Itching to learn more about the activism of womyn of color at Brown University since the 1960s? Look no further than A People’s Herstory of Womyn of Color at Brown, an archive created by spring 2014 students Sarah Day Dayon ’15, Kendra Cornejo ’15, Hector Peralta ’16, and Julmar Carcedo ’16. This rich archive includes eight interviews with Brown alumnae over the past forty years (all conducted by the students themselves), news articles from the Brown Daily Herald, letters from students to administrators, meeting minutes, and more. Influenced by our course readings, especially by Michel-Rolph Trouillot’s warning against silences in archives, these students compiled a huge amount of data to address a gap in Brown’s institutional memory of the activism of womyn of color over the ages. They chose their words carefully to create a space that rejects the master narratives of history and of activism at Brown (see the video below for the origin of the term “women of color”). For that reason, this project has been double-categorized as a resource for anyone interested in reading gender and activism against the grain.