[Civil rights]
1 drawing on layered paper board : crayon, ink, blue pencil, and white out over pencil. | Cartoon shows a bowling ball, identified as "Civil Rights," leaning against a bowling pin, labeled "Senate." The civil rights bowling ball has already knocked down the House pin, but cannot budge the Senate pin, which is nailed to the floor. The Senate bowling pin scowls at the...
Contributor:
Mauldin, Bill
Date:1964
Photo, Print, Drawing
Civil rights demo.
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 28.0 x 35.6 cm (mat) | Photograph shows Jackie Robinson and others leading a large civil rights march in San Francisco. The sign supporting William Scranton represents the marchers objection to Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater.
Contributor:
Johnson, David S.
Date:1962
Photo, Print, Drawing
Civil rights hootenanny
1 photographic print. | Photograph shows participants in the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom singing and waving their hands.
Contributor:
O'Halloran, Thomas J. - White House News Photographers Association
Date:1963
Photo, Print, Drawing
Civil rights march
1 photographic print. | Photograph shows young white couple with baby participating in the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom at the Lincoln Monument.
Contributor:
White House News Photographers Association - Routt, Randolph J.
Date:1963
Photo, Print, Drawing
Senate. Civil rights debate Gallery /
1 drawing : crayon ; sheet 46 x 61 cm. | Sketch shows people listening to debate on Civil Rights Act in the U.S. Capitol.
Contributor:
Brodie, Howard
Date:1964
Photo, Print, Drawing
Summit Conference on Civil Rights
1 photographic print. | Civil rights leaders seated around table (from left) Bayard Rustin, Jack Greenberg, Director of Counsel of NAACP Educational & Legal Defense Fund; Whitney Young, Jr., Director of the National Urban League; James Farmer, National Director of CORE; Roy Wilkins, NAACP Executive Secretary; Dr. Martin Luther King; John Lewis, Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and A. Philip Randolph, Chairman...
Date:1964
Web Archive
Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights (CCCR)
The Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights (CCCR) is committed to the revitalization of a progressive civil rights agenda at the national level. Website. electronic | Electronic (Form).
Contributor:
Citizens' Commission on Civil Rights (U.S.)
Contributor:
Crockett, Gib - Washington Star Syndicate
Date:1966
Photo, Print, Drawing
Confer on civil rights march
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7 3/16 x 9 1/8 in. | Leaders of the 1963 March on Washington (l to r) Bayard Rustin, Asa Philip Randolph, and Dr. John Morsell holding a press conference in the New York headquarters.
Gallery spectators Senate civil rights filibuster /
1 drawing : crayon ; sheet 46 x 61 cm. | Sketch shows the a nun and an African American woman in the gallery of the U.S. Capitol during the filibuster of the Civil Rights Act.
Contributor:
Brodie, Howard
Date:1964
Photo, Print, Drawing
Sen. Strom Thurmond Civil rights filibuster /
1 drawing : crayon ; sheet 46 x 61 cm. | Sketch shows Senator Strom Thurmond alone on the floor of the U.S. Capitol during the debate on the Civil Rights Act.
Contributor:
Brodie, Howard
Date:1964
Photo, Print, Drawing
Sen. Dirksen press conference Civil rights debate /
1 drawing : crayon ; sheet 46 x 61 cm. | Sketch shows Senator Everett Dirksen speaking to members of the press, including May Craig, on the Civil Rights Act in the U.S. Capitol.
Contributor:
Brodie, Howard
Date:1964
Photo, Print, Drawing
Demand withdrawal of civil rights program
1 photographic print. | Senator J. Howard McGrath (seated), Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, meeting with governors (l-r) Ben T. Laney, of Arkansas, R. Gregg Cherry, of North Carolina, William P. Lane, Jr., of Maryland, J. Strom Thurmond, of South Carolina, and B.H. Jester, of Texas, to "air their grievances against President Truman's civil rights program."
Date:1948
Photo, Print, Drawing
"Yes, we did discuss civil rights!"
1 drawing : India ink, graphite, and opaque white over graphite underdrawing ; 41 x 32.5 cm (sheet) | Editorial cartoon shows President Lyndon B. Johnson with his arm around the shoulders of Senator Richard B. Russell, both are bruised, their clothes torn and tattered, they are surrounded by reporters as they emerge from a meeting where they "did discuss civil rights."