“Vivid and moving. . . . [Tells] a story all but lost in most civil rights histories.”—Bill Marvel, Dallas Morning News It was the final speech of a long day, August 28, 1963, when hundreds of thousands gathered on the Mall for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. In a resounding cadence, Martin Luther King Jr. lifted the crowd when he told of his dream that all Americans would join together to realize the founding ideal of equality. The power of the speech created an enduring symbol of the march and the larger civil rights movement. King’s speech still inspires us fifty years later, but its very power has also narrowed our understanding of the march. In this insightful history, William P. Jones restores the march to its full significance. The opening speech of the day was delivered by the leader of the march, the great trade unionist A. Philip Randolph, who first called for a march on Washington in 1941 to press for equal opportunity in employment and the armed forces. To the crowd that stretched more than a mile before him, Randolph called for an end to segregation and a living wage for every American. Equal access to accommodations and services would mean little to people, white and black, who could not afford them. Randolph’s egalitarian vision of economic and social citizenship is the strong thread running through the full history of the March on Washington Movement. It was a movement of sustained grassroots organizing, linked locally to women’s groups, unions, and churches across the country. Jones’s fresh, compelling history delivers a new understanding of this emblematic event and the broader civil rights movement it propelled.
This book draws the connections between King's perceptive thoughts on substantive justice and the ongoing quest for equality for all. “A rich and novel account of the Poor People’s Campaign, King and the Other America challenges common ...
--William P. Jones, author ofThe March on Washington: Jobs, Freedom, and the Forgotten History of Civil Rights
8 For the March on Washington see William P. Jones, The March on Washington, Jobs, Freedom and the Forgotten History of Civil Rights (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 2014); Taylor Branch, Parting the Waters: America During the King ...
Ossie Davis (1917–2005): film, television, and Broadway actor. Medgar Evers (1925–1963, assassinated): Field Secretary for the NAACP in Mississippi, best known for his efforts to overturn segregation at the University of Mississippi.
William Powell Jones, The March on Washington: Jobs, Freedom, and the Forgotten History of Civil Rights (New York: W. W. Norton, 2013), 175. 57. Ibid., 176. 58. Despite pleas from women journalists to join the protest, Randolph and King ...
March on Washington: Jobs, Freedom, and the Forgotten History of Civil Rights. New York: Norton. “The 1911 Triangle Factory Fire.” n.d. Cornell University, http://triangle flre.ilr.cornell.edu/story/introduction.html.
The Sell Out (New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2015). Benedict, Michael Les. A Compromise of Principle (New York: W. W. Norton, 1974). Biondi, Martha. To Stand and Fight: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City ...
William P. Jones, The March on Washington: Jobs, Freedom, and the Forgotten History of Civil Rights (New York: W. W. Norton, 2014). Io. David Lucander, Winning the War for Democracy: The March on Washington Movement, 1941–1946 (Urbana: ...
Clark personally pinned Annie Lee Cooper to the ground and pummeled her with his fists in front of a cameraman. On February 1, King, Abernathy, and over seven hundred demonstrators, many of them schoolchildren, staged a mass protest.
In contrast, many in the North had difficulty even defining the qualities that might render one elite in black communities above the Mason-Dixon line. Joseph Willson, a black southerner who wrote an extended commentary on Philadelphia's ...