Community on the Move for Equality (COME) leader Rev. James Lawson leads a march in Memphis, Tennessee, with a sign reading King Henry we will not turn back on February 26, 1968, during the sanitation workers\u27 strike. King Henry referred to Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb.https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/speccoll-mss-mpressscimitar2/1078/thumbnail.jp
Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb holds a press conference during the sanitation workers strike, February 196...
Thomas Moore, from Detroit, marches outside City Hall in the snow on March 22, 1968, with a sign say...
Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb (circled) and Harry Woodbury among a crowd of striking sanitation workers l...
Community on the Move for Equality (COME) leader Rev. James Lawson leads a march in Memphis, Tenness...
Memphis COME (Community on the Move for Equality) leader Rev. James Lawson on a sidewalk with a pick...
COME (Community on the Move for Equality) leader Rev. James Lawson speaking at a meeting during the ...
Rev. James Lawson, leader of Community on the Move for Equality (COME), at a press conference during...
Rev. James Lawson and Dr. Martin Luther King at a press conference on March 28, 1968, during the san...
Rev. James Lawson, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Rev. Ralph Jackson at a press conference on Marc...
Memphis civil rights leader Rev. James Lawson (left), Southern Christian Leadership Conference assoc...
Memphis religious ministers met with Mayor Henry Loeb on April 5, 1968, during the sanitation worker...
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., locked arm-in-arm with others, marches during the Memphis sanitation wo...
Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb holds a press conference during the sanitation workers strike, February 196...
Thomas Moore, from Detroit, marches outside City Hall in the snow on March 22, 1968, with a sign say...
Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb (circled) and Harry Woodbury among a crowd of striking sanitation workers l...
Community on the Move for Equality (COME) leader Rev. James Lawson leads a march in Memphis, Tenness...
Memphis COME (Community on the Move for Equality) leader Rev. James Lawson on a sidewalk with a pick...
COME (Community on the Move for Equality) leader Rev. James Lawson speaking at a meeting during the ...
Rev. James Lawson, leader of Community on the Move for Equality (COME), at a press conference during...
Rev. James Lawson and Dr. Martin Luther King at a press conference on March 28, 1968, during the san...
Rev. James Lawson, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Rev. Ralph Jackson at a press conference on Marc...
Memphis civil rights leader Rev. James Lawson (left), Southern Christian Leadership Conference assoc...
Memphis religious ministers met with Mayor Henry Loeb on April 5, 1968, during the sanitation worker...
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., locked arm-in-arm with others, marches during the Memphis sanitation wo...
Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb holds a press conference during the sanitation workers strike, February 196...
Thomas Moore, from Detroit, marches outside City Hall in the snow on March 22, 1968, with a sign say...
Memphis Mayor Henry Loeb (circled) and Harry Woodbury among a crowd of striking sanitation workers l...