On his last trip as president, Joe Biden went to Charleston's Royal Missionary Baptist Church and delivered remarks to the congregation.
President Joe Biden delivered a speech at Royal Missionary Baptist Church in North Charleston, SC, one day before Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Inauguration Day.
Martin Luther King, Jr. with his arms folded in front of him and his gaze cast out over the frozen Tidal Basin. But there stood Glenda McDonald, bundled up in her parka doing as she has done over the years,
President Joe Biden visited South Carolina on his final full day in office to attended worship services and recognize his long relationship with a state that catapulted him to the 2020 Democratic nomination with the endorsement of Congressman Jim Clyburn.
The president will deliver remarks at the service to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day, which is on Monday, about King’s legacy. Biden, alongside first lady Jill Biden, will then visit the ...
President Joe Biden landed at Joint Base Charleston to spend his last day as Commander in Chief in the Lowcountry.“I think it’s really interestin
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. gave his iconic “I Have a Dream ... who served in President Joe Biden's administration. “What's so important about the King holiday is not only the service ...
Events honoring Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy and advocating for his vision of a just, nonviolent society will occur the same day as Donald Trump's second presidential inauguration.
Monday was only the second time in history the presidential inauguration and Martin Luther King Jr. Day have fallen on the same day.
Juliet Atim, now co-president of Rocky Mountain High's student body, rarely had another Black student in her elementary and middle school classes.
Former president George W. Bush took the internet by storm during the 2025 Inauguration of President Donald Trump, where the 43rd president seemed to have a playful moment during the proceedings.
BOSTON - All the way back in April of 1965, sisters Glynnette and Beverly Byron marched hand in hand toward the Boston Common, part of a march against segregation led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.