SIPGMS_190507_135
Existing comment: Adam Clayton Powell Jr., 1908-1972
Stokely Carmichael, 1941-1998
George Tames's photograph evokes the echoes of Congressperson Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and Stokely Carmichael's laughter in the corridors of the Rayburn House Office Building. Powell and Carmichael had held a press conference on July 27, 1966, to call for a Black Power conference during the upcoming Labor Day weekend. The men represented two different generations in the campaign for civil rights.
Powell (left) was elected to office in 1944 as New York City's first African American congressperson. He became famous for fighting segregation in the military, in schools, and in the workplace. During the 1960s, he helped develop and pass a number of important civil rights bills. Carmichael (right) grew up in New York City and shared Powell's commitment to civil rights. In 1966, when this photo was taken, Carmichael had begun serving as the chairperson of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
George Tames, 1966
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