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  1. 29 de oct. de 2009 · In 1941, A. Philip Randolph, head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and an elder statesman of the civil rights movement, had planned a mass march on Washington to protest Black soldier's ...

  2. 23 de ago. de 2023 · Randolph died in 1979. His wife, Lucille, died in 1963, four months before the March. They didn’t have any children. And to a degree, historians often have overlooked his place in history.

  3. 1 de feb. de 2017 · A. Philip Randolph, foreground, testifies before the Senate Armed Services Committee in March 1948. He told the panel that millions of blacks would refuse to register to serve under draft and ...

  4. As the head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and a tireless advocate for civil rights, A. Philip Randolph (1889--1979) served as a bridge between Afri...

  5. In early 1941, A. Philip Randolph, the head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, threatened to lead a peaceful march of 10,000 African Americans on Washington, DC, to demand an end to racial segregation in the government, especially the military, and to demand greater equality in the hiring practices of defense industries.

  6. live-bri-dos.pantheonsite.io › activities › a-philip-randolph-the-call-to-negroBill of Rights Institute

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  7. Bayard Rustin. In my fifty years as a social and human rights activist, I have met and worked with some of the leading figures in the struggle for justice—Gandhi, Norman Thomas, Martin Luther King, Jr., Lech Walesa. But the man who most closely touched my life, whose ideas, character, and work helped shape my destiny, was Asa Philip Randolph ...