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Morehouse
King Collection
Through
the efforts of a group of prominent Atlantans, a 10,000-piece
collection of handwritten notes and unpublished sermons
of Martin Luther King Jr. ’48 narrowly avoided the
auction block and will now make its home at Morehouse College,
alma mater of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate whose drum
majoring for peace and justice was first ignited here
The
coveted collection, which has been called the most valuable
collection in private hands, was slated to be auctioned
at Sotheby's on June 30th. Several institutions, from the
Smithsonian, to the Schomburg Center for Research in Black
Culture, the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
at the New York Historical Society, Boston University and
others were interested in the papers.
On Friday,
June 23 at about 9:30 p.m. the auction was averted by a
deal spearheaded by Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin and several
public and private entities. The $32-million deal paves
the way for the papers to reside permanently in the city
where King was born and the Civil Rights Movement was anchored.
More specifically, the papers will be owned by Morehouse,
where they will be made available for research, public access
and exhibits.
The
people who taught and mentored King while at Morehouse shaped
his philosophies and theories--which in turn helped shape
the man and the movement. Morehouse College is proud to
be a part of this effort to protect and preserve America’s
history.
Check this site often for up-to-date information regarding
the historic acquisition of the King Papers.
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