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"Selma to Montgomery: A March for the Right to Vote -- Photographs by Spider Martin" is on view through June 28 at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute.
More than three thousand people joined Dr. Martin Luther King on a march escorted by U.S. Army troops from Selma to Montgomery Alabama, becoming one of the most iconic moments in Civil Rights history.
Such was the case with a recently discovered envelope from the archives of The Huntsville Times. The envelope contained photographic negatives from the historic Selma to Montgomery Civil Rights ...
Armed National Guard Military Police observing the Selma-to-Montgomery march through the outskirts of Montgomery on March 25, 1965. Photo by Loy Williams, courtesy of Southern Methodist University ...
65 photographs by Spider Martin on view now through June 1, 2025, at the the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts reveal an intimate, first-hand perspective of the Selma to Montgomery March in its ...
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery Civil Rights March, a five-day protest that drew more than 25,000 marchers and changed the course of civil rights in America.
Spider Martin’s work documenting the march from Selma to Montgomery is on display at the Levine through February 22. Archival audio for this story came from Pacifica Radio Archives. Tags ...
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The landmark voting rights march from Selma to Montgomery in 1965 didn’t happen in just one day: Participants spent four nights camping along the roughly 55-mile (89 ...
Much of his archive from those monumental Selma protests have been newly restored and is now on display at The Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, in time for the 60th anniversary of Bloody Sunday.
The 1965 civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery was a watershed moment in the fight for Black Americans’ voting rights, but wouldn’t have been possible without a few helping hands along ...
The cities of Selma and Montgomery will soon commemorate the 60th anniversary of the voting rights marches.
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