January 2016 Internet Auction Ends Thursday, January 14th, 5pm Pacific
This lot is closed for bidding. Bidding ended on 1/14/2016
Original transcript of a speech delivered by Martin Luther King, Jr. on 11 November 1959 to Iowa State University. Titled, ''The Future of Integration'', speech discusses the civil rights climate and concludes with MLK's unwavering belief in civil non-violence. Reads in part, ''...to segregate a child on the basis of his race is to deny that child of equal protection of the law. As a result of this decision [Plessy v. Ferguson] we find ourselves standing on the threshold of the third and most constructive period in the development of race relations in the history of our nation...we stand on the border of the promised land of integration...Many public officials are using the power of their offices to defy the law of the land. Through their irresponsible actions, their inflammatory statements, and their dissemination of distortions and half truths, they have succeeded in arousing abnormal fears and morbid antipathies within the minds of underprivileged and uneducated whites, leaving them in such a state of excitement and confusion that they are led to acts of meanness and violence that no normal person would commit. This defiance also expresses itself in the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan...Then there are the White Citizens' Councils. Since they operate on a higher political and economic level than the Klan, a halo of respectability hovers over them. But like the Klan, they are determined to preserve segregation and thereby defy the desegregation rulings of the Supreme Court...These methods also extend to white persons who will dare to take a stand for justice. They demand absolute conformity from whites and abject submission from Negroes...'' 12pp. speech measures 8.5'' x 11''. Staple to top left and minor toning throughout. Very good condition.
Martin Luther King, Jr. ''The Future of Integration'' Speech Delivered in 1959 -- ''...segregation is at bottom a form of slavery covered up with certain niceties of complexity...''
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