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- Tooth Themed Wall Clock Used in Dr. Sullivan Jackson's Dental Office, Selma, Alabama - Dr. Sullivan Jackson practiced dentistry for forty years in Selma, Alabama. He moved to Selma after graduating from Meharry Medical College, a prestigious Black medical school in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1952. Jackson became an active member of the Selma community. This tooth-shaped clock adorned a wall of his dental office in the years before his retirement in the early 1990s.

- circa 1980
- Collections - Artifact
Tooth Themed Wall Clock Used in Dr. Sullivan Jackson's Dental Office, Selma, Alabama
Dr. Sullivan Jackson practiced dentistry for forty years in Selma, Alabama. He moved to Selma after graduating from Meharry Medical College, a prestigious Black medical school in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1952. Jackson became an active member of the Selma community. This tooth-shaped clock adorned a wall of his dental office in the years before his retirement in the early 1990s.
- Chair Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama -

- 1955-1959
- Collections - Artifact
Chair Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama
- I.B.P.O.E.W., "Pride of Alabama" Lodge 1170" Fez, Selma, Alabama -

- 1955-1960
- Collections - Artifact
I.B.P.O.E.W., "Pride of Alabama" Lodge 1170" Fez, Selma, Alabama
- Baby Dress Worn by Jawana Jackson, Selma, Alabama -

- circa 1961
- Collections - Artifact
Baby Dress Worn by Jawana Jackson, Selma, Alabama
- Dish Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama -

- 1910-1920
- Collections - Artifact
Dish Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama
- Sofa Bed Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama -

- 1950-1960
- Collections - Artifact
Sofa Bed Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama
- Voting Rights Marchers Walking toward the Alabama Capitol Building, Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965 - Carl Benkert, Jr. (1922-2010) was an industrial engineer from Michigan who traveled to Selma, Alabama in March of 1965 to participate in the Voting Rights Movement. He brought his camera and tape recorders to document his experience in Alabama, capturing images and songs over the course of ten days. Benkert's recordings were released in an album later that same year.

- March 25, 1965
- Collections - Artifact
Voting Rights Marchers Walking toward the Alabama Capitol Building, Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965
Carl Benkert, Jr. (1922-2010) was an industrial engineer from Michigan who traveled to Selma, Alabama in March of 1965 to participate in the Voting Rights Movement. He brought his camera and tape recorders to document his experience in Alabama, capturing images and songs over the course of ten days. Benkert's recordings were released in an album later that same year.
- People Waving from a House during the Voting Rights March, Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965 - Carl Benkert, Jr. (1922-2010) was an industrial engineer from Michigan who traveled to Selma, Alabama in March of 1965 to participate in the Voting Rights Movement. He brought his camera and tape recorders to document his experience in Alabama, capturing images and songs over the course of ten days. Benkert's recordings were released in an album later that same year.

- March 25, 1965
- Collections - Artifact
People Waving from a House during the Voting Rights March, Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965
Carl Benkert, Jr. (1922-2010) was an industrial engineer from Michigan who traveled to Selma, Alabama in March of 1965 to participate in the Voting Rights Movement. He brought his camera and tape recorders to document his experience in Alabama, capturing images and songs over the course of ten days. Benkert's recordings were released in an album later that same year.
- Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King with the Voting Rights Marchers, Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965 - Carl Benkert, Jr. (1922-2010) was an industrial engineer from Michigan who traveled to Selma, Alabama in March of 1965 to participate in the Voting Rights Movement. He brought his camera and tape recorders to document his experience in Alabama, capturing images and songs over the course of ten days. Benkert's recordings were released in an album later that same year.

- March 25, 1965
- Collections - Artifact
Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King with the Voting Rights Marchers, Montgomery, Alabama, March 25, 1965
Carl Benkert, Jr. (1922-2010) was an industrial engineer from Michigan who traveled to Selma, Alabama in March of 1965 to participate in the Voting Rights Movement. He brought his camera and tape recorders to document his experience in Alabama, capturing images and songs over the course of ten days. Benkert's recordings were released in an album later that same year.
- Dresser Used by Jawana Jackson, Selma, Alabama -

- circa 1958
- Collections - Artifact
Dresser Used by Jawana Jackson, Selma, Alabama