This Article is From Oct 19, 2013

Martin Luther King's papers, including letters to Mahatma Gandhi, fetch 79 lakh rupees

Martin Luther King's papers, including letters to Mahatma Gandhi, fetch 79 lakh rupees

Photo of the final page of the original "I Have a Dream" speech of Martin Luther King with a note

New York: A collection of papers from the American civil rights leader Martin Luther King Junior, including two letters that he wrote while he was in India studying Mahatma Gandhi's philosophy of non-violence, have fetched more than 130,000 dollars (around Rs. 79 lakh) at an auction.

Mr King wrote the two letters to his personal secretary, Maude Ballou, when he was in India in 1959.

One letter that King sent from Bangalore sold for 18,750 dollars and another from Bombay fetched 17,500 dollars.

The material, more than 100 artifacts in all, sold yesterday at Heritage auctions, New York, were consigned to auction after more than half a century in the possession of 88-year-old Ballou.

The collection included King's handwritten notes on eight cards containing the outline of his famed 'Dexter Avenue Church Farewell Address,' circa 1960, which was bought at 31,250 dollars as the top lot of the archive.

Two autograph draft chapters from his first book, Stride Toward Freedom, chapters III and IX, both realised equal prices of 8,125 dollars.

"This was simply an unprecedented auction of amazing, evocative material that provides a ground-level perspective of the civil rights struggle," said Sandra Palomino, Director of Historical Manuscripts at Heritage Auctions.

"There was worldwide interest in the material and the emotional response to it was huge," Palomino said.

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