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Martin Luther King, Jr. Wall Poster
“I have a dream...”
available at-
Art.com
AllPosters.com
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Martin Luther King, Jr. S-Litho
“Non-violent protest is the most effective weapon of an oppressed people.”
available at-
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Art.com
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Heroes of the 20th Century
Martin Luther King Poster
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”
available at-
AllPosters.com
Art.com
• more Heroes of the 20th Century posters
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Crossroads of Dreams, Poster
available at-
AllPosters.com
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Martin Luther King Jr.
b. 1-15-1929; Atlanta, GA
d. 4-4-1968; Memphis, TN
Martin Luther King, Jr. was a nam who symbolized peace, nonviolence, and love ofr all human beings. Yet during his short life, he was often a victim of hatred and violence. And it was an act of terrible violence that finally ended his life in 1968. Today, Martin Luther King is one of only three Americans whose birthdays are celebrated as national holidays. And the other two were U.S. Presidents.
Martin Luther King was born in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1929. His father was a minister at a local Baptist church, and Martin grew up surrounded by religion and listening to his father's powerful voice. Later in life, he imitated this speaking style in his emotional speeches. Martin was such a good student that he was able to skip the 9th and 12th grades. He entered Morehouse College in Atlanta at the age of 15 and began studying to be a minister. After his schooling, King got a job as pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. In 1958, a black woman in Montgomery named Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white passenger. Martin Luther King helped organize and lead a boycott of the Montgomery buses. This marked the beginning of Reverend King's long fight against prejudice and discrimination.
Martin Luther King believed that the nonviolent tactics of leaders like India's Mohandas Gandhi were the best way to work for change. He lead many protest marches and demostrations calling for equal rights for blacks. In 1963, he lead a huge march on Washington, D.C. that drew more than 200,000 people. There, he delivered his now-famous "I Have A Dream" speech. In 1964, Rev. King was awared the Nobel Peace Prize for his work to gain equality for black and his efforts to help the poor. In 1968, while in Memphis to help striking workers, Martin Luther King was assassinated by a white man named James Earl Ray. On his grave are words he spoke at the 1963 March on Washington: "Free at last, free at last, thank God Almighty, I'm free at last."
• more Nobel Peace Prize Winners Posters
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Martin Luther King, Jr.
TIME, February 18, 1957
available at-
barewalls.com
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Martin Luther King, Jr.
TIME Magazine Man of the Year
January 3, 1964
available at-
barewalls.com
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Martin Luther King, Jr.
TIME, March 19, 1965
available at-
barewalls.com
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Martin Luther King, Jr.
Rolling Stone, April 7, 1988
available at-
barewalls.com
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Martin Luther King, Jr.
March of Washington
National Archives
available at-
barewalls.com
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Civil Rights Leaders
National Archives
available at-
barewalls.com
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