For the series, Gates collaborated with more than 30 historians to identify and select 70 of the most important and illustrative stories of the African-American experience to serve as the epic's narrative spine. Among the more notable figures Gates highlighted was the black Spanish conquistador
Juan Garrido, who, in 1513, accompanied
Ponce de León on his expedition into what is now the state of
Florida. As a result, the airing of
The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross coincided with the 500th anniversary of the presence of persons of African descent in what is today the continental United States. Among the other prominent figures profiled in the series are:
Harriet Tubman,
Richard Allen,
Frederick Douglass,
Robert Smalls,
Ida B. Wells,
W. E. B. Du Bois,
Booker T. Washington,
Marcus Garvey,
Oscar Micheaux,
Rosa Parks,
Martin Luther King Jr.,
Ruby Bridges,
Charlayne Hunter-Gault,
Kathleen Neal Cleaver,
Maulana Karenga,
Colin Powell, and many more. In an interview with
TheRoot.com (an online magazine that Gates co-founded and for which he serves as editor-in-chief), Gates described his goals for the series: "First, to show that black culture is inextricably intertwined with American culture. There’s no America without African Americans. "Second, to provide a tool that teachers can use to enact the conversation about race every day in the classroom. Every day’s gotta be Black History Month. Just like with citizenship, for example: A teacher doesn’t say, ‘Today I'm going to teach you how to be a citizen.’ It's taught every day.” In a separate interview on the
Tavis Smiley Show on PBS, Gates explained how personal the series is for him: "The reason that I wanted to do this series, the first comprehensive treatment of the whole sweep of African-American history since Bill Cosby did his in 1968, and which I watched with my parents when I was 17 years old, was to provide the tools through which a teacher could incorporate African American history into the story, the grand narrative, of the founding of America, its settlement, its peopling, and its great prosperity over the last several centuries." ==Episodes==