOW

Super Satya is ready to have a super day, including finally conquering the tallest slide in Hoboken. But her day takes a not-so-super turn when she realizes her superhero cape is stuck at the dry cleaner. Will she be able to face her fears, help her friends and be the true hero everyone knows she is? Super Satya Saves The Day introduces Satya, a precocious Indian-American superhero. Ages: 3-9


Bee-Bim Bop!

$8 BUY NOW

Bibimbop is a traditional Korean dish of rice topped and then mixed with meat and vegetables. Author Linda Sue Park has created a fun picture book for pre-schoolers that uses bouncy rhyming text to tell the story of a young girl recounting all the ways she helps her mother make this delicious dish, from shopping, preparing ingredients, setting the table, and finally sitting down with her family to enjoy a favorite meal. Featuring whimsical illustrations, which sweetly depicts the lives of a modern Korean-American family, the book includes the author’s recipe for bibimbop. Ages: 4-7


Goldy Luck and the Three Pandas

$7 BUY NOW

Writer Natasha Yim and illustrator Grace Zong have transplanted the classic British fairy tale, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, and set the story in a bustling contemporary Chinatown. It's Chinese New Year, and young Goldy Luck’s mother wants her to take a plate of turnip cakes to the neighbors. The Chans aren’t home, but that doesn’t stop Goldy from trying out their rice porridge, their chairs, and their beds—with disastrous results. Soon, things take a turn for the absurd., i.e., Pandas! Ages: 4-8


Asian Americans Who Inspired Us

$21 BUY NOW

This celebration of trailblazing Asian-Americans who changed the world is beautifully illustrated and features the captivating and inspiring stories of a wide range of American heroes of Asian descent, ranging from Olympic figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi and classical musician Yo-Yo Ma to astronaut Ellison Onizuka and U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth, plus many more. As a Filipina-American mother and Fulbright Scholar who served in the U.S. Air Force, author Analiza Quiroz Wolf is herself an inspirational Asian-American role model. Ages: 6-12


Brandon Makes Jiǎo Zi

$22 BUY NOW

First-time author Eugenia Chu’s illustrated children’s book mixes American and Chinese cultures and blends traditions and languages in a simply told and engaging story. The title character, Brandon, is an American-born Chinese boy who bonds with his Chinese grandmother by making dumplings with her. The story is told in both English and simplified Chinese and is a fun read for families with children who are learning—or who are interested in—Mandarin or Chinese culture. Ages: 7-11


Sam Wu Is Not Afraid Series

$50 BUY NOW

London-based authors Kevin and Katie Tsang are a husband and wife writing duo who conceived the Sam Wu Is Not Afraid series based on memories of Kevin’s childhood fears while growing up in Atlanta. Sam Wu is the kind of character who young readers will immediately identify with: brash on the outside, but doubtful on the inside. Each book in the series tackles one thing or other that our hero is most definitely NOT at all but maybe actually totally afraid of, whether it’s ghosts, sharks, spiders or zombies. Funny, silly, and earnest in equal measures, Sam Wu would never be mistaken for a wimpy kid. Ages: 7-12


Cilla Lee-Jenkins: Future Author Extraordinaire

$6 BUY NOW

The titular character of Susan Tan’s quasi-autobiographical debut novel is a precocious soon-to-be third-grader named Priscilla “Cilla” Lee-Jenkins who is 50% Chinese, 50% Caucasian, and 100% destined to become a future author extraordinaire. The irresistible Cilla and all of the other fully realized cast of characters in the book are beautifully and humorously written, and Tan tackles tough subjects like biracial identity and the challenges of growing up in a black and white world with great wit, compassion and flair. Ages: 8-12


Girl Giant and the Monkey King

$11 BUY NOW

If your young reader is a fan of Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson series, Van Hoang’s debut novel will appeal with its mix of magic, adventure, and middle-school woes. Girl Giant and the Monkey King tells the story of Thom Ngho, an 11-year-old Vietnamese-American heroine who is keeping a secret: she is extraordinarily strong—and her strength is making it impossible for her to fit in at her new middle school. Thom accidentally unleashes the Monkey King, a powerful and mischievous deity, and she soon realizes that dealing with this notorious trickster may be more trouble than it’s worth. Ages: 8-12


Green Lantern: Legacy

$9 BUY NOW

Asian-American comic-book superheroes are few and far between, so when writer Minh Lê and illustrator Andie Tong reimagined the Green Lantern story as told through the adventures of a 13-year-old Vietnamese-American boy named Tai Pham, many in the Asian-American community rejoiced. This graphic novel nicely interweaves Vietnamese culture with the origin stories of DC Comics space cops known as the Green Lanterns, with Tai’s grandmother's jade ring functioning at the power-inducing rings owned and operated by the Green Lantern corps across the universe. Ages: 8-12


Pippa Park Raises Her Game

$16 BUY NOW

While trying to navigate friendships and cyberbullying, tweenager Pippa Park receives a prestigious athletic scholarship, which leads her to reinvent herself at her new private middle school. Author Erin Yun cleverly reimagines Charles Dickens’s classic Great Expectations through the experiences of a funny, kind-hearted Korean-American heroine whose journey to self-discovery and self-acceptance wends through the corridors of middle school, sports action, and underprivileged immigrant home. Sharp and poignant, young readers will enjoy learning about class relations and ethnic identity. Ages: 9-13


A Place to Belong

$17 BUY NOW

Newbery Medal award-winning author Cynthia Kadohata takes young readers back to the end of WWII in the U.S. and Japan. After spending four years in internment camps, the 12-year-old protagonist, Hanako, and her American-born family are forced to renounce their American citizenship and expatriate to Japan. This historical fiction tells a story from the past but reflects the dangerous xenophobic and nationalist rhetoric that’s present today. This beautifully written novel will resonate with young readers who will relate to the pressure Hanako feels as a young kid giving up everything known for something entirely different. Ages: 10-14


The House That Lou Built

$7 BUY NOW

Lou has a big dream: to build a tiny house. She shares a room with her mom in her grandmother’s house in San Francisco and longs for a place of her own, where she can escape her crazy but lovable extended Filipino family. It’s not so easy to build one, but she won’t give up on her dreams—her friends and family won’t either. This beautiful coming-of-age story is set around the Bay and explores culture and family, forgiveness and friendship, and what makes a true home. Ages: 8-12


Bravo Anjali

$14 BUY NOW

Young readers will enjoy the story of Anjali as she struggles with friendship and owning her exceptional talent in the tabla world where she is the only girl. A follow-up story to Always Anjali, this story inspires young readers to never dim their light and to never let anyone make her feel bad for being good at something.

 

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The Presidio offers an affordable way to entertain visiting relatives or mix up your weekend routine. This former military base turned National Recreation Area provides a wealth of kid-friendly activities. Read on to discover the 17 best activities (think: playgrounds with amazing views, bowling, museums and more) the Presidio has to offer, all that cost little to nothing.

photo: Will-Rocha-Jr.

Picnic with Friends: Main Parade Grounds are a beautiful place to picnic. Although this area previously hosted the Presidio Picnics and Off The Grid future picnics have moved to Battery Bluff. The “Share Chairs” are available and you can snag these fun red monsters on a first come first served basis (the kids love them). 

Online: presidio.gov

photo: Kate Loweth

Check Out the StoryWalk: Read the story The Hike by Alison Farrell as you walk along the Presidio Promenade. Start at the Presidio Visitor Center and follow the signs to the first panel, located at the intersection of Lincoln Blvd and Patten Road. 

Online: parksconservancy.org

photo: Erin Feher

Camp in the Presidio: Who doesn’t love the idea of camping without leaving the city? The next time you’re looking for that outdoorsy experience without straying too far from home, visit Rob Hill Campground, located just a hop, skip and jump away from Immigrant Point Overlook and Baker Beach. Rob Hill Campground is even more available Apr.-Oct. but tends to book up fast get your campsite booked

Sports Basement rents everything novice campers could need for a night out in the woods, including tents, sleeping bags, air mats and camp stoves. To read more about our editor’s experience camping here click to read her story.

Online: tinybeans.com

Borrow E-Bikes: Bay Wheels e-bike share program is perfect for parents chasing their kids through the Presidio. Activated through the Lyft app, those over the age of 18 can use the app to find a bike in a safe location and use an e-bike as an option for getting to and around the park.

Related: The Ultimate City Slicker Campout

 

photo: SF Recreation and Parks

A Favorite Park, Revamped: Mountain Lake Park sits just south of the Presidio. The under 3 set can play in their own self-contained toddler area that only has one gate to enter and exit (essential for toddler containment). Big kids will enjoy using the stairs or the climbing wall to reach the top of the cement slide and then grabbing a buddy to slide down together. There’s also a great rope climbing area with gorgeous views of nearby Mountain Lake.

Online: tinybeans.com

Explore the Abandoned Batteries: Take a step back in time and explore the old abandoned batteries at Fort Scott. The perpetually-foggy Fort Scott was established as a coastal artillery post in 1912 and housed seventeen functioning batteries until after World War II. You can explore fifteen of them today in a beautiful national park with a rich military history. These batteries right along the Pacific Ocean offer great views for the adults and endless hours of entertainment for the kids—as well as a history lesson for all.

Bonus: At the north end of the Baker Beach parking lot is the Battery Chamberlin

Online: tinybeans.com

 

photo: Laure Latham

Go Ocean Crabbing: This one might take a bit of planning, but it’s well worth it. Gather the goods to go crabbing (cost is about $25, but you can use the equipment again and again), and head out to the Pier in front of the Warming Hut. Here you’ll find people fishing, crabbing and searching for other marine life. Click here to read our insider’s guide to crabbing in the Bay. And, if you’re not in the mood to catch, merely watch all of the fishermen catch their goods. You’ll find some reel in fish, while others even score starfish and other sea creatures.

Online: tinybeans.com

 

photo: Nicki Richesin

Visit The Walt Disney Family Museum: If you’re looking for a taste of Disney without the trip the next best thing is in our backyard: The Walt Disney Family Museum. The kid-friendly museum houses tons of fun, including animated walls, silent black and white short films, and even a miniature replica of Disneyland. Perhaps the museum’s best kept secret is the monthly screenings in the sweet theater. Click here for our insider’s guide to getting the most out of your visit here with your family.

Online: waltdisney.org

Related: The Presidio’s Best Kept Secret: Rainy Day Fun

photo: Kate Loweth

Be Amazed by Andy Goldsworthy:

Spire: Andy Goldsworthy’s iconic spire will show your kids that art comes in all shapes and sizes, and even in locations beyond museums walls. Located on the Bay Ridge trail just inside the Arguello Gate, the spire is a towering structure made up of large cypress tree trunks. After gawking at the gigantic spire, which your kids may think looks like a teepee, take a walk on the Bay Ridge trail, a path perfect for littles.

Wood Line: Right next to Lover’s Lane you’ll find a grove of eucalyptus and an iconic work by artist Andy Goldsworthy. Kids will love trying to balance on the Wood Line. Begun in 2010 and completed a year later, this piece offers a stark contrast to Goldsworthy’s first Presidio piece, the towering Spire. Whereas Spire calls upon viewers to look up, Wood Line invites you to contemplate where the life of a tree begins…the fertile earth.

photo: Kate Loweth

Take a Stroll Along Crissy Field: There’s nothing like Crissy Field with its amazing views. Start your day at the beachfront parking lot just west of the Presidio’s Marina Gate. Bundle up since chances are it’ll be a bit foggy outside, especially if you visit in the summer months. Walk along the path (great for jogging strollers) or, if you’re sans wheels, take a jaunt along the beach. Once you walk west about 1.25 miles, you’ll reach the Crissy Field Warming Hut where you can grab a hot beverage, snacks and laze around on the picnic tables.

Online: parksconservancy.org

Throw a Strike: Bowl a strike with your kids at the Presidio Bowling Center. We love the family-friendly nature of this joint—great customer service, food and drink on premises, bumpers for the little bowlers, clean bathrooms and a great spot to host a birthday party. This place gets crowded, especially on rainy days, so be sure to call ahead to check wait time or head to Presidio Bowl during off hours.

Online: presidiobowl.com

photo: Sarah Montoya

Catch Awesome Views at the Presidio Wall Playground: It’s no surprise why we picked the Presidio Wall Playground as one of the top five Bay Area playgrounds with a view. The park features Golden Gate Bridge, Bay and Marin Headlands views on display—that is, if you visit on a fog-free day. What’s more is that the playground is a great spot for both the little kids and big kids alike since there are age-appropriate play structures in the large fenced-in playground. The park also features tennis courts, a basketball court, baseball field and an ample grassy expanse to get those little legs tired.

photo: Sarah Montoya

Take a Photo at Inspiration Point: Maybe it’s just us, but living in the Bay Area we tend to forget how downright beautiful this place is until visitors remind us of the area’s spectacular scenery and views. Stop by Inspiration Point located just across the street from Goldsworthy’s spire for a family photo-op. The stunning views of the Bay span from Angel Island to Alcatraz and everything in-between, and they are truly inspiring.

May the Force Be With You: Calling all Star Wars fans! Head to the Lucasfilm Headquarters just inside the Lombard Gates to get up close and personal with Yoda. Tell the guard that you’re there on a mission to see Yoda and he’ll usher you right in. If you visit on a weekday during normal business hours, don’t leave without checking out the Lucasfilm lobby where even more Star Wars memorabilia is on display.

photo: Kristina Bullock @millionmilermom 

Stay for a While at the Lodge or the Inn: If you’re looking for a convenient place to stay, look no further than the newly-opened Lodge at the Presidio. This beautifully-restored former barracks building is now a 42-room boutique hotel with all modern amenities like custom-made mattresses, televisions and WiFi in every room, and bathrooms with full bathtubs—perfect for families with kids. Its location at the edge of the main lawn means breathtaking views of the Golden Gate Bridge, the San Francisco Bay, or downtown from nearly every window, and it is steps away from all the amazing activities the Presidio has to offer. 

Inn at the Presidio offers an authentic historic experience and exceptional recreational opportunities in a setting of immense natural beauty. The historic hotel in San Francisco is located at Pershing Hall, an elegant home for bachelor officers when the Presidio was a U.S. Army post. The Georgian Revival-style building has been restored as a guest lodge featuring 22 spacious accommodations, including 17 suites with fireplaces. 

Lodge at the Presidio
105 Montgomery St.
San Francisco
Online: lodgeatthepresidio.com

Inn at the Presidio
142 Moraga Ave.
San Francisco
Online: presidiolodging.com

 

photo: Sarah Ordody

Check Out the Visitor Center: With millions of visitors to this 1,500 acre wonderland of fun, you’ll need a good place to get your bearings. Beeline it to the visitor center, which offers up an array of information and history. The building is super kid-centric with interactive displays, touch screens and more. 

Related: Inside the New Presidio Visitors Center

photo: Sarah Montoya

Battery Bluff: This newly opened park has gorgeous views of the Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz, the San Francisco skyline and Chrissy Field. The park has a multi use trail, beautiful new pinic tables and connects to the larger Presidio Promenade hiking trails. Watch the website for updates as the space is set to start hosting events throughout the summer with live music, food trucks, and more.

Online: presidio.gov

—Sarah Montoya, Kate Loweth, Anita Chu & Erin Lem

Now that you’ve been to the Museum of Science and Industry and The Field so many times you could lead a tour, it’s time to earn a little extra credit. When you’re craving something new and culture’s on the menu, check out a super-secret museum that’s just a mini road trip away. We dug up goodies that are within an hour’s drive of Chicago. Scroll through to see them all, from a secret nature center to an auto museum with superhero appeal.

Transportation

Volo Auto Museum

Does your kid go crazy for cars? An hour northwest of Chicago, this wheel-tastic museum is a draw for car nuts of all ages. Famous movie cars from Fast & Furious 7, Batman Begins, Dark Knight and Dark Knight Rises, National Lampoon's Vacation and more. There are also plenty of coin kiddie rides for the youngest children in your group.

Open daily, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; 27582 Volo Village Rd., Volo; Online: volocars.com

Illinois Railway Museum

America’s largest railway museum is right here in Illinois and goes way beyond your everyday Metra train. Ride on a one-of-a-kind mainline train, hop aboard an old-fashioned trolley coach or take a loop in a vintage streetcar. Feel like you've seen some of these sights before? That’s because the museum has been the set for numerous transportation scenes in commercials and movies, including A League of Their Own. Perhaps the biggest attraction is the annual Day Out With Thomas. On select days in July, kids chug along on a 20-minute ride on Thomas the Tank Engine and enjoy music, magicians, clowns and a meeting with Sir Topham Hatt. Consider taking a special trip for Halloween or Christmas when the museum features holiday-themed train rides.

7000 Olson Rd., Union; Online: irm.org

Nature

Trailside Museum of Natural History

Established in 1931, the Hal Tyrrell Trailside Museum of Natural History is a small museum located in a historic mid-1870′s Victorian mansion. Kids will have the chance to meet live native animals, including owls, frogs, turtles and even a fox. Hands-on activities complement learning, and even toddlers will enjoy the easy animal-themed puzzles. Natural-surfaced hiking trails through the surrounding Forest Preserve are perfect for little hikers and wind through beautiful oak woodlands and along the Des Plaines River.

730 Thatcher Ave., River Forest; Online: fpdcc.com

Knock Knolls Nature Center

Tucked in a quiet residential neighborhood, this slice of nature gives visitors the chance to discover what life was like at the convergence of the East and West Branches of the DuPage River in the 1800s. You'll also get to know the local wildlife that call this corner of DuPage County home. Grab a treasure hunt sheet from the front desk and explore! The highlight is a 900-gallon freshwater fish tank filled with catfish, bass and other swimmers. You'll also track replica fossils in the floor, marvel at a living wall of plants and learn how a rainwater collection cistern works. The building sits in a 224-acre park laced with winding, forested trails and sits adjacent to a nature playground. 

320 Knoch Knolls Rd., Naperville; Online: napervilleparks.org

Tinker Swiss Cottage Museum

The Tinker cottage, gardens and three-story Swiss-inspired barn was built by businessman Robert Tinker in 1865. Flash forward to today, when you can witness its beauty and get a dose of local history. The charming cottage and over-the-top gardens have become one of Rockford’s most popular attractions. The Victorian-era decor and unique architecture will satisfy the curiosity of the parents. As for the kids, they'll have a blast romping through the iris, rose and prairie gardens as the weather warms.

411 Kent St., Rockford; Online: tinkercottage.com

History

Isle a la Cache Museum

Learn about Illinois in the 18th century when our state was home to French voyageurs and native Potawatomi. Operated by the Forest Preserve of Will County on an island in the Des Plaines River, this recently renovated museum features many interactive exhibits and a Native American longhouse. At a recent museum event, children participated in traditional French and Woodland Indian games and storytelling. If you visit the island in the summer, your family will want to take part in one of many nature activities like fishing, kayaking, hiking and more.

501 E. Romeo Rd. (135th Street), east of Route 53, Romeoville; Online: reconnectwithnature.org

DuPage Country Historical Museum

Housed in a building gifted by John Quincy Adams in 1891, the former Adams Memorial Library is now a museum that contains countless artifacts and materials that document DuPage County. The HO Gauge Model Train is operated by the DuPage Society of Model Engineers the 3rd and 5th Saturday every month.

102 E. Wesley St., Wheaton; Online: dupagemuseum.org

Graue Mill and Museum

Since 1852, the Graue Mill has been grinding cornmeal, its waterwheel turning at the edge of the picturesque Salt Creek. Today, the Graue Mill Museum is dedicated to bridging past and present through living-history programs that illustrate daily life of the past, including milling, spinning and weaving demonstrations. While the museum is closed in the winter, the grounds of the mill are picture-perfect year-round. Kids will love throwing pebbles into the Salt Creek and watching sticks make their way down the beautiful falls that make the mill's gristmill go round.

3800 York Rd., Oakbrook; Online: grauemill.org

The Villa Park Historical Society Museum

This quaint historical museum, which shuts down for the winter, is a bona fide local gem. You'll find it near the Illinois Prairie Path, North America’s first rails-to-trails conversion. It’s housed in a 1929 building, which was once the station for the electric Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad. Antique toys, historical photos and artifacts from the demolished Ovaltine factory will take you back in time and spark hot chocolate cravings.

220 S. Villa Ave., Villa Park; Online: vphistoricalsociety.com

https://www.instagram.com/p/CcThkS5uXDz/?hidecaption=true

Ukranian National Museum

We love doing arts and crafts, and sometimes we like a little inspiration. The Ukrainian National Museum highlights the traditional arts of Ukraine, with rows of beautiful ‘pysanky’ (decorated Easter eggs), richly embroidered costumes and other weavings and carved objects. Artifacts from the Ukraine and information about the current Ukrainian community in Chicago will help put together a mini-history lesson.

2249 W. Superior St., Ukrainian Village; Online: ukrainiannationalmuseum.org

Art

Lizzadro Museum of Lapidary Art

Surround your kids in a glittering array of jewels and precious stones at this gem of a museum. The museum houses the collection of Italian immigrant and businessman Joseph Lizzadro, a marvel of treasures big and small created from semi-precious and precious gems. Learn the science behind those gems and see amazing specimens of rocks, minerals and fossils from around the world. The gift shop has lots to start off your junior geologist’s own collection.

1220 Kensington Rd., Oak Brook; Online: lizzadromuseum.org

SMART Museum of Art at the University of Chicago

Wouldn’t it be nice to pop into an art museum for free, check out a few masterpieces, and then enjoy a snack? You can at this spot that packs the thrills and amenities of the big art museums, but on a smaller scale. We love the SMART for its temporary exhibitions and collections, which include modern art and design, and Asian and European art. 

5550 S. Greenwood Ave., Hyde Park; Online: smartmuseum.uchicago.edu

Government

The Money Museum at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

There's no better way to teach kids about saving money than taking them on a free visit to The Money Museum. Although the historical displays might be more suited to teens, taking a photo in front of a suitcase stuffed with one million dollars worth of hundred-dollar bills is worth the bragging rights for any age. Don’t forget to grab a souvenir bag of shredded currency for show-and-tell. Note: This museum is temporarily closed, but keep tabs on their website for opening information and online resources for families.

230 S. LaSalle St., The Loop; Online: chicagofed.org

Sports

The National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame

Mario Andretti’s Indy 500 racecar! Rocky Marciano’s first heavyweight championship belt! Swimmer Matt Biondi’s Olympic Gold Medals! Inspire your little athletes with a trip to the Tommy and Jo Lasorda exhibit galleries housed inside the larger Hall of Fame building. Even non-Italian-Americans will appreciate this up-close look at sports gear and memorabilia from sports celebs like Joe DiMaggio, Yogi Berra, Joe Montana, Dan Marino and Mary Lou Retton.

1431 W. Taylor St., Little Italy; Online: niashf.org

— Amy Bizzarri & Maria Chambers

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Portland, Oregon: a place where families and communities blend together and show support for one another. Asian American and Pacific Islander [AAPI] communities have been a huge component of the diversity that makes Portland so unique! And when we band together to support local AAPI businesses that serve local families, we are not only broadening our kids’ knowledge and understanding of culture, we are strengthening community bonds and developing relationships that make Portland the city it is. From awesome small businesses and restaurants to arts and culture opportunities for your crew, we’ve rounded up AAPI-owned businesses and non-profits you can patronize and donate to and make a difference. Read on to find out more.

Hanoi Kitchen

This Vietnamese-owned spot has been a staple in the northeast neighborhood of Portland. Built on family-traded recipes, Hanoi Kitchen has been supplying Portland with delicious cuisine for years! Switch up a weekday meal or have a fun family dinner with their steamed rice crepes, their southern-style noodle soup, or treat you and the kiddos to a tasty vermicelli bowl!

Where: 7925 NE Glisan St., Portland OR
Phone: (503) 252 – 1300
Online: hanoikitchenpdx.com

Highlight Auto Body and Repair

Take the pressure off finding a decent place to get your car fixed with Highlight Auto Body and Repair! They are incredibly efficient and budget-friendly because they know how important having a working car is to getting around. Their effective customer communication, family-oriented candor, and passion for automobiles make Highlight the best way to get your car up to snuff and support a local AAPI business in the process!

Where: 11109 SE Division St., Portland OR
Online: highlight-auto-body-and-repair-portland

Portland Taiko

Ever wanted to learn the drums? How about Japanese taiko drumming? If you’re not sure what that is, now is a perfect time to find out! Built by Ann Ishimaru and Zachary Semke, this taiko performance group offers a range of learning options from company workshops to individual lessons. Plus, you know you’re getting grade-A instruction, as they routinely perform all over the Pacific Northwest! Head online today to check out their upcoming classes or schedule a community event with them.
Where: 3728 SE 34th Ave., Portland OR 
Phone: (503) 288-2456
Online: portlandtaiko.org

Coco’s Donuts

Ever had one? They’re addicting. Treat you and the kiddos to a sweet snack after school or on a weekend afternoon with Coco’s Mochi Oreo or Mochi Matcha flavored donuts, or keep it simple with their glazed raised or chocolate frosted with sprinkles! No matter your preference, Coco’s has a treat for you. They’ve been serving up these warm, tasty treats to the Portland community for years, so don’t wait! Head to one of their multiple locations today to see what all the fuss is about!

Where: 5 Locations: Downtown Portland, Broadway, Williams, Brooklyn, Sunnywise, Portland State University
Online: cocodonuts.com


Lan Su Chinese Garden
 

Spend a weekend afternoon appreciating the beauty of the Lan Su Chinese Garden. Placed aptly in Portland’s China town, this green space is rich with native Chinese plants, flowers, and trees, as well as a Koi pond! Amble along the paths through their lush gardens for a meditative, calming experience and then cap the day with a cup of tea from their teahouse!
Where: 239 NW Everett St., Portland OR 
Cost: Adults (Ages 14-61) $14, Seniors & Students $13, Youth (6-18) $11, Children 5 & under Free
Phone: (503) 228-8131
Online: lansugarden.org

Portland China Town Museum 

This museum is nearly brand new to the city of Portland – opening its doors in December of 2018, the Portland Chinatown Museum [PCM] seeks to honor Portland’s rich Asian history. The museum constantly rotates exhibitions and has a permanent gallery feature titled Beyond the Gate: A Tale of Portland’s HIstoric Chinatowns. Pack the family up and head to PCM today to really understand the importance of Portland’s AAPI community today!

Where: 127 NW Third Ave., Portland OR 
Cost: Adults: $8, Seniors: $6, Students: $5, Children 12& Under: Free
Phone: (503) 224-0008
Online: portlandchinatownmuseum.org

Japanese American Museum of Oregon

Located in the northwest Portland neighorhood, the Japanese American Museum of Oregon [JAMO] strives to educate the public about Japanese emigrants and their descendants, also known as the Nikkei. The idea for JAMO was built from the Issei Appreciation project, to preserve the stories of the Oregon Japanese immigrants, and the first iteration of the museum was established in 1990 at Tom McCall Waterfront Park. Now, they’ve just opened their northwest location [May of 2021] for all to explore, learn, and appreciate!

Where: 411 NW Flanders St., Portland OR 
Phone: (503) 224-1458
Online: jamo.org

Donation Opportunities

While going out to eat and exploring gardens and museums is a great way to engage with Portland’s AAPI community, it isn’t the only way to have a supportive impact. There are several organizations that take donations that would go directly to the preservation of community history and the advancement of community business and activism. Below are some of the organizations you can donate to today as you do your part to support Portland’s great Asian American and Pacific Islander community!

Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon [APANO]
Founded in 1996, APANO dedicates itself to community development through cultural work, leadership development and support, political advocacy, and community organization!

Asian Pacific American Chamber of Commerce of Oregon & Southwest Washing [APACC]
APACC gathers representatives of all lines of Asian-owned businesses to ensure economic development, growth, and success among the Portland AAPI community. 

The Japanese American Citizen League [JACL]
Founded in 1929, JACL has worked for nearly a hundred years to support Portland’s Japanese American community through civil rights activism to build infrastructure that supports our AAPI neighbors. 

The Korean American Coalition [KAC]
KAC has several areas of impact for Portland’s AAPI community: they are engaged in civic and legislative advocacy, community service, cultural education through Korean artforms, and youth leadership!

Northwest Chinese Alliance [NCA]
Built on the practice of preserving cultural art forms, the NCA strives to showcase Chinese American history through the performing arts. They seek to build community and engage individuals through dance performances and events like the Rose Festival Grand Floral Parade!

Oregon Chinese Coalition [OCC]
The OCC is a tight-knit organization that seeks to strengthen the Portland Chinese community through civil, political, religious, and cultural preservation. 

Oregon Korea Fund [OKF]
Founded in 1995, the OKF seeks to provide support for Korean heritage, communities, businesses, and families through the support of donations and grant work!

—Hannah Judge

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May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, and New Yorkers are fortunate to live in a place that is home to so many thriving AAPI communities. So we’re taking a minute to spotlight some of our favorite Asian American and Pacific Islander businesses. These local entrepreneurs make being a parent in the city easier, more fun and more delicious (among many other things.) And of course, many owners are parents themselves. Want to support other NYC parents who run small businesses? We love these women-owned businesses in NYC, and these NYC Black-owned businesses and these parents are kind of our heroes.

Nguyen Coffee Supply

At Nguyen Coffee Supply, it’s all about the experience of brewing a cup of coffee. This, the first specialty Vietnamese coffee company in the U.S., opened its doors in Fall 2018 and prides itself on importing and roasting single-origin Vietnamese coffee beans. Apparently, compared to Arabica beans, its Vietnamese Robusta has twice as much caffeine (without the jitters), 60 percent less sugar and up to 80 percent more anti-oxidants. Co-owner Sahra Nguyen encourages people to support the small businesses in the city. “Especially immigrant-owned mom-and-pop shops that may not be so social media savvy. We need diversity in businesses, experiences and culture so that our city remains the dynamic place we love.”

Lo & Sons

For the past decade, the Lo family (Jan, Derek and their mom Helen) has been designing stylish travel bags from their Dumbo studio. (During the pandemic, they pivoted to helping healthcare workers by donating almost 4,000 bags to those on the frontlines.) The company's timeless, thoughtfully designed bags are created with eco-friendly materials and plenty of organizational features and pockets to keep your trip as streamlined and seamless as possible.

Dopple

Love cute, fashionable and distinct kids' clothes but not so into the cost (or trying to find them in the right size?) Check out Dopple, the creation of co-founder and CEO Chao Wang. This subscription service for stylish and affordable clothing for children, which offers pieces from brands such as Stella McCartney, Chloé, Bonpoint and Dôen, makes it easy to up your kid's look without going broke. You can also order a single "Dopple Drop", a cute starter outfit set for newborns (in various styles) as a gift for new parents. The latest rollout from the company is ReDopple, a peer-to-peer marketplace where users can buy or sell any of the 380 plus brands in Dopple’s inventory.

Yu & Me Books

lucy Yu owner of Yu & Me Bookstore nyc
Lucy Yu

Lucy Yu is not even 30 yet, but she's opened NYC's first female-owned Asian American bookstore in Chinatown. The shop, which is also a cafe and bar debuted in late 2021. It highlights works by Asian authors and books that feature the stories of immigrants. Closed Mondays. 

Korean K9 Rescue

At Korean K9 Rescue in Astoria, the mission is all about building awareness and compassion for dogs, especially those that are rescued from dog meat farms, high-kill shelters and puppy mills both here and abroad. Gina Bohler, executive director and founder started the organization in 2017. These days, New Yorkers in all five boroughs—and around the Tristate area—are happy adopters.

“We are so thankful to the NYC community for embracing our rescue organization and giving these homeless and mistreated dogs a second chance here,” she says. “We also have a Patreon page where you can get a sneak peek inside our facility in Bundang, South Korea, while supporting our rescue efforts monthly for just a few dollars.”

Pink Moon

When Lin Chen, a second-generation Asian American, launched Pink Moon, an online beauty site in mid-2020, her focus was on curating exclusively female-founded, sustainable self-care, well-being and lifestyle brands. “Practicing self-care/love has positively changed my life and this is why I want to offer other women the opportunity to experience this, too,” she says. These days Chen runs her business from her office in Midtown East, with hopes of opening a flagship well-care and community site for women through every phase of life some day. 

Rooted

Rooted may have started out of Ryan Lee and Kay Kim’s apartment in Williamsburg in 2018, but it’s soaring now with a greenhouse in Florida, a Brooklyn team and a commitment to doing everything through a lens of sustainability. "We’re adamant about doing things as green as possible, even if it’s much harder, for the sake of our environment,” Kim says. The online nursery offers plant subscriptions, as well as one-off orders. 

Madame Vo

Jimmy Ly, co-owner of Madame Vo, a contemporary Vietnamese restaurant in the East Village that opened in 2017, began dreaming up his vision when he met ‘Madame’ Yen Vo and the two connected over their mutual love of Vietnamese food. A Queens native, Ly had grown up as his family’s designated sous chef for family gatherings, and later worked in his parent’s banh mi shop. Vo grew spent her youth eating traditional Vietnamese food in her native Houston. When Ly introduced Yen to his family’s cooking, the inspiration for Madame Vo was born—and, since then, the couple became the proud parents of two boys.

“Vietnamese food is more than just the national cuisine of Vietnam—it is a way of life and an integral part of the culture,” Ly says. “At Madame Vo, we strive to honor the tradition of Vietnamese food by providing New Yorkers with the familiar and nostalgic flavors of southern Vietnamese cooking. Whether you're ordering a savory Com Suon Nuong or a delicious bowl of The Madame Pho, you can rest assured that your meal has been made with the utmost care and best ingredients, following recipes that have been passed down through generations of the Ly and Vo families."

212 E. 10th St. 
East Village 
917-261-2115

Kim’C Market

In 2019, Ryan Kim opened Kim’C Market, an e-commerce business based in the Brooklyn Navy Yard with the express goal of helping people stay healthy by providing healthy Korean foods and ingredients. “I was inspired to start Kim’C Market after my uncle passed away from cancer in 2018,” Kim says. “Having grown up without a father, I felt the need to be able to guide my late uncle’s children and ensure that the whole family would be able to have access to clean, healthy foods.”

“Whether you’ve been cooking with Korean ingredients your whole life or would like to dip your toes into the world of Korean cooking, our mission is to connect people with tasty, wholesome Korean and Asian ingredients and ship or deliver them fast to you. Food has an innate transformative power, from the nutrients inside it to the people who make it and the cultures which influence it, and it is our goal to make these clean ingredients accessible to all kitchens. To see how our products can be used not only in Korean cooking but your own cuisines, check out our cooking videos on YouTube.com.”  

Aoko Noko 

This family-owned and operated kids’ clothing line is known for its modern and thoughtfully crafted designs. Inspired by their own kids, the owners have over 18 years of experience in the fashion industry; they’re passionate about creating lasting, neutral unisex pieces that can be handed down again and again. 

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cc8N8HYOj1c/?hidecaption=true

Piccoliny

Founder Alex Zagami Ng comes from a long line of business owners. When she opened her shop in Little Italy, it quickly became a favorite for NYC locals and visitors alike. Ng curated a wonderful selection of toys, clothing and books, and also designed her own line. Find Piccoliny gear online (including a special collab with legendary dim sum spot Nom Wah Tea House, pictured above) or if you live in NYC, from these select retailers as well as Saks Fith Avenue in midtown Manhattan. 

Little Moony

Little Moony is a designer daughter and master tailor mother team. The idea to launch a children’s clothing line was born out of an afternoon watching their niece/granddaughter play in a cute but comfortable dress (which mom had made!). From there, Little Moony has become known for comfortable, well-designed clothes that range from bright and colorful to calm and cool. There’s a brick-and-mortar store in the SOHO neighborhood of NYC, but you can purchase everything from onesies to dress and jogger pants from the website too. 

230 Mulberry St. 
Soho
646-852-8330

 

Hudson and Bleeker

Founder and CEO Eram Siddiqui launched Hudson and Bleecker when she couldn’t find stylish travel accessories. What started as a single shoe bag has expanded into a line of multi-functional, well-crafted travel accessories. Take a peek at the website, and you’ll find garment bags, cosmetic bags, packing cubes and more. 

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We know Seattle parents are always looking for ways to shop local and spend with intention. So we figured Asian American and Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander Heritage Month was the right time to highlight some of Seattle’s best Asian American-owned businesses we think should be on your radar. Whether you’re looking for sustainable gift ideas; a new place to grab dinner or a hot cup of coffee; or even kids Bollywood dance lessons, you’ll find them on our list of Asian American-owned businesses. Read on for some great local shops that have Seattle families in mind.

Asian Restaurants

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Bunsoy
One of two hot new restaurants in Ballard, Chef Rhabbie Coquia is cooking up inventive and traditional Filipino dishes for Seattleites to enjoy at Bunsoy. Everything about the restaurant is about creating a warm and cozy vibe from the wall art to the food to the creative cocktails that will make you feel like you're on vacation. You'll need a reservation to get in for dinner, so make your plans to visit this new spot ahead of time.

WeRo
Ballard's other new Asian American-owned restaurant is WeRo. Chef and owner Wes Yoo is passionate about filling a void in local Korean cuisine, and comfort is his focus (it's the first meaning of WeRo in Korean). Here folks will find modernized food that explores the authentic flavors Yoo grew up enjoying in Seoul. Another dinner-only spot, reserve your patio spot (there's also 21+ seating) before heading over.

Musang
This Beacon Hill restaurant got its start as a series of pop-ups hosted by Chef Melissa Miranda back in 2016. Now, the restaurant (named after Chef Melissa’s father) is known for its cozy environs and creative Filipinx cuisine. Beyond their killer brunch, our other favorite dimension to Musang is the Little Wildcats program for kids. It's a chance for them to cook traditional Filipinx food alongside skilled cooks. 

Relay Restaurant Group
We’re all about parents here at Tinybeans, and Rachel Yang and Seif Chirchi, Chef/Owners of Joule, Revel, Trove and Revelry are two of our favorites. At each of their four restaurants (three local, one in Portland) families will find inventive food and a casual atmosphere that bumps them into the family-friendly category. As Yang says, her restaurants are more than places to feed people, they “help them create everlasting memories of good times.” Plus, as of now, the two are James Beard award finalists for 2022.

Cafes, Coffee Shops & More

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Chuck’s Hop Shop
If babies and beer is how you roll, it doesn’t get easier than Chuck’s Hop Shop, an Asian American-owned business with three Seattle locations. Not only is it the “land of 1,000 beers” but each location offers outdoor seating and Full Tilt ice cream to satisfy your kiddo’s sweet tooth. Best part? It’s pooch-friendly too. We couldn’t think of a better spot to spend a sunny afternoon with your crew.

Firehouse Coffee
Families have long been flocking to Firehouse Coffee in Ballard. This neighborhood hot spot is a refuge for families; the separate play area allows parents and kids to play without constant wrangling. And their treats from local faves, Alki Bakery and Flying Apron, don’t hurt either. Even if you don’t have time to stop and play, you can drive-thru for coffee on busier days.

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Bellden Café
A café with a heart in Old Bellevue, Bellden was a Reader’s Digest 2020 Finalist for Nicest Place in America. If you’re wondering how a coffee shop that serves tasty breakfast and lunch items, coffees, pastries and cocoa earned this distinction, it’s because they partner with local non-profits, creating signature drinks, and then donate a portion of the profits from the sales. This Eastside addition has been functioning as a community hub that works to support neighbors in need.

Fresh Flours
Sweet and savory breakfast pastries and flavorful cookies are the name of the game at this local bakery. Now with four locations, Fresh Flours hit the Seattle scene in 2006 and hasn’t slowed down. It’s an easy stop for families on their way to rock the weekend. Grabbing coffee a fresh breakfast before they head out to play.

Sandhu Cake Co.
When it comes to kids these days, we’ve got four you need to meet. The sibling bakers, decorators and taste-testers of Sandhu Cake Co. These kids have been baking up treats in their kitchen for a while now. If you need a specialty cake for an upcoming birthday bash or baby shower, they’ve got a gallery of impressive creations to choose from. Just remember to get your order in early; these amazing bakers book up fast.

One-stop shops

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Uwajimaya
Iconic grocery store. Fantastic food hall. Purveyor of amazing Asian gifts. However you categorize it, Uwajimaya is Seattle’s original go-to spot for all things Asian. In addition to hard-to-find specialty food items, you can find all your grocery needs in the aisles here. Plus awesome local goodies like mochi donuts, Hood Famous Bakery ube cheesecake and tasty treats from Cakes of Paradise. Stop by the food hall for an easy to-go meal and if your kids (or you!) need a Hello Kitty fix, you know you can find it here. There are three locations in Seattle, Renton and Bellevue.

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Daiso
Other than Archie McPhee we can't think of a better place to let your kiddo loose with five dollars than Daiso. Trust us, they'll be in little trinket heaven, and you'll go home feeling like a rockstar parent. Besides cute finds with total kid-appeal, parents will find all kinds of household goods to simplify and organize your life. With multiple Seattle locations and a store at Crossroads in Bellevue, it's the place local families go for all things Japanese.

Gifts & More

Boma Jewelry
There’s lots to love about this mom- and Asian-owned jewelry brand that’s committed to sustainability as much as it is ethical practices. It was started in 1981 by owner Suzanne Zetillart’s parents and now has placements in over 1,000 retail partners across the country. The company’s socially minded programs (they launched a BIPOC grant program in 2020) are varied, and they have plans to be carbon neutral by 2025. But our favorite part has got to be the kids jewelry that’s simply cute.

a new eco-friendly gifting product from tokki, an asian owned businesses in seattle
courtesy Tokki

Tokki
Tokki is another phenomenal mom- and Asian-owned business that’s focused on sustainability. Started by Seattle mom, Jane Park, Tokki products are all about joy through gifting with beautiful, re-usable designs (hint: their thoughtfully made gift tags and bags can be used time and time again). They're bringing gifting to the digital age with their soon-to-launch Tokki Eco Gifting Bag (it'll be out in June). Simply scan a QR code to upload your photo and videos directly to your gift bag to create a seriously memorable present. Plus, you can feel good about saving those wrapping paper discards and one-use tags from the landfill.

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Ayako & Family
Next time you’re at the Ballard or U District Farmers Markets, look for Ayako & Family jam and shokupan. While their specialty plum jams (made from fruit grown on Mari Farm-Taki in Yakamia) taste good on just about anything you spread them on, they pair especially well with the thick-sliced shokupan also sold at the market. Curb your craving year-round when you stop by.

Rangeela Dance Company
Rangeela Dance Company brings Bollywood to Seattle with fun fusion classes parents and kids will love. Founded by Priyanka Vora, each class blends India’s Bollywood dance moves with cardio, funk and urban themes that energize your typical workout. Admittedly, we’re crushing on the kids Bollywood dance classes for tots as young as three. 

Local CSAs to Support

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Friendly Hmong Farms
This Eastside CSA is the product of a grassroots effort to support Hmong farmers who were hit especially hard during the pandemic in 2020. When your family subscribes for a flower share, they are supporting over 20 Hmong families whose Eastside farms span from Snohomish down to Kent. Subscribe for the season or a la carte, selecting a pick-up location and date for a one-time purchase. The collective also has a fabulous farm intern program for teens (ages 15-17) who identify as BlPOC, LGBTQA, and/or are neurodivergent.

Kamayan Farm
Kamayan Farm is a veggie, flower and education farm located on Snoqualmie people’s land in Carnation. Farmer Ari de Leña started working the land in 2016, growing veggies and medicinal herbs for the CSA. Offering spring, summer and fall CSA boxes, families can support this farm by eating local. Although the CSA is sold out for the 2022 season, you can cross your fingers and join the waitlist. Not to worry, you can still support Kamayan Farm when you buy flowers individually or through a subscription.

Culture & History Museums

Be/Longing at the Seattle Asian American Art Museum
Adam Hunter/LMN Architects

Seattle Asian Art Museum
The Seattle Asian Art Museum in Volunteer Park is a great spot to spy Asian art and learn a little something too. When you visit, explore fascinating exhibits including Embodied Change: South Asian Art Across Time and Be/Longing: Contemporary Asian Art, where you can marvel at Do Ho Suh's jaw-dropping Some/One. We're big fans of the Museum's Family Fun Workshops that allow kids and caregivers to explore cultures and artistic traditions together. Although you no longer need tickets in advance for these arty opportunities, you save money (and guarantee your spot) when you get them ahead of time. Currently, the Museum is open Fridays through Sundays, and kids 14 and under are always free.

Wing Luke Museum
Explore the history of the Asian Pacific American experience when you bring the kids to the Wing Luke Museum. The Museum is open to the public Wednesdays through Sundays from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Wandering the museum gives families the chance to explore exhibits where kids can learn about important Asian Americans (like Wing Luke himself) and reflect on the immigrant and refugee experience in Washington. The "Letter Cloud" installation is particularly powerful, and you'll find plenty of Bruce Lee love here as well. Also of note? The history and food walking tours that are open to all ages. The Rice Stuff runs through May as do the Redlining Heritage Trail tours.

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It’s never too early (or too late) to talk to your kids about racism, diversity and equality. If you’re having a hard time finding the right way to approach the topic, let literature lend a helping hand. From autobiographical picture books to powerful first-person fiction, we’ve carefully curated some of our favorite books that’ll spark conversations about everything from the immigrant experience to Black History to give kids (and parents) perspective. Keep reading and start listening.

Black Girls Unbossed

The famous activists we know today started their journeys when they were young––just like the Black girls highlighted in this new book by Khristy Lauren Adams. These young world changers are starting organizations to help those in need, leading racial advocacy efforts, creating apps to aid in mental health issues and so much more, all born out of their own life experiences.

Recommended Ages: 8-12

Available on Amazon, $20

Antiracist Baby

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

From activist, professor and father Ibram X. Kendi, this lovely picture book will help you and your kids learn about cultivating a more equitable world by following nine simple steps. We love this new and powerful read; it is filled with thoughtful rhymes and beautiful, bold illustrations.

Recommended age: 0-3

Buy it now, $7

We Are Little Feminists Board Book Series

Books for Kids About Racism
Little Feminists

Little Feminist's 3-board-books geared toward early readers (like babies!) all feature photos of REAL families with poems to build vocabulary & connection. The three books include HAIR which showcases race and ethnicity; FAMILIES which includes families in all their variations and showcases gender and sexuality; and ON-THE-GO which includes many forms of abilities, mobility and bodies

Recommended age: 0 & up

Buy it now, $29

Little Leaders: Bold Women in Black History

Books for Kids About Racism
Little Brown/Hatchett

This little book packs a big punch! Featuring forty trailblazing women in African-American history, each entry is accompanied by a beautiful illustration. From pilot Bessie Coleman to crooner Nina Simone to poets, inventors, athletes and more, this book will inspire children of any gender to be bold, beautiful and make history. 

Recommended age: 3 & up, but we think you should read it to your baby. 

Buy it now, $12

The People Shall Continue

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Told with the flow of a Native American narrative, this book tells the tale of those who were usurped, who watched their lands be stripped away and witnessed the enslavement of their people. But, they remembered, found solidarity with other oppressed people and despite all, persisted. 

Recommended age: 1-8

Buy it now, $23

We're Different, We're the Same

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Sesame Street has been teaching kids that diversity is beautiful for over 50 years, so it'll come as no surprise that your favorite muppets star in this great book about racism for kids. Elmo and his friends show us that even though we might look different on the outside, on the inside we all have the same needs, feelings and desires. 

Recommended age: 3-7

Buy it now, $3

Something Happened in Our Town

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Follow two families, one white, one black as they each discuss the shooting of a Black man by the police in their town. It touches on subjects like violence, social injustice, racial profiling and entitlement. The lovely illustrations and positive messaging tackle the tough subject matter in just the right way. 

Recommended age: 4-8

Buy it now, $13

A Kids Book About: Racism

Books for Kids About Racism
A Kids Book About:

Sometimes the easiest way to get your point across is to just SAY IT. That's what this book by father, thinker and entrepreneur Jelani Memory. With simple text, bold images that explain what racism is, how it makes people feel and how to spot it when it happens, this must-have book lays it all out so that even young kids can start to listen and learn. 

Reccomended age: 5 & up

Buy it now, $52

I Am Harriet Tubman

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Brad Meltzer’s latest release in his Ordinary People Change the World series, we learn the story of Harriet Tubman and her bravery as she fought to abolish slavery. She helped hundreds of African Americans escape slavery and find freedom through the Underground Railroad. This is one book that will inspire your kids to become heroes themselves.

Recommended age: 5-8

Buy it now, $11

The Day You Begin

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Imagine walking into a room and seeing no one like you? Whether your skin is different, you walk differently, you talk differently, you wear different clothes, there are many reasons to feel different. This lovely rhyming story is all about being inclusive, and it encourages kids to be comfortable in their own skin and savor what is unique about them. 

Recommend age: 5-8 years

Buy it now, $12

Maya Angelou (Little People, Big Dreams)

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Like the “I Am” series, the Little People, Big Dreams series explores amazing men and women of history, from artists to scientists to activists, teaching kids that one person can make a difference. This book covers the inspiring Maya Angelou’s journey, from a traumatic childhood to one of the world’s best-loved authors. If you thought you knew who Maya Angelou is, you are in for a treat: this book will leave you even more in awe than you already were. Written by Lisbeth Kaiser and illustrated by Leire Salaberria. 

Recommended age: 5–8 years

Buy it now, $10

Black Is a Rainbow Color

Books for Kids About Racism
Macmillan

When debut author Angela Joy set out to teach her children their first Black History lesson she was not expecting her preschooler to say, "But Mama, we're not black, we're brown." It was then that she realized that she wanted her children, and all children, to understand that being Black was about culture as much as color. Vibrant, stained-glass like artwork by Coretta-Scott King Award-winning illustrator Ekua Holmes accompanies Joy's poetic text as we join a little girl on a journey to discover all the wonderful things that Black is. Includes a suggested playlist as well as an expanded explanation of the historical references in the text to allow parents to explain Black history to their kids. It's an exceptionally designed, written and thoughtful new book appropriate for kids of all ages and ethnicities.

Recommended age: Suggested age, 4-8, but we think even older kids can benefit from this book due to the important historical talking points in the back of the book.

Buy it now, $14

A Song for Gwendolyn Brooks

Books for Kids About Racism
Sterling Publishers

Celebrate the life and voice of poet Gwendolyn Brooks with this thoughtful story that combines both Brooks' legacy with her life story. Known for being one of the most foremost poets on the Black experience and the role of women in society, Gwendolyn Brooks went from a young child writing all the time to become the first Black author to win the Pulitzer Prize and authoring 20 books of poetry, two autobiographies and one novel. Celebrated author and children's librarian Alice Faye Duncan makes Brooks come to life on the page for the young reader.

Recommended age: 5 & up 

Buy it now, $10

The Youngest Marcher: The Story of Audrey Faye Hendricks, a Young Civil Rights Activist

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Audrey was arrested! Cynthia Levinson brings this true tale of the youngest known child to be arrested at a civil rights protest in Birmingham, Alabama. Kids will cheer for Audrey, equality and the rights of all children. Illustrated by Vanessa Brantley Newton. 

Recommended age: 5–10

Buy it now, $12

Of Thee I Sing: A Letter to My Daughters

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Written by President Barack Obama as a letter to his own daughters, this is the story of 13 key players in American history. From Jackie Robinson to Georgia O’Keefe to George Washington,  Obama illustrates how his own children—and all kids—have these heroic traits in themselves. Uplifting and encouraging, your kids will gain an understanding of the history of the United States and know that “yes!” they can. Illustrated by Loren Long. 

Recommended age: 5 & up

Buy it now, $11

A Ride to Remember

Books for Kids About Racism
Harry N. Abrams

The summer of 1963 was an important time in America. Not only did Martin Luther King Jr.'s March on Washington take place, but the Gwynn Oak Amusement Park in Maryland became desegregated and open to everyone. As the first African-American child to ride the carousel at the park that day, co-author Sharon Langley shares her story in this new book all about how a community came together for positive change. 

Recommended age: 6-9

Buy it now, $14

Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

If you want to talk about Black History with your kids, this book will take you back to the beginning. Told from the point of view of a 100-year-old African-American woman, Heart and Soul takes kids on a journey through the history of slavery to Jim Crow laws to the quest for equality and freedom in our schools and beyond. It teaches them about the reality and the inspiring truth: the men, women and children of all colors who rallied to change education laws and end segregation and who fight still for truth, justice and the true American way. Kadir Nelson is an award-winning author and illustrator, whose honors include the Coretta Scott King Author and Illustrator Award.

Recommended age: 6–10

Buy it now, $7

You Should Meet: Katherine Johnson

Books for Kids About Racism
Simon & Schuster

Who was Katherine Johnson? This book will tell you: she is said to be one of the greatest minds of all time! She worked in the 1950s for the NASA space program and was such a brilliant mathematician that she figured out the math needed to send a rocket to the moon in her head. She didn't even use a computer or a calculator. This book will teach kids about her early life as a child growing up in a small town in Virginia that didn't even have a high school for African Americans (schools were segregated then), how her family moved to a town with a high school she could attend, and about her incredible career as a scientist and mathematics marvel.   

Recommended age: 6-8

Buy it now, $5

Todos Iguales / All Equal

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Did you know the first success school desegregation case took place in Southern California? 23 years before the historical Brown v. Board of Education case there was the little-known case of Roberto Alvarez v. the Board of Trustees of the Lemon Grove School District. This lovely bilingual storybook tells the tale of one immigrant community and its fight for equal rights. 

Recommended age: 8-11

Buy it now, $19

Front Desk

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

Mia Yang has a few secrets: she lives in a motel, her parents clean the motel rooms and hide immigrants, and she wants to be a writer, not a mathematician. Loosely based on author Kelly Yang's childhood, this powerful story addresses poverty, systemic racism, stereotypes and more. Although this story takes place in the '90s, many of the heartbreaking stories told here remain true for immigrants and minorities today.

Recommended age: 9 & up

Buy it now, $8

Schomburg: The Man Who Built a Library

Books for Kids About Racism
Candlewick Press

Afro-Puerto Rican immigrant and hero Aturo Schomburg was a law clerk with a passion: he collected books, letters, art and music from Africa and the African diaspora. When the collection got too big for his own shelves, he turned to the New York Public Library where, in 1905, he curated a collection known then as the "Negro Division." Not only does this book take you through the life and times of the amazing Arturo Schomburg, but it also details critical and often overlooked African Americans and African American history throughout major events in the forming of the United States of America, including revolutionaries, the woman who wrote poems in praise of George Washington, the powerful writings of Frederick Douglass and the whitewashing of African history. A must-read for kids from all walks of life.

Recommended age: 9-12

Buy it now, $10

42 Is Not Just a Number: The Odyssey of Jackie Robinson, American Hero

Books for Kids About Racism
Candlewick Press

Jackie Robinson was an all-star from a young age: baseball, basketball, football, he excelled at them all. With talent like that, it seemed likely he'd go pro except for one thing: the color of his skin. So Jackie joined the Negro Leagues, setting records and impressing the manager of the major league team, the Brooklyn Dodgers. In 1946, Jackie became the first African American EVER to play in MLB. He faced cruelty, protests and violence. But he persisted: he displayed courage, determination, restraint and an incredible ability to win the game. This detailed chapter book will help parents and kids alike to remember never give up.

Recommended age: 8-12

Buy it now, $7

Kira-Kira

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

This Newbery Award-winning book follows Katie and her family as they leave Iowa and move to Deep South Georgia in the 1950s. One of only 31 Japanese-American families in town, Katie, her older sister Lynn and hard-working parents will encounter racism at school and at work and when tragedy befalls the family, Katie must stay strong for everyone. A sobering historical fiction tale worth reading. 

Recommended age: 10-14

Buy it now, $6

This Book Is Anti-Racist: 20 Lessons on How to Wake Up, Take Action, and Do The Work

Books for Kids About Racism
Quarto

New in January of 2020, author Tiffany Jewell aims to dismantle racism by helping readers understand the origins of racism, current racism in our society and how to stand up against racial oppression. Each chapter builds on the previous one as you learn more about yourself and racial oppression and it includes 20 powerfully effective activities to get you thinking and help you learn and grow. 

Recommended age: The publisher list ages 11+ but we think every family should own a copy of this and read it together. 

Buy it now, $6

Loving vs. Virginia: A Documentary Novel of the Landmark Civil Rights Case

Books for Kids About Racism
Chronicle Books

This book for older readers tells the story of a landmark civil rights case. Richard and Mildred Loving met in 1955 in Caroline County, Virginia, during a time when segregation, prejudice,  injustice and cruelty were the norm. They fell in love and their love was at the heart of the Supreme Court case that legalized marriages between races.

Recommended age: 12 & up

Buy it now, $8

Other Words for Home

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

In this Newbery honor book, you'll meet 12-year-old Jude, who has left her seaside home in Syria to escape the country's brutal civil war. She and her mother leave her father and brother behind as they head for Cinncinati to stay with relatives. Jude will experience being labeled as "Middle Eastern" for the first time, but she'll also discover new friends, a school musical that's worth taking the risk and finally understand that home can be in more than one place. 

Recommended age: 8-12

Buy it now, $8

The Hate U Give

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

16-year-old Starr Carter is constantly trying to find the balance between the fancy prep school she attends and the poor neighborhood in which she lives. When she witnesses the death of her childhood friend at the hands of the police, that balance is shattered. The protests, the hate and the confusion that follow are achingly similar to current events. A heartbreaking tale, this poignant first-person narrative is a great way to start or continue a conversation with your tween about the Black Lives Matter movement. 

Recommend age: 12 & up

Buy it now, $13

All the Days Past, All the Days to Come

Books for Kids About Racism
Amazon

From Newbery Award-winning novelist Mildred D. Taylor comes the end of the Logan family saga that began with Song of the Trees and Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry. In All the Days Past, Cassie Logan is all grown up and trying to find her place in the world. Her journey takes her to Toledo, California, law school in Boston and finally, back to Mississippi in the '60s to help with voter registration. She will be witness to the rise of the civil rights movement, which is preceded by racist American white society, and the often violent confrontations that bring about historical change. 

Recommended age: 14 & up

Buy it now, $11

Want to shop and support an independent bookstore? Check out Indiebound to find a bookstore near you.

—Gabby Cullen, Amber Guetebier & Karly Wood

All photos: Courtesy of publishers

 

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Dear Parents, Black History Is American History

 

Naming your daughter (or your son) after your own fierce grandma or your favorite famous female in history is a way to let your kiddos know from Day One you believe in them. Read on for next-level baby name inspiration!

Shawn Miller via Wikimedia Commons

Amanda Gorman: Amanda made history when she became not only the youngest poet to read her poem at the inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, but she also became the first National Youth Poet Laureate at just 22. Amanda's poem, "The Hill We Climb" called for hope, unity and a nation to heal without hiding from the harsh realities of injustice and the past. 

Alice Eastwood:  Born in Canada, Eastwood is best known for her work as a renowned (and self-taught!) botanist who, in 1906—after the big earthquake in San Francisco—she rescued 1497 irreplaceable botanical specimens from the Cal Academy before it fell to flames. There are 17 plant species (and two plant genera) named for her. She also hiked Mt. Shasta by herself and published over 300 scientific articles in her lifetime.

Wikimedia Commons

Anna May Wong: The first Chinese-American movie star and the first Asian-American actress to gain international fame, she used her influence to fight against the rampant racism in Hollywood, especially the offensive depiction of Chinese characters, usually played by white actors.

Amelia Earhart: The first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean, she also set an altitude record and became the first person to fly solo across the Pacific from Honolulu, HI.

 

Bobbi Gibb

Bessie Coleman: In 1922, Bessie Coleman became the first African American and Native American woman pilot in the United States. Born in Texas to a sharecropper father, she was accepted into the  Caudron Brothers' School of Aviation in Le Crotoy, France and received her international pilot's license in 1921. She tragically died in a plane crash on April 30, 1926. Ida B. Wells performed her funeral service in Chicago, and in 1931, the Challenger Pilots’ Association of Chicago started a tradition of flying over Coleman’s grave every year.

Billie Jean King: A world-renowned tennis player, Billie can count 39 World Grand Slams and three years as captain of the United States tennis team at the Federation Cup among her numerous ground-breaking accomplishments. Known as a long-time advocate for gender equality and social justice, at the age of 29, Ms. King fought and beat Bobby Griggs (he was 55 at the time) in a legendary tennis match—Battle of the Sexes. Ms. King was inducted into the Tennis Hall of Fame in 1987 and the National Women’s Hall of Fame in 1990.

Bobbi Gibb: In 1966, Bobbi Gibb wanted to run the Boston Marathon, but when she was denied entry for being a woman she did what all self-respecting women at the time did: she defied authority and ran anyway! Gibb waited a few yards away from the starting point, pulled a black hoodie over her head so no one would recognize her, and after several hundred runners began the race she jumped in! And not only did Bobbi run the race, but she finished it in 3 hours and 20 minutes (unofficially). That’s just one hour behind the winner and ahead of half the male runners. Check out this cool picture book based on Gibb’s Boston Marathon story.

Photography (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons

Deb Haaland: In 2018, Debra Anne Haaland became one of the first Native American women elected to Congress (along with Sharice Davids). She is the former chair of the Democratic Party of New Mexico and a member of the Laguna Pueblo people. She is also an attorney and 35th generation New Mexican.

Dolores Huerta: Huerta worked side-by-side with famous labor and farmworker advocate Cesar Chavez to help protect agricultural and immigrant workers’ rights. She founded the Agricultural Workers Association and co-founded United Farm Workers and continues to fight for the rights of Latinos and women.

Dolly Parton: Born in a one-room cabin in Tennessee, Dolly Parton grew up one of 12 children in extreme poverty. Her family was very involved in their church, and she began performing as a child. She moved to Nashville after graduating from high school and found initial success as a songwriter. Her first number-one hit was the iconic "I Will Always Love You." She saw more success in the '70s and continued to make her way in the music industry with a success that has lasted for decades. Parton is not only a musical icon, but she also co-owns The Dollywood Company and founded The Dollywood Foundation, which raises scholarship funds for high school kids and also manages The Imagination Library, a program that distributes free books to kids up to the age of five. 

Durga Banerjee: The first woman pilot in India, she became an official pilot for Indian Airlines in 1966. She was also the first woman ever to fly the Tornado A-200.

Guillermo Kahlo- Sotheby's, Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Frida Kahlo: Mexican-born Kahlo was just 18 with hopes of becoming a doctor when she suffered a serious injury from a traffic accident. Confined to her bed, she began painting. Her works remain today as some of the most impressive, iconic and recognizable art in history.

Florence Nightingale: Considered the founder of modern nursing herself, she organized care of wounded soldiers during the Crimean War (1853-1856). She became known as a manager and trainer of nurses who advocated for sanitary conditions in hospitals, and a holistic approach to treatment (that rest and good nutrition were key to recovery and good health). So if you want a kiddo who will wash her hands and eat her veggies, this is the name for you. 

James S. Davis via Wikimedia

Gloria Steinem: Activist, feminist, journalist, founder of Ms. Magazine and champion of women’s rights, she’s considered one of the pioneers of the American feminist movement. 

Greta Thunberg: Countless kids and young adults are trying to change the world. Swedish teen activist Greta Thunberg is the founder of the Fridays for Future movement and has already inspired many to stand up for their beliefs. She was named Time’s 2019 Person of the Year, and 2020 marked the second year in a row the 17-year-old was nominated for the Nobel peace prize. 

Grace Hopper: Grace Brewster Murray Hopper (1906-1992) was one of the first computer programmers ever in the United States. A Navy Rear Admiral, in 1944 she worked on the Harvard Mark I Computer and invented the first compiler for computer programming language. In other words, she figured out how to explain computer code to mere humans (and how to program a computer to do what humans want). In the 1940s!!! She continued working for the Navy and later for other government agencies as a high-ranking official. 

Gwendolyn Brooks: One of the most highly celebrated poets of all time, Gwendolyn was the first Black author ever to win the Pulitzer Prize. She wrote 20 books of poetry, two autobiographies and one novel. She was also Poet Laureate to the State of Illinois and the poetry consultant to the Library of Congress.

Wikimedia Commons

Hedy Lamarr: Not only was Hedy a famous Hollywood actress, but she is also credited with inventing Wi-Fi. Her groundbreaking work on spread spectrum technology is what modern-day digital communications are based on.

Harriet Tubman: Find major inspiration for doing the right thing, even when the wrong thing is the norm, by teaching your kiddos about the incredible, unflappable Harriet Tubman. Born into slavery in 1822, she emancipated herself at the age of 27 and went on to be instrumental in helping dozens of other slaves find freedom using the Underground Railroad—the system of secret safehouse and waystations from the south to the north. Tubman was an armed scout and spy during the Civil War, an early suffragist (advocate for women’s rights) and a humanitarian. She established a home for elderly African-Americans, where she later resided. Today, you can visit Harriet Tubman National Historical Park which includes her home, a visitor’s center, the Harriet Tubman Home for the Aged, and the church she raised funds to build. Her burial site is nearby. 

Wikimedia Commons

Kamala Harris: Kamala Harris made history on Jan. 21, 2021, by being sworn in as Vice President as the first woman, the first Black woman, and the first South Asian woman to be elected into the second-highest office in the nation. Long before her presidential aspirations, she was the first woman and person of color to serve as San Francisco district attorney, the first woman and first Black attorney general of California and the first Black senator from California. If you want to raise a fierce fighter who shatters glass ceilings, this name is sure to inspire. 

Jeekc via Wikimedia Commons

Jane Goodall: Possibly the most famous primatologist in the entire world, Goodall’s work with chimpanzees changed the way we view them and our relationship with (and part in the destruction of) their habitat.

Lella Lombardi: She was Italian and she was a Formula One race car driver. If that’s not reason enough to worship her, she raced in 17 Grands Prix and was the only female driver in history to finish in the top six.

Queen Liliuokalani: The last reigning monarch over the Kingdom of Hawaii, she was imprisoned in her own home in Honolulu after the rebellion attempt to overthrow the Hawaiian monarchy by U.S. soldiers and her attempts to refuse the annexation of Hawaii to the United States. Her birth name was Lydia Liliʻu Loloku Walania Wewehi Kamakaʻeha.

NASA, Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

Mae C. Jemison: On June 4, 1987, Mae C. Jemison became the first African-American woman to enter the space program. On Sep. 12, 1992, she joined the crew of seven astronauts on the Endeavour, becoming the first African-American woman in space. Born in Decatur, Alabama and raised mostly in Chicago, Il, Jemison holds multiple awards and degrees including a B.S. in biomedical engineering and an M.D. She has worked as a medical doctor (including in the Peace Corps). As a child, Jemison spent a lot of time in her school library, reading especially books about space.

Malala Yousafzai: Want to raise a child that isn’t afraid to fight against inequality and injustice? Name your kid Malala after this brave young woman. Malala was shot in the head at age 15 after refusing to stay at home when the Taliban declared that girls could not attend school. After surviving the gunshot wound, she devoted her life to helping girls and women get the education they deserve. She won a Nobel Peace Prize winner and wrote her own children's picture book.

Margaret Atwood: She might be best known for her feminist science fiction novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, but that’s only one of her 16 novels! She is a prolific author whose stories address gender, identity, religion and myth all at once. She is the winner of numerous awards in both poetry and fiction. We like the name Atwood for a gender-neutral vibe, too. 

Marie Curie: A physicist and chemist who was not only the first woman ever to win a Nobel Prize, she was also the first person and only woman to win it twice, once for Chemistry and once for Physics. Her pioneering work includes the theory of radioactivity and discovering not one but two elements (radium and polonium).

Maya Angelou: Born Marguerite Annie Johnson, her brother nicknamed her Maya. After a difficult childhood, she found release in her writing. She was the first African American cable car operator in San Francisco, was a waitress for many years and later became an actress, singer, dancer, activist, professor and (most famously) a poet and writer. She was awarded numerous prestigious awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Wikimedia Commons

Nichelle Nichols: Born Grace Dell Nichols (also an awesome name), Nichelle’s impressive career includes singing with Duke Ellington and playing Lt. Uhura on the Star Trek television series and movies. What you might not know is that she ran a company called Women in Motion which worked with NASA to recruit minority and female astronauts, scientists and personnel for NASA. She has served on the board for the National Space Society since the 1980s and has been a tireless advocate for exploring the final frontier.

Rachel Carson: Ensure your little one grows up to be a nature lover and defender of all creatures great and small by naming them after this fearless woman who helped end the use of DDT and other harmful chemicals in our environment. Her hard work and dedication also jump-started a grassroots campaign that eventually led to the creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Her presence in the global fight for the environment continues to this day, via the Rachel Carson Prize, which is awarded to women working in the field of environmental protection.

Steve Petteway via SCOTUS

Rashida Tlaib: Rashida is a woman of firsts. She is the first Muslim woman ever to serve in the Michigan legislature and one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress (along with Ilhan Omar).

Ruby Bridges: In 1960, Ruby was just six-years-old when she made history as the first African-American child to attend a desegregated school. She went on to live a life of activism and later formed the Ruby Bridges Foundation to fight racism and promote tolerance, respect and appreciation of differences.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg: Born Joan Ruth Bader, she was an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court of the United States, the second female justice in history. A consummate bada$*, she is a trailblazer in fighting against gender discrimination, and an outspoken advocate for (and defender of) women’s rights. 

Rosa Parks: AKA the Mother of the Freedom Movement and the First Lady of Civil Rights, Rosa Parks made history when she refused to give up her seat in the “colored” section of the bus to a white passenger. She was arrested for civil disobedience and fought it in court. This was just the beginning of many years of activism and work toward equal rights.

Wikimedia Commons

Sally Ride: The first American woman to fly in space, on June 18, 1983. She flew again in 1984. She was also a professor at UC San Diego, invented the EarthKAM project which helps kids take pictures of Earth from the International Space Station and was inducted into the Astronaut Hall of Fame in 2003.

Sharice Davids: In 2018, Sharice Davids was elected to Congress, becoming one of the first Native American women to be elected to Congress (the other is Deb Haaland, also elected in 2018) as well as the first openly gay person elected to Congress from Kansas and the first LGBT Native American elected to Congress.

Susan B. Anthony: A suffragist, anti-slavery advocate and early champion for women’s rights, she fought for the right for women to vote. She and her three sisters voted in the 1872 presidential election even though it was illegal. She was arrested, went to trial, and ordered to pay a fine which she refused. The Nineteenth Amendment (the 1920 law that finally gave women the right to vote) is named after her (Susan B. Anthony Amendment).

Sonia Sotomayor: The first Latina Supreme Court Justice in U.S. History, she holds multiple degrees and was also a U.S. District Court Judge as well as a U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals Judge.

Giuseppina Leone via Wikimedia Commons

Tu Youyou: Chinese born Tu Youyou took the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, primarily for her work in researching and discovering artemisinin and dihydroartemisinin, two compounds used to treat malaria. Her work has saved millions of lives. Tu’s extensive knowledge of the vast pharmacopeia of traditional and Western medicine has made her one of the most important scientists in her field. 

Wilma Rudolph: Wilma Rudolph had polio, scarlet fever and pneumonia as a child, which left doctors doubting she’d ever walk again. But Wilma didn’t agree: at 16 she competed at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne. She won the bronze medal in the 4x100-meter relay. In 1960 she competed in Rome and won gold medals and set world records in the 100, 200 and 4x100-meter relay. Never let them get you down!

Winona LaDuke: Winona is an environmentalist, economist, activist and writer whose father was a Native American from the Gaa-waabaabiganikaag reservation in Minnesota, a member of the Ojibwe Nation. From a young age, she was inspired to advocate for sustainable farming, heritage foods and land protection for indigenous (and all) people and continues to be a pioneer and leader. 

Wú Méi: One of the few known martial arts warriors from the 17th century, Mei survived an attack at a Shaolin Monastery, fought in numerous invasions and is still known today as a founding mother of martial arts styles including Dragon Style.

Zora Neale Hurston: One of the most influential and important writers in the twentieth century, her unique voice and style that integrated her knowledge of folklore with her prose is required reading for anyone who wants to experience the true voice of African-American literature.

—Amber Guetebier

 

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Feature photo: Johnathan Borba via Unsplash