Montgomery Mayor Steven Reed announced the removal of two billboards with the words "Make America Great Again" displayed over ...
The Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, which has an upcoming exhibit on the Selma march, placed the billboard ad.
The words “Make America Great Again” were emblazoned across the image, drawing parallels to the blatant violence of the Jim ...
The organization that created the billboard that juxtaposed Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan over a photo of state troopers confronting civil rights marchers in Selma 60 years ago ...
Thirty six years ago today, during the 1969-98 Northern Ireland conflict, Belfast human rights lawyer Pat Finucane was shot ...
They came toward us. Beating us with nightsticks, trampled by horses, releasing the tear gas. I thought I was gonna die on ...
He led more than 600 peaceful protestors across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma to march for voting rights. The group was attacked by Alabama State Troopers in what would be known as "Bloody Sunday.
It blended the Republican saying with a 'Bloody Sunday' photo and was funded by Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts. It has since been removed.
The work, designed by the art collective For Freedoms, depicts a photograph from Selma’s Bloody Sunday in 1965 overlaid with Trump’s campaign slogan.