Publisher Description
Following the Supreme Court ruling in 1954 striking down the “separate but equal” doctrine, a decade and a half of civil turbulence existed. Civil rights activists used nonviolent protest and civil disobedience to bring about change. This product tells a part of that historic time with speeches from many of those attempting to achieve racial equality.
Produced by the Speech Resource Company and fully narrated by Robert Wikstrom
- Martin Luther King Jr., Montgomery Bus Boycott, 6/5/1956
- President John F. Kennedy, Civil Rights Address to the Nation, 6/11/1963
- Martin Luther King Jr., Civil Rights Rally Address, 5/16/1963
- March on Washington, 8/28/63, Philip Randolph, John Lewis, Daisy Bates, Bayard Rustin
- Malcolm X, Message to the Grass Roots, 1/23/1963
- Andrew Young, Reflections on MLK and Malcolm X
- President Lyndon Johnson, Signing Civil Rights Bill, 7/2/1964
- James Farmer, Speech on Poverty, 10/15/1965
- Roy Wilkins, Address at UCLA, 12/2/1965
- Martin Luther King Jr., National Health Care Workers Address, 3/10/1968
- Martin Luther King Jr., “Been to the Mountaintop,” 4/3/1968
- Robert F. Kennedy, Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., 4/4/1968
- Coretta Scott King, Reflections on Civil Rights Movement
- Stokley Carmichael, Civil Rights Rally Address
- Ella Baker, “Life is more sacred than property,” 4/24/1968
- Angela Davis, Address at UCLA, 10/8/1969
- Ralph Abernathy, Committee for Economic Opportunity, 8/15/1987
- Nelson Mandela, Address to Joint Session of Congress, 6/26/1990
- Rosa Parks, Speech at the Million Man March, 10/16/1995
- Dorothy Height, Human Rights Campaign, 11/8/1997
- Desmond Tutu, “Reconciling Love,” 11/4/2005
- Julian Bond, Speech at National Equality March, 10/11/2009
- Roy Innis, Receiving John M. Ashbrook Award, 2/18/2010
- Jesse Jackson, Fiftieth Anniversary of March on Washington, 8/29/2013
- President Barack Obama, Civil Rights Summit, 4/10/2014
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About Robert Wikstrom
Robert Wikstrom is a historian with a professional background in radio and television broadcasting. He founded the Speech Resource Company operating out of Olympia, Washington. He also owns SoundWorks, a spoken word publisher located in Seattle.
www.HistoricMomentsInSpeech.com