
¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ is known to have many gems within the university’s history and values.
Among those gems is a copy of Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” held by Special Collection in Harwell G. Davis Library. Willie Pearl Mackey (King) took the scraps of paper that King wrote on in jail and typed them in letter form. This first copy is believed to have been sent to the executive director of the Alabama Baptist State Convention before the letter was officially published.
Recently, a television company in the United Kingdom requested to use ¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ’s copy of the letter in a upcoming film on King. It will take the copy to interview Mrs. King about her role in the Civil Rights Movement, according to Jennifer Taylor, ¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ’s Special Collection director.
“It’s really exciting that someone who had a huge part in history is being given something from ¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ for her to talk about her role in the movement,” Taylor said.
¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ will be listed in the credits of the film for providing assistance, and the film will be broadcast to mark the 50th year since King’s death. Every Cultural Perspectives student at ¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ will also read the letter during the next academic year.
The letter is just one of many treasures found in ¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ’s Special Collection, Taylor said. In addition to ¼«ÀÖ½ûµØ archives, the collection also houses archival materials from the Alabama Baptist State Convention, Alabama Baptist churches and other materials donated to the collection through the decades.
The Special Collection staff provides research assistance and hosts tours of the collection for individuals and groups.
The collection is open to the public Monday–Friday, 9 a.m.–5 p.m. Hours may vary when the university is not in session.
Gerald Smith is a journalism and mass communication major and a news and feature writer in the Division of Marketing and Communication.