The Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, which has an upcoming exhibit on the Selma march, placed the billboard ad.
It blended the Republican saying with a 'Bloody Sunday' photo and was funded by Museum of Fine Arts. It has since been ...
The image juxtaposed Donald Trump's political slogan with a photo of state troopers confronting civil rights marchers in ...
Montgomery Mayor Steven Reed announced the removal of two billboards with the words "Make America Great Again" displayed over ...
The Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail in Alabama memorializes the route taken by marchers during the Voting Ri ...
For those who'd like to tour Tuscaloosa's Civil Rights Trail, but either haven't been able to organize a group jaunt or find ...
It ended in 1956. The Selma to Montgomery March took place in 1965 in Alabama. In March, protesters walked the 54-mile route in an effort to register Black voters in the South. However ...
A controversial billboard featuring the name of the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts has been taken down, and the City of Montgomery is promising a full review.
The work, designed by the art collective For Freedoms, depicts a photograph from Selma’s Bloody Sunday in 1965 overlaid with Trump’s campaign slogan.