Jump to navigation
Home
Advanced search
Browse
About
You are here
Home
›
Browse
›
SEARCH IN
Select Collection
All collections
Poor People's Campaign Collection
1310 Series
1978 Metro Wildcat Strike
A Grassroots Response to a Child Welfare Crisis
ARTS DC: CETA and the Arts in the District of Columbia 1977 – 1982
Administrative Records
African American Artist Community Supports
Anthology of Booty
Antonelli Football Film Collection
Archive This Moment D.C.
Asbury United Methodist Church Oral History Project
Asian American Voices in the Making of Washington, D.C.’s Cultural Landscape
Black Artists in Washington, DC and the Black Lives Matter Movement Oral History Project
Black Artists in Washington, DC and the Black Lives Matter Movement Oral History Project
Black Lives Matter Memorial Fence Artifact Collection
Black Lives Matter Memorial Fence Oral History
Black Lives Matter Memorial Fence Photographs Collection
Blacklight
Building Permits (1877 - Aug. 1884)
Buzzard Point Oral History Project
COVID-19 in Washington, D.C. Twitter Archive
Calendars
Capital Bicycle Club Photograph Collection
Cartes de visite and cabinet card portraits
Center for Inspired Teaching 'Real World History' Oral History Project
Children's Book Project Series
Chinatown Voices
Chip Py Go-Go Collection
Clifford Berryman Cartoon Collection
Collaboration News Magazines
Cora Masters Barry Oral History Project
Creating and Teaching Real World History
D.C. Art Spaces Oral History Project
D.C. Jazz Festival Oral History Project
D.C. Last Colony: Voting Rights and Home Rule
DC Oral History Collaborative
DC Public Library
DC Public Library Archives
DC Public Library Archives Films
DC Public Library Archives Photographs
DC Public Library Archives Publications
DC Public Library Programs and Events
DC Punk Archive
DC Punk Archive Fliers, Posters, and Programs
DC Punk Archive Zine Library
Darrell C. Crain, Jr. Photograph Collection
David Sterman Photograph Collection
Deaf Community Voices in the Heart of Washington, D.C. - Signing a Culture Oral History Project
District of Columbia Building Permits, 1877-1949, and Index, 1877-1958
Don't Mute D.C. Twitter Archive
Downtown Progress Records
Emergency Committee on the Transportation Crisis
Empower D.C. - Barry Farm Oral History Project
Experiments in Housing Organization
Federal City College Oral History Project
Flowers and Families: The Stories of the Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens
Friday Morning Music Club
From Pandemic to Protest: Black Bartenders in Washington, D.C.
Georgetown Ordinances
Globe Performance Posters
Go-Go Museum and Café Collection
HOME/BREWED Oral History Project
Herman Steinberg Photograph Collection
Historic Image Collection
History of the First Latin American Festival on the Mall: 1989-1990
In Tempo Magazines
Index by Square Number (1877 - 1958)
Index by Street Name (1912 - 1958)
Jewish Historical Society Oral History Project
Joseph Owen Curtis Photograph Collection
Julius Hobson Papers on Federal Job Discrimination
Labor Contract and Inventory of Enslaved Persons in Georgetown
Latino Youth Community History Project
Lemon and Mary Hine Correspondence
Let's Talk Hand Dance
Literary Arts Program Magazines
Literary Arts and Urban Journalism Program Collection
Looking for Heroes Series
Mapping Segregation in Washington DC: School and Neighborhood Desegregation in Ward 4
Maps: City & Regional
Maps: Real Estate Plat Books
March on Washington 50th Anniversary Oral History Project
March on Washington Resources
Marshall Heights: Civic Mindedness and Engagement Incarnate, pre-DC Home Rule Oral History Interview
Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia 1968 Riots Documents
Milepost to Self-Government Oral History Project
Mind, Body, and Justice: Health Activists East of the Anacostia River
Mount Pleasant Riot Oral History Project
National Park Service, National Capital Region Photograph Collection
Newton Street/The Cooperative at 1477 and Black Women Warriors
Oral Histories
Oral History of DanceAfrica, D.C.
Over the River and Through the Woods, Longtime Residents and Parklands of Ward 8
Parent/Child Super Hero Series
Political Posters
Potomac Boat Club Collection
Quicksilver Times
Recordings
Reports of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia, 1874-1929
Scrapbooks
Selections from the Damu Smith Papers
Selections from the Washington Star Photo Collection
Service Worker’s Union Local 82 Oral History Project
South of U Oral History Project - Life, Riots, and Renewal in Shaw
St. Mary’s Court Oral History Project - Never Too Old To Learn
Stereoview Photograph Collection
The Brookland Literary And Hunting Club (BLAHC): It’s Not What You Think!
The Davis Center Oral History Project
The Washington Section, National Council of Negro Women Monument or Movement: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
Thomas Sayers Ellis Go-Go Collection
Transgender Histories of D.C.
U Street Oral History Project - D.C.'s Cultural Corridor
Unicorn Times
Voices of The D.C. Fort Totten Storytellers
Washington Blade
Washington City Paper
Washington Community Video Center Collection
Washington Free Press, 1967-1969
Washingtoniana Ephemera Collection
We Are Penn Branch DC
We're Glad You're Here
When Parents United for D.C.'s Public Schools
Where is My Place? Experimental Arts Community Building and Re-Building in Washington, D.C.
Whitman-Walker Health Oral History Project
Willard R. Ross Postcard Collection
Women in the Life
Women of the WIRE: Stories of D.C.’s Formerly Incarcerated Women
Search box
Poor People's Campaign Collection
Grid view
List view
Pages
1
2
next ›
last »
Sit-in Songs
Give us this day our daily bread...
Woman working on encampment structures at Resurrection City
The Lake House temporary housing at Resurrection City
Man walking past Resurrection City encampments
Poor People's Campaign letterhead stationery
Advising: The New City of Hope
'Nothing but Soul' temporary structure at Resurrection City
In Resurrection City songbook
A letter to Friends from DC Jail
The Poor People's Campaign and You
List of worshipers arrested on Capitol steps workshop
Minutes of the Shelters (and Site) committees
Poor People's Campaign and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: a report to Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends, from the Social Order Committee
Action Bulletin No. 8, Poor People's Campaign
Report of the Legislative Committee for the Poor People's Campaign
Summary of the Commission Report and Legislative before Congress
Policy statement on poverty, jobs, and income
True Unity News
True Unity News of Resurrection City, Volume 1, Number 5
Pages
1
2
next ›
last »
Title
Poor People's Campaign Collection
Date Created
1968-01-01
Abstract
The D.C. Public Library’s Poor People's Campaign Collection includes correspondence, promotional materials, memorabilia, newspapers, and song books documenting the 1968 Poor People's Campaign and Resurrection City protest encampment on the National Mall. Notable documents in the collection include original newspapers and songbooks created by the residents of Resurrection City, documentation of actions by local Quakers on behalf of the campaign, and bumper stickers commemorating the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
The Poor People's Campaign was a civil rights movement initiated by Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in spring 1968 to support the efforts of American poor people. The campaign lobbied for economic justice and vital social programs via an Economic Bill of Rights and organized a protest encampment of thousands of poor people on the National Mall, known as Resurrection City, beginning May 21, 1968. Resurrection City had its own university, "soul tent", city hall, and newspaper, two issues of which are included in the collection. The campaign effectively ended on June 24 when the camp was cleared by police following the expiration of SNCC's National Park Service permit. This was King's last major campaign as he was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee on April 4.
The entire Poor People's Campaign collection has been digitized and is available here.
City
Washington, D.C.
Subject
Activists
Demonstrations
Politics and government
Type
Archives
Rights Information
The materials in the collection were created by many different entities. When known, the creator and/or copyright holder of an item is noted but could not be identified for many of the items.