Transcription of Civil Rights in America: Racial Voting Rights
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National Park Department of the InteriorNational Historic Landmarks ProgramCivil Rights in America: Racial Voting RightsA National Historic Landmarks Theme Study Cover photograph: NAACP photograph showing people waiting to register to vote, 1948. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, Visual Materials from the NAACP Records [reproduction number: LC-USZ62-122260] Civil Rights IN AMERICA: Racial Voting Rights A National Historic Landmarks Theme Study Prepared by: Susan Cianci Salvatore, Project Manager & Historian, National Conference of State Historic Preservation Officers Consultant Essays prepared by the Organization of American Historians: Neil Foley, Historian Peter Iverson, Historian Steven F.
Aug 25, 2003 · met at the Loyal African Methodist Episcopal Church, popularly known as the Lincoln Church. James Walker Hood, the head of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, presided and called upon the government to provide blacks equal protection of the laws, the franchise, and the right to sit on juries.
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