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On March 25, 1965, the historic Selma to Montgomery March concluded with 25,000 people listening to Martin Luther King in his “Not Long, How Long?” speech at the Alabama state Capitol.
By Tuesday, when even the television cameramen began to lose interest, the march ... Selma who does not know that there will be other walks on other days. There are easier ways to get to Montgomery.
The marathon continues. Last month marked the 60th anniversary of the 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery. That year, ...
He is part of the "This Side of the Bridge" celebrations happening in Montgomery on March 21-23. It's the culmination of the ...
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The historic Selma to Montgomery, Alabama marches for voting rights in 1965 trace to a critical but often overlooked piece of history: The Jackson Home. The modest Selma residence, once the home ...
Daviess County resident and self-proclaimed amateur historian, Victor Hollowell, along with his wife Cathy Sue Hollowell, took a trip to Alabama in July of 2018 to see several of the historic sights ...
If you have images in your head of Bloody Sunday in Selma, or the Selma-to-Montgomery march that ended at the State Capitol on this day 60 years ago, there’s a good chance they were formed ...
Civil rights marchers arrive at the Alabama State Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama after a 50 mile march from Selma to protest race discrimination in voter registration. Together the two states were ...