
National Civil Rights Museum
450 Mulberry Street
Memphis, TN
38103
Tel: 901-521-9699
Fax: 901-521-9740
ยป send e-mail
After decades of struggle by civil rights activists, and despite the passage of the most powerful civil rights laws in a century in 1964 and 1965, racial discrimination and injustice persisted into the late 1960s. As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. reflected, “Laws only declare rights; they do not deliver them.” Further efforts were being made to spur delivery of the rights promised by law, when on April 4th 1968, Dr. King, co-founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and acknowledged leader of the Civil Rights Movement, was assassinated.
The National Civil Rights Museum, located at the site of the assassination, traces the African American Civil Rights Movement from the earliest days of slavery, examines the effect of racism in American society, and considers issues of poverty and economic and social injustice.
The National Civil Rights Museum exists to assist the public in understanding the lessons of the Civil Rights Movement and its impact and influence on the human rights movement worldwide, through its collections, exhibitions, research and educational programs.