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Civil Rights Movement Leadership: Martin Luther King Jr at Washington National Cathedral Days Before Assassination, 1968

Civil Rights Movement Leadership: Martin Luther King Jr at Washington National Cathedral Days Before Assassination, 1968 by Martin Luther King Sermon Before Assassination

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Details
$1,400.00
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Seller: Max Rambod Inc.
Title
Civil Rights Movement Leadership: Martin Luther King Jr at Washington National Cathedral Days Before Assassination, 1968
Author
Martin Luther King Sermon Before Assassination
Seller
Max Rambod Inc. (United States)
Description
1968. King, Martin Luther, Jr., original silver gelatin press photograph taken March 31, 1968 in Washington, D.C., documents his appearance at Washington National Cathedral to deliver the sermon "Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution," four days before his assassination in Memphis on April 4, 1968. The image shows King on the Cathedral grounds with Dean Francis B. Sayre, Jr. and a Capitol Police officer, situating the civil rights leader within a major Episcopal institution at a moment of national crisis marked by debates over civil rights, poverty, and the Vietnam War. Sayre, an outspoken supporter of the movement who had marched in the 1965 Selma to Montgomery voting rights march, invited King to preach what would become his final Sunday sermon, linking the pulpit of the National Cathedral to the broader moral and political struggle for racial justice. Silver gelatin press photograph, Washington, D.C., March 31, 1968. Image measures approximately 4.5 x 4 inches. King appears in a dark suit and tie; Sayre wears a suit with clerical collar. The two men stand outdoors on the Cathedral lawn accompanied by a uniformed Capitol Police officer. Red editorial markings appear in the margins and along the periphery of the image, indicating press handling and layout preparation. Created within days of King's assassination, the photograph captures the intersection of religious leadership and civil rights advocacy at the highest levels of American public life. Sayre, grandson of President Woodrow Wilson, used his position to denounce segregation, McCarthyism, poverty, and the Vietnam War, aligning the Cathedral with the movement's national moral critique. Minor yellow toning visible in portions of the background foliage; light press markings consistent with newsroom use; image remains sharp and clear. Overall very good condition. Historically proximate visual record of King's final public sermon and his alliance with religious leadership in Washington.
PHIL SPECTOR, MERV GRIFFIN [ca. 1965-66] Photo

PHIL SPECTOR, MERV GRIFFIN [ca. 1965-66] Photo by Np

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Details
$75.00
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Seller: Walterfilm, Inc.
Title
PHIL SPECTOR, MERV GRIFFIN [ca. 1965-66] Photo
Author
Np
Seller
Walterfilm, Inc. (United States)
Condition
Near Fine
Description
Np. No binding. Near Fine. New York: Np, [ca. 1965-66]. Vintage original 8 x 10" (20 x 25 cm) black-and-white photo. Photo agency sticker and traces of glue (not visible on front) clearly showing printed snipe was once attached, slight crease in extreme upper top, near fine. Phil Spector made a few appearances on The Merv Griffin Show in 1965, and there was one 1966 appearance in which he got into a heated argument with his host.