Authoress T'Malkia Zuri

WE BUILT THIS BEEP

– HISTORICAL SERIES

Documenting the receipts of Black American excellence.

We Built This Beep-Book Series

WE BUILT THIS BEEP – THE SERIES

A Literary Blueprint for Black American Remembrance, Sovereignty, and Survival by T'Malkia Zuri

The We [BEEP] This collection is a historical restoration project authored by Empress T’Malkia Zuri, documenting the undeniable proof that Indigenous Black Americans were the true architects, inventors, educators, and leaders who built the foundation of the United States.

Each volume uncovers the receipts — original newspaper articles, patents, and records — proving that Indigenous Black Americans not only shaped America’s infrastructure but also its intellect, innovation, and industry. From the builders of the Capitol to the creators of modern invention, from early educators to self-made businessmen, this series restores the legacy that history tried to erase.

These are not just books.
They are evidence — of genius, of ownership, of origin.

Earliest South view of the President’s House c. January 1846. Photographer John Plumbe Jr. (Credit: Library of Congress)

⚖️ THE SERIES MISSION

To document truth.
To restore lineage.
To awaken those who remember.

Every page in this series reclaims what was stolen — our names, our narratives, and our native inheritance.

This is not just history.

It is testimony — the living record of a people who built, taught, and led long before this land was called America.

WE BULT THIS BEEP – HISTORICAL SERIES

Front cover of We Built This Beep by T’Malkia Zuri, a documented historical work on Black American builders, visionaries, farmers, and founders.
We Invented This Beep Cover 11 9 2025
We Taught This Beep Cover 11 9 2025
Cover of We Ran This Beep, a documented Black American history book featuring archival newspaper text and bold typography.

WE BUILT THIS VOLUME I >

Formats:  Hardcover, Paperback

Pages: 395

Publisher: Griot Publishing House>>

WE INVENTED THIS BEEP VOLUME II

Formats:  Hardcover, eBook

Pages: 220

Publisher: Griot Publishing House>>

WE TAUGHT THIS BEEP VOLUME III

Formats:  Hardcover, ebook

Pages: 219

Publisher: Griot Publishing House>>

WE RAN THIS BEEP VOLUME IV

Formats:  Hardcover, ebook

Pages: 226

Publisher: Griot Publishing House>>

🏗 VOLUME I — WE BUILT THIS BEEP: The Historical Receipts of Black American Builders, Farmers, and Founders

Release Date: November 9, 2025

Before there were skyscrapers, railroads, or banks — there were the hands of Black Americans. We Built This [BEEP] uncovers the documented proof that Black Americans were not just laborers, but the architects, farmers, and founders who laid the foundation of this nation brick by brick and acre by acre.

Through rare newspaper articles, government records, and first-hand accounts, historian T’Malkia Zuri presents the receipts — undeniable evidence that Black Americans built America’s infrastructure, businesses, and institutions long before credit was ever given. From the construction of the White House and U.S. Capitol to the rise of Negro-owned banks, insurance companies, and farming cooperatives, this book restores the erased legacy of those who literally built the world’s most powerful nation.

Featuring more than 400 pages of archival documentation and insightful commentary, We Built This [BEEP] is not just a historical reference — it’s a declaration. It challenges the myths of American history and reclaims the rightful narrative of Black American genius, innovation, and self-sufficiency.

This volume is part of a growing series dedicated to preserving the receipts of Black American brilliance — proving once and for all that we didn’t just contribute to America.

We built it.

🪶 Key Themes:

  • The erased legacy of Black American builders, farmers, and architects

  • The construction of the White House, U.S. Capitol, and early American infrastructure

  • The rise of Negro-owned banks, insurance companies, and cooperative businesses

  • Black craftsmanship, innovation, and entrepreneurship in the 19th and early 20th centuries

  • The economic self-determination of early Black communities

  • The importance of historical receipts as proof of ownership and contribution

Supported by over a hundred verified historical records, newspaper clippings, and firsthand accounts.

→ Learn More or Order Volume I

💡 VOLUME II — WE INVENTED THIS BEEP: Culture, Land, and Identity in the Age of Awakening

We Invented This Beep Cover 11 9 2025

Release Date: December 1st, 2025

From the cotton gin’s overlooked improvements to the traffic light that changed city life, from the ironing board to the gas mask that saved thousands — Black American brilliance built the modern world. Yet, for generations, these inventors were written out of the very history they shaped.

In We Invented This [BEEP], historian T’Malkia Zuri digs deep into newspaper archives, patents, and firsthand records to uncover the receipts — the documented proof that Black Americans were not merely laborers but innovators, engineers, and creators of systems that revolutionized everyday life.

This volume is more than a collection of inventions; it’s a restoration of truth. Through original newspaper clippings, commentary, and rare patent evidence, Zuri traces the untold legacy of those who refused to be erased — men and women who turned brilliance into blueprints and vision into value.

We Invented This [BEEP] stands as part of the [BEEP] series — a powerful documentation of how Black Americans built, farmed, founded, and invented the foundations of modern civilization.

🪶 Key Themes:

  • The erased legacy of Black American inventors, engineers, and innovators

  • Patent records that reveal hidden ownership of groundbreaking inventions

  • How stolen ideas and systemic reclassification buried Indigenous Black genius

  • The transformation of necessity into innovation — from agriculture to industry

  • Restoring the true lineage of invention and technological advancement

  • The role of creativity, resistance, and intellect in nation-building

📜 Includes verified patents, archival newspaper articles, and rare documentation proving Black Americans were the original architects of American innovation.

→ Learn More or Order Volume II

🏫 VOLUME III — WE TAUGHT THIS BEEP: The Historical Receipts of Black American Educators, Orators, and Early Schools

We Taught This Beep Cover 11 9 2025

Release Date: February  7, 2025

Before there were universities or school boards, there were our teachers — the ones who gathered children beneath oak trees, in church basements, and one-room cabins to pass on the power of knowing. We Taught This [BEEP] restores the forgotten receipts of Black American educators, orators, and early schools that laid the true foundation of learning in this country.

Through rare newspaper clippings, archival documents, and firsthand accounts, historian T’Malkia Zuri uncovers the history of education built by those once denied it. From the pioneering teachers of the Freedmen’s era to the establishment of independent Negro academies and colleges, this volume traces how Black Americans created entire systems of learning long before they were recognized by the state.

This is not just a book of records — it’s a testimony. A testimony to the minds that refused to be silenced and the communities that built classrooms from faith and willpower. Every article, photograph, and commentary reclaims the truth that Black Americans were not just students in America’s story — they were its first teachers.

We Taught This [BEEP] stands as part of the [BEEP] historical series — documenting the builders, inventors, farmers, and educators who formed the intellectual, physical, and spiritual backbone of this nation.

🪶 Key Themes:

  • The rise of independent Black schools and educators before public education

  • Teachers, orators, and scholars who built systems of learning from the ground up

  • The role of the church, mutual aid societies, and Freedmen academies in early education

  • Reclaiming intellect as inheritance — restoring the Black American blueprint of knowledge

  • Education as liberation and resistance to reprogramming

  • The preservation of truth through oral tradition, literacy, and lineage

📜 Includes verified newspaper clippings, archival photographs, and first-person accounts documenting the evolution of Black American education and intellectual freedom.

→ Learn More or Order Volume III

🏛️ VOLUME IV — WE RAN THIS BEEP: The Historical Receipts of Black American Businessmen, Politicians, and Early Black Corporations

Cover of We Ran This Beep, a documented Black American history book featuring archival newspaper text and bold typography.

Release Date: March  26, 2026

Before the corporations, there were cooperatives. Before Wall Street, there were barbershops, newspapers, and insurance firms owned and operated by Black Americans who refused to wait for permission to build. We Ran This [BEEP] uncovers the documented truth of how Black Americans established thriving businesses, political movements, and corporate institutions that fueled local economies and defined self-determination.

Through historical receipts, archival records, and rare newspaper clippings, T’Malkia Zuri reveals the world of early Black entrepreneurs, bankers, and lawmakers who built entire systems of enterprise — often while locked out of America’s mainstream economy. These were the men and women who formed insurance companies, publishing houses, and trade associations; who built wealth, ran cities, and shaped policy long before their stories were erased.

This volume is more than a collection — it’s evidence. Evidence that Black Americans not only labored for the nation’s success but ran the institutions that kept it alive.

We Ran This [BEEP] stands as part of the [BEEP] historical series — documenting the builders, inventors, educators, and visionaries who formed the economic and political backbone of America.

🪶 Key Themes:

  • The rise of early Black-owned businesses, cooperatives, and corporations

  • Political and economic self-governance in post-Reconstruction America

  • How Black Americans built financial systems and local economies from the ground up

  • The legacy of business leagues, publishing houses, and mutual aid societies

  • The transition from labor to leadership — reclaiming control of commerce and policy

  • Economic sovereignty as the foundation of true independence

📜 Includes verified newspaper archives, corporate records, and firsthand accounts revealing how early Black entrepreneurs and politicians shaped America’s economy.

→ Learn More or Order Volume III

    Scroll to Top