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12 Items

Jackson Home

Content Types
  • Dr. Sullivan, Richie Jean, and Jawana Jackson in their living room, 1960s. / THF708482
    Collections - article

    The Jackson Home: Furnishing It Like It’s 1965

    In this interview, Jeanine Head Miller (Curator of Domestic Life), and Charles Sable (Curator of Decorative Arts) sat down with Kristen Gallerneaux (Curator and Editor-in-Chief of Digital Curation) to share their efforts to restore the interiors and furnishings of The Jackson Home. This article is part of an ongoing series focusing on the history, preservation, and restoration of the landmark Jackson Home experience, slated to open in Greenfield Village in Summer 2026.
  • Contents of the Jackson Family Home are packed in boxes and await loading for shipment from Selma, Alabama, to Dearborn, Michigan. / Photograph by Staff of The Henry Ford.
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    The Jackson Home—Unpacking a Family's Story

    In the Spring of 2023, the contents of an entire house - 9,000 everyday objects, including photographs, documents, books, and household items, were logged, packed, and shipped from Selma, Alabama to Dearborn, Michigan. That house was the Jackson Family Home, which was recently moved to its new permanent home in Greenfield Village – you can find out more about the move here!
  • Dr. Sullivan and Richie Jean Jackson on their wedding day, March 15, 1958. / THF708474
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    The American Promise: The Speech that Changed a Movement

    It was March 15, 1965, when members of the Jackson Family and guests gathered in their homes to listen to President Johnson give this speech. This was also the seventh wedding anniversary for “Sully” and Richie Jean. The President began: “At times history and fate meet at a single time in a single place to shape a turning point in man's unending search for freedom. So it was at Lexington and Concord. So it was a century ago at Appomattox. So it was last week in Selma, Alabama.”
  • John Lewis and Rev. Hosea Williams Lead a Long Line of Marchers over the Edmund Pettis Bridge, March 7, 1965
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    The Long March to Voting Rights

    In 1965, all eyes turned to Selma, Alabama, as the next stage in the fight for civil rights. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and other activists planned a series of marches from Selma to Montgomery to draw attention to the continued struggle for voting rights for Black Americans.
  • Cross Stitch Used by the Jackson Family, Selma, Alabama
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    Hospitality in the Jackson Home

    The Jackson Home was known as “The House by the Side of the Road” for the way it welcomed everyone who came by. It was this welcoming spirit that would place the home at the center of history, as the struggle for Civil Rights came to Selma in 1965.  
  • Six women pose at one end of a table decorated for a birthday with a cake and streamers
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    Hosting a Movement: Hospitality in the Jackson Home

    The Jackson Home was known as “The House by the Side of the Road” for the way it welcomed everyone who came by. It was this welcoming spirit that would place the home at the center of history, as the struggle for Civil Rights came to Selma in 1965.
  • 8 men in suits playing various instruments
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    Dr. Sullivan Jackson: Saxophonist

    Music is a part of the Jackson family story, from the piano lessons that first brought young Richie Jean Sherrod soon-to-be-Jackson and young Corretta Scott soon-to-be-King together to the family's music room that housed an impressive record collection. In fact, Dr. Sullivan Jackson played tenor saxophone prior to his career as a dentist serving Selma's Black community. Dr. Jackson's time as a musician in the mid-1940s to the early-1950s allowed him to participate in Black American music cultural changes.
  • Richie Jean Sherrod Jackson at desk
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    Draft by Draft: The Making of The House by the Side of the Road

    The Jackson family’s story shines a spotlight on ordinary people playing a small role in extraordinary moments in history and reminds us of the impact we all can have as well. As Richie Jean writes, “We cannot all be a Martin Luther King Jr., but each and every one of us can make a positive difference in the lives of our families and the people we meet each day. For you see the dream is still alive.”
  • A single level home with white siding and brick along the porch
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    The House by the Side of the Road: The Jackson Home at Greenfield Village

    In 2025, the country celebrates the 60th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act, the culmination of decades of activism by African Americans in the mid-20th century. The Henry Ford in 2023 acquired Dr. Sullivan and Mrs. Richie Jean [Sherrod] Jackson's home — a pivotal location for the Selma voting rights movement — to help preserve this unique story of family, community and justice into the future.
  • The Jackson Home at its location at 1416 Lapsley Street, Selma. / Image from the THF collections.
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    More Lessons to Share: The Preservation of the Dr. Sullivan and Richie Jean Sherrod Jackson Home

    The Jackson Home is pivotal as one of several key locations to the Selma Voting Rights Movement. Read more about The Henry Ford's preservation process.