Sites tagged "Protests": 37
Sites
Exploring DC’s Go-Go and Punk Music Scenes Tour: Metro PCS, Shaw
Despite the tense relationship between go-go music and city officials throughout the 1980s and 1990s, fans kept the genre alive and well. Private businesses and venues continued to provide a home for the music that had brought so many Washingtonians…
Civil Rights Tour: Recreation - Uline Arena and E.B. Henderson
Uline Arena became the largest venue in the city for sports events when it opened in 1941, but its whites-only policy in an increasingly Black city, and in a neighborhood where many African Americans lived, made it a source of controversy and a site…
Civil Rights Tour: Employment - Marie Richardson, United Federal Workers' Rep
Marie Richardson (1920-1987) became a labor and civil rights activist in the 1930s, while a student at Cardozo High School. Her father handled baggage at Union Station, and together they helped organize the first local union in the country to…
Civil Rights Tour: Protest - Poverty Rights Action Center, Welfare Rights
Poverty/Rights Action Center (P/RAC) opened its offices at 1713 R Street in April 1966 as an organizing base for grassroots activists across the country—mostly poor, Black women determined to ensure that they had a voice in President Lyndon B.…
Civil Rights Tour: Protest - O Street Mansion, Rosa Parks' "Home Away from Home."
The O Street Mansion was the Washington home-away-from-home of civil rights icon Rosa Parks (1913-2005) during her later years. Already a seasoned organizer, activist, and member of the NAACP, Parks helped spark the Civil Rights Movement in 1955 by…
Civil Rights Tour: Protest - National Negro Congress, Demanding Change Through Direct Action
During a campaign to exonerate the Scottsboro Boys—a group of imprisoned Black Alabama youth in danger of being lynched—the local chapter of the National Negro Congress (NNC) held its first mass meeting in DC at Metropolitan Baptist Church (then at…
Civil Rights Tour: Legal Campaigns - NAACP, DC Branch
Established in 1912, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's (NAACP) DC branch was the largest and most influential of some 50 branches across the United States. The group devoted itself to protesting racial discrimination…
Civil Rights Tour: Education - MLK Library, A Living Memorial
Upon its dedication in August 1972, the DC Public Library’s new central branch—designed by famed modernist architect Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe—became one of the first public buildings in the country to be named in honor of the Reverend Dr. Martin…
Civil Rights Tour: Employment - Jewell Mazique, Equal Employment Activist
After receiving a master's in African Studies at Howard University, helping to raise three nieces in her Kalorama home, and working two jobs to put her husband through medical school, Jewell Mazique (1913-2007) quit her clerical position at the…
Civil Rights Tour: Civic Activism - IPS, Home for Radicals
Shortly after it was first established in 1963 as a left-leaning think tank directed by two former Kennedy administration staffers, Marcus Raskin and Richard Barnet, the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) became a hub for civil rights activists,…