Creator

Rodger Mallison

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Identifier

10019711

Description

Holy Trinity Catholic Seminary students are seen protesting a Ku Klux Klan march, holding signs that read "God Doesn't Look at a Man's Color, Why Should We?" and "As You Do to the Least of my Brothers, That You Do Unto Me." The march was led by Nation Knights of the Ku Klux Klan members Addie Barlow Frazier and Grand Dragon Earl Hawkins in downtown Dallas, Texas on November 3, 1979. About 50 Klansmen began the march at Commerce and Harwood streets but ended abruptly when Dallas police herded the Klan into the basement of the Dallas County Courthouse when it appeared violence might occur between the protesters and the Klan. After the Klan march, an estimated 2,500 anti-Klan protesters, calling themselves the Coalition for Human Dignity, marched through the downtown area. Dallas activist groups, such as the Mexican-American Brown Berets and the East Dallas Bois D'Arc Patriots, were in force in the march, which also attracted Catholic theology students, feminists, representatives of the gay community, and many others.

Archival Date

1979-11-03

Collection Name

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection

Collection Number

AR406-6 11/04/1979 #7284 [Env. 6, Frame 11]

Original Format

Negatives, Black & White

File Format

JPG

Rights

Rights held by The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, Special Collections. Any use of content downloaded or printed from this page is limited to non-commercial personal or educational use, including fair use as directed by U.S. copyright laws. For more information or for reproduction requests, please contact UTA Special Collections by emailing spcoref@uta.edu.

Subjects

Protest and social movements; Seminarians; Race relations

Subjects

Protest and social movements; Seminarians; Race relations

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