Part of America's Story
The Jackson Home and its contents are a remarkable fusion of the ordinary and the epic: A maple dining table — around which civil rights leaders, U.S. congressmen, and two Nobel Peace Prize winners broke bread and shared dreams. An upholstered armchair facing a black-and-white television — the chair where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. sat as he watched President Lyndon Johnson pledge to pass voting rights legislation. A bed with a pair of pajamas atop the covers — the bed and pajamas in which King spent many nights during the Selma to Montgomery marches.
In this home, people will learn how a committed group of idealists — some famous, some obscure — worked together to advance American principles and bring liberty, justice and rights within the reach of all Americans. Their struggles, and their successes, are a powerful part of America's story.
Here, behind a humble façade, world-changing ideas, plans and actions charged the air with hope:
- In this house, Dr. Sullivan Jackson and his wife Richie Jean provided a safe haven for the nation's leading civil rights activists to strategize and plan.
- This house is one of several places where the Selma movement was planned. This home was central to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference/MLK planning.
- In this house, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. worked, slept and strategized, along with key allies, for months before the Montgomery march.
- In this house, Dr. King frequently spoke by phone with President Lyndon Johnson about the need to expand and protect Black voting rights through national legislation.
- In this house, Dr. King and others watched, electrified, as President Johnson made a nationally televised address to Congress introducing the Voting Rights Act of 1965, proclaiming “We shall overcome.”
- In this house, the only known meeting between the first and second Black men to receive the Nobel Peace Prize took place — Dr. Ralph Bunche and Dr. King.
- This house was home to several generations of Black dentists, teachers and professionals, who used their connections and success to build up the Black community of Selma.
More to Explore

Donate Today
Be a part of the Jackson Home journey by making a gift today to ensure that its stories of courage, resilience and the ongoing fight for social justice continue to inspire generations.

Move to Greenfield Village
From Selma, Alabama, to Greenfield Village, learn more about this multiyear effort and move by The Henry Ford.