News
Melody Shari and Mayor Steven Reed honored 1965 Selma marchers and today’s justice leaders at a 60th anniversary reception in ...
Some acts of history are worth more than a moment of remembrance — they deserve action. That belief inspired Daviess County ...
Daviess County resident and self-proclaimed amateur historian, Victor Hollowell, along with his wife Cathy Sue Hollowell, took a trip to Alabama in July of 2018 to see several of the historic sights ...
Move It dance show comes to Excel Centre. Photo: Fiona Whyte Photography WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH: March is Women's History Month, when the often-overlooked achievements of women, and particularly ...
The March Madness slate continued Saturday and the Elite Eight is set. Plenty of stars were in action, and Hailey Van Lith captured everybody's attention early on with a dominant outing to lift No ...
He highlights how the Montgomery to Selma march influenced the 1969 Belfast to Derry march, exploring the origins, protests, and key figures that shaped both movements. He joined us in the studio ...
Selma, Alabama's historic Jackson home, where the 1965 Selma voting rights march was planned, has been moved to The Henry Ford's Greenfield Village. The house was cut in half and moved ...
The historic Selma to Montgomery, Alabama marches for voting rights in 1965 trace to a critical but often overlooked piece of history: The Jackson Home. The modest Selma residence, once the home ...
Sixty years ago today the Selma to Montgomery Voting Rights March concluded with Martin Luther King Jr. speaking before a crowd of 25,000 on the steps of the Alabama State Capitol in Montgomery.
On March 25, 1965, the historic Selma to Montgomery March concluded with 25,000 people listening to Martin Luther King in his “Not Long, How Long?” speech at the Alabama state Capitol.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results