Living Legacy Project
  • Home
  • Living Legacy Pilgrimages
    • 2023 Summer Signature Pilgrimage
    • LLP Blog
    • LLP Photo Tour
  • Virtual Programs
    • 2023 Spring Education Series >
      • Reflections on the Movement with Dr. Steve Schwerner
      • The State of Voting Rights Today
      • The Music of the Labor Movement
    • 2022 Speaking Truth: Countering Disinformation About Racial History >
      • Critical Race Theory
      • The 1619 Project
      • Medical Racism
    • 2022 Spring Music & History Series >
      • A View from the Bridge
      • Wharlest and Exerlena Jackson
      • Gullah Geechee Culture in Song and Story
    • 2021 Two Routes >
      • Pivotal Events of the American Civil Rights Movement >
        • Speaker 1: The Music of Civil Rights
        • Speaker 2: Montgomery Bus Boycott
        • Speaker 3: Freedom Rides and Freedom Summer: The Movement in Mississippi
        • Speaker 4: Selma Voting Rights Movement
      • Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn me 'Round: Music of Civil Rights and Social Change >
        • Music 1: ​We Shall Overcome: Music from Civil Rights Movement Mass Meeting
        • Music 2: Soundtrack of Social Change: Writing Songs of Protest and Justice
        • Music 3: Protest Music: Songs in Action
        • Music 4: Sankofa: The Musical Legacy of Protest
    • 2020 Voting Rights: The Struggle Continues
  • Donate
  • Thirty Days of Hope
  • Resources
    • Marching in the Arc of Justice >
      • Workshops and Special Presentations
    • Reading
    • Films
    • Links
  • About LLP
    • Leadership
    • Contact Us
    • Participant Agreement

The Alabama Living Legacy Pilgrimage March 20-24, 2019 is SOLD OUT!

12/20/2018

0 Comments

 
March 20-24, 2019, we'll be traveling to Alabama for a four-day Living Legacy Pilgrimage. We'll gather in Birmingham and visit the historic 16th Street Baptist Church, the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth's Bethel Baptist Church, and the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. 

In Montgomery, we'll visit Maya Lin's Civil Rights Memorial at the Southern Poverty Law Center. We'll see where The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. led his congregation and where the Selma to Montgomery March ended at the steps of the Alabama State Capitol building, and where Mrs. Rosa Parks chose to sit on a bus sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott, one of the most effective boycotts ever instigated.

Included in out visit to Montgomery is the newly opened Legacy Museum: From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration and The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, otherwise known as the Lynching Memorial. 

We'll then visit Selma, where Bloody Sunday, Turn-around Tuesday, the death of Unitarian Universalist minister James Reeb, and finally the successful Selma to Montgomery March changed the course of history, although not before another Unitarian Universalist, Viola Liuzzo died at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan. 

From there, we'll travel to Marion, Alabama, where Jimmie Lee Jackson was killed by a state police officer, and the idea for the Selma to Montgomery March was born as mourners considered marching Jimmie Lee's body to the state capitol in Montgomery. 

Don't miss this important Pilgrimage!
0 Comments

Registration is open for the Alabama Living Legacy Pilgrimage March 20-24, 2019! Register today!

12/6/2018

1 Comment

 
March 20-24, 2019, we'll be traveling to Alabama for a four-day Living Legacy Pilgrimage. We'll gather in Birmingham and visit the historic 16th Street Baptist Church, the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth's Bethel Baptist Church, and the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. 

In Montgomery, we'll visit Maya Lin's Civil Rights Memorial at the Southern Poverty Law Center. We'll see where The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. led his congregation and where the Selma to Montgomery March ended at the steps of the Alabama State Capitol building, and where Mrs. Rosa Parks chose to sit on a bus sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott, one of the most effective boycotts ever instigated. Included in our visit to Montgomery is the newly opened Legacy Museum: From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration and The National Memorial for Peace and Justice, otherwise known as the Lynching Memorial. 

We'll visit Selma, where Bloody Sunday, Turn-around Tuesday, the death of Unitarian Universalist minister James Reeb, and finally the successful Selma to Montgomery March changed the course of history, although not before another Unitarian Universalist, Viola Liuzzo died at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan. 

From there, we'll travel to Marion, Alabama, where Jimmie Lee Jackson was killed by a state police officer, and the idea for the Selma to Montgomery March was born as mourners considered marching Jimmie Lee's body to the state capitol in Montgomery. 

Don't miss this important Pilgrimage!

MORE INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION
Picture
EJI National Memorial for Peace and Justice, Montgomery, Alabama
1 Comment

    Author

    This blog is written by the staff and participants of the Living Legacy Pilgrimage.

    Archives

    August 2021
    January 2021
    June 2020
    May 2020
    March 2020
    October 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    January 2017
    November 2016
    September 2013
    October 2012
    February 2009

    Categories

    All
    2009 LLP
    2012 LLP
    2012 LLP
    2013 LLP
    2016 LLP
    2019 LLP
    Birmingham
    Current Topics
    Living Legacy Project News
    Marion
    Montgomery
    Racial History
    Selma
    Testimonial
    Voter Disenfranchisement
    Voting Rights
    Voting Rights
    Women

    RSS Feed

Living Legacy Project, Inc.: Learning from the past to build for the future
© 2010-2025. Living Legacy Project. All Rights Reserved.