Martin Luther King Jr.'s iconic 1963 "I Have a Dream" speech is well known, but there are several other key speeches that also resonate as historical signposts of the Civil Rights Movement.
The letter in Wichita shows an early draft that might have informed some of the civil rights leader's most famous speeches.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” address at 1963’s March on Washington is perhaps the most famous speech in American history. But fewer people remember the man behind King’s dream ...
King spoke at Hofstra the year after he won the Nobel Peace Prize and just months after "Bloody Sunday" in Selma, Alabama.
McGovern combined the words and actions of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., with the division being sown today by the Trump ...
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered earlier versions of his speech at Oakwood University in Huntsville and Hampton House in ...
Dallas ISD students performed speeches inspired by Martin Luther King Jr. Blen Teklu, a Preston Hollow Elementary student, ...
HISD students gave poignant speeches on Martin Luther King Jr.'s messages of hope at the annual MLK Day competition.
On Martin Luther King Jr. Day, his powerful words from the "I Have a Dream" speech resonate as a call to action. The "Quote of the Day" from 1963 urges a move from segregation's darkness to racial ...