Capital University News, California State University, Sacramento
October 25, 2004
Riles papers include early Martin Luther
King recording
One of the earliest known recorded interviews with Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr., obtained by the late Wilson C. Riles, is part of a substantial
collection of papers and archival materials donated this year by the Riles family
to the University.
The large and valuable collection spans nearly 50 years, from 1947 to 1995. It
adds an important dimension to Sacramento State’s resources on African American
history, and the history of public education in California, says archivist Sheila
O’Neill.
Wilson C. Riles was one of the first African Americans elected to statewide office
in California, serving as the superintendent of public instruction for three terms
beginning in 1970. He began his career as a teacher in Arizona and then moved
to California to become the first African American hired as a professional employee
in the State Department of Education. He then worked his way up through the department
before being elected superintendent.
His papers document a dramatic period of social change for educational institutions,
including school integration, busing, student unrest and the impact of Proposition
13 on the state’s education system.
Riles gained national recognition for his innovative approaches to education and
inter-group relations. His papers contain information on programs developed during
his tenure, such as those for disadvantaged children and involvement of parents
in the classroom.
The King recording is from a Feb. 28, 1956 interview, three months into King’s
support for the Montgomery, Ala. bus boycott. In the recording King details his
rationale for the boycott and the use of nonviolence. The boycott lasted for 380
days and pressured the city and the country to think differently about segregation
and civil rights.
The recently discovered recording was obtained by Riles as a member of the Fellowship
for Reconciliation, which conducted the interview.
A copy of the recording was also presented by the Riles family to the Martin Luther
King Jr., Papers Project at Stanford University.
For more information contact Sheila O’Neill, head of special collections
and University archives at 278-6144.
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California State University, Sacramento Public Affairs
6000 J Street Sacramento, CA 95819-6026 (916) 278-6156
infodesk@csus.edu
California State University, Sacramento Public Affairs
6000 J Street Sacramento, CA 95819-6026 (916) 278-6156 infodesk@csus.edu