Rep. John Lewis talking with a Somali child during Operation Restore Hope, 1993 (NARA ID 6508426);ย President Barack Obama embracing Rep. John Lewis, 3/7/2015 (NARA ID 157649496);ย Photo of the two-minute warning on Bloody Sunday, March 7, 1965. (NARA ID 16899041);ย John Lewis with President Obama and others at the 50th Anniversary of the Selma March (NARA ID 157649500)
We Remember Civil Rights Legend John Lewisย
There is perhaps no single figure whose own life and career embodies the promise, success, and continued challenges of civil rights for Black Americans than John Lewis. We mourn this tremendous loss and look back on his incredible history through our holdings dating back to the early 1960s, including the March on Washington and theย โBloody Sundayโ Selma March.
Hear Rep. Lewis describe his meeting with JFK before the March on Washington (from hisย Oral History for the JFK Library).
It was in this meeting...ย somehow out of the blue A. Philip Randolph says something like, โMr. President, the black masses are restless,โ in his baritone voice. โThe black masses are restless, and weโre going to march on Washington.โ And you could tell by the body language of President Kennedy, he just sort of moved and twisted and turned in his chair, he didnโt necessarily like what he heard. And he said, โMr. Randolph, if you bring a lot of people to Washington, wonโt there be a crisis, disorder, chaos? And we would never be able to get a civil rights bill through the Congress.โ And Mr. Randolph responded and said, โMr. President, this will be an orderly, peaceful, nonviolent protest.โ And President Kennedy sort of said, โWell, I think weโre going to have problems. But we all have problems, and we can solve those problems.โ
See John Lewis inย The Marchย (film of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, restored by the National Archivesย Motion Picture Preservation Lab). At 23 he was the youngest speaker that day and was the last remaining living speaker.
See also:
FBI Case File #44-28492: Bloody Sunday,ย Rediscovering Black History blog post by archivist Dr. Tina Ligon
Selma, Edmund Pettus Bridge FBI Case File,ย Rediscovering Black History blog post by archives specialist Netisha Currie
Testimony of John Lewis in Court Case resulting from 1965 March from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama
Archivist of the United States David S. Ferriero introduces Rep. John Lewis at National Archives event celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington
Video:ย John Lewis on Rights and Justice in America

















