In May
1963, following a long history of local activism, Los Angeles was the site of
the Freedom Rally, the largest civil rights demonstration in the city to
date. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke before a crowd of nearly forty
thousand at Wrigley Field. He addressed the question of how Angelenos could
contribute to the civil rights movement: "The most important thing that you
can do is to set Los Angeles free, because you have segregation and
discrimination here, and police brutality."
In Marching West, authors
Karin L. Stanford and Mark Speltz tell dynamic stories from the civil rights
era in Los Angeles and explore how photography played an integral role in advancing the fight for
Black equality. The extraordinary photographs in this book reveal the ties
between the local and national movements and document the protests and
activism of Western coalitions, religious leaders, and Hollywood stars. With
stunning images from the Tom & Ethel Bradley Center and other Southern
California collections-including prints by Harry Adams, Vera Jackson, and
Charles Williams-this unprecedented volume memorializes the struggle for
civil rights in Los Angeles.
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