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The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s scribbled notes for a speech he had planned to deliver in Memphis in 1968. (Associated Press/Sotheby's) |
Unknown King papers to be auctioned
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NEW YORK - An original handwritten outline for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s first speech condemning the Vietnam War, a document owned by his friend Harry Belafonte, is going on the auction block this week.
The Vietnam speech is valued between $500,000 and $800,000.
Belafonte, a singer and actor, was an early supporter of King's and his host on King's visits to New York dating from the mid-1950s. In a telephone interview, Belafonte said he was putting his documents up for sale because "I am at the end of my life - I will be 82 shortly - and there are a lot of causes I believe in for which resources are not available, and there is a need to redistribute those resources."
Elizabeth Muller, a Sotheby's specialist on manuscripts who in 2006 discovered a printed version of King's "Letter from a Birmingham Jail," said the Belafonte papers were previously unknown to King archivists.
The speech, titled "The Casualties of the War in Vietnam," cited a loss of moral principle and resources diverted from the fight for civil rights.
ASSOCIATED PRESS![]()



