A gripping middle-grade history that offers a fresh look at the
groundbreaking 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom by
spotlighting the protest's radical roots and the underappreciated role
of Black women--includes a wealth of contemporary black-and-white photos
throughout.
Six decades ago, on August 28, 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
delivered his iconic "I Have a Dream" speech during the March on
Washington for Jobs and Freedom--a moment often revered as the
culmination of this Black-led protest. But at its core, the March on
Washington was not a beautiful dream of future integration; it was a
mass outcry for jobs and freedom NOW--not at some undetermined point in
the future. It was a revolutionary march with its own controversies and
problems, the themes of which still resonate to this day.
Without diminishing the words of Dr. King, More Than a Dream looks at
the march through a wider lens, using Black newspaper reports as a
primary resource, recognizing the overlooked work of socialist
organizers and Black women protesters, and repositioning this momentous
day as radical in its roots, methods, demands, and results. From Yohuru
Williams and Michael G. Long, the acclaimed authors of Call Him Jack,
comes a classic-in-the-making that will transform our modern
understanding of this legendary event in the fight for racial justice
and civil rights.