StarTribune.com
king011507.papers

Home | Lifestyle | Faith + Values

King-papers exhibit open to diverse crowd

Last update: January 15, 2007 - 11:22 AM

ATLANTA — As the Atlanta History Center opened Monday for the first public exhibition of Martin Luther King Jr.'s papers since they were returned to his hometown, people walk in, hushed and quiet, and filed past King's sermons, notes and books.

Bertis Post, 70, of Atlanta said a prayer as she waited to be admitted into the dimly lit exhibit hall. The retired nurse said she marched with King in Alabama and Atlanta, and the exhibit brought back many difficult memories.

"I remember a lot that I don't care to say,'' she said. "I always wanted to see the papers in person — just to be here and be around what you believe.''

Post said she was especially happy to see the many parents who brought young children to the exhibit.

One such parent was Mekia Gravett, a 25-year-old mother of two from Villa Rica, west of Atlanta. She said she wanted to teach her children about King so they would understand that things weren't always as easy as they are today and would appreciate those who helped pave the way.

"I want them to know where they come from; now it's just part of history books,'' said the dental student. Gravett said she especially wanted her 8-year-old daughter to see all the books King read, and appreciate the importance of education.

Nearby, Derrick Byrd, who brought his 8-year-old twins to the exhibit, was entering some of the titles from King's collection into his BlackBerry so he would remember to add them to his reading list.

One of his daughters, Moriah, said she wanted to read a book that King read: "To Be Equal'' by Whitney Young.

The exhibit, which opened on what would have been King's 78th birthday, includes King's letter from Birmingham jail, an early draft of King's famous speech "I Have A Dream,'' his acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize, and more than 600 of his other personal documents.

The exhibit is a glimpse at a portion of the collection of more than 10,000 King papers and books that Mayor Shirley Franklin helped acquire for the city for $32 million from Sotheby's auction house last summer. More than 50 corporate, government and private donors pitched in to give the papers to Atlanta's Morehouse College, where King graduated in 1948 with a bachelor's degree in sociology.

The exhibit will remain at the history center through May 13. The papers will then be housed at the Robert W. Woodruff Library on the campus of the Atlanta University Center, which includes Morehouse College.

———

On The Net:

"I Have A Dream'' Exhibit: http://www.atlantahistorycenter.com/template.cfm?cid=779

Recent Faith + Values stories

Vatican says restoration of frescoes may have revealed Michelangelo self-portrait - January 15, 2007
Vatican says restoration of frescoes may have revealed Michelangelo self-portrait - The restoration of Michelangelo's frescoes in the Vatican's Pauline Chapel may have produced a special prize — a previously unknown self-portrait of the artist. More

Comment on this story   |   Be the first to comment   |  Hide reader comments

Subscribe
Your Photos and Video

Share photos and videos now

View Finder

Blue water and blue sky...beautiful day.

See thousands of photos from other StarTribune.com readers and share your own photos and video today.

Shopping + Classifieds
Dog Classified

New Home Wanted

Hundreds of puppies and dogs seeking new homes. Find one now!

Win tickets to see The Hidden Cameras with Gentlemen Reg at 7th Street Entry.

Vita.mn presents The Hidden Cameras with Gentlemen Reg at 7th Street Entry on Dec. 2.

See all contests