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Later years

  • Program for the All-Eastern Division Gala Festival Concert, 1961.
  • Speech by Dawson to the American Choral Directors Convention.
  • Dawson, Ambassador Lodge, and others, Loyola, Spain [1956]
  • Flyer of Tuskegee crusade for citizenship, 1957
  • WC Handy, "Memphis Blues" from Dawson’s collection
  • Postcard advertising the Crescent Youth Symphony performance of the Negro Folk
                Symphony in 1975.
  • Honorary doctorate, Ithaca College, 1982
  • Dawson’s induction to Alabama Hall of Fame, 1987
  • Wayne State Glee Club, 1970
  • Dawson receiving his honorary doctoral degree at Lincoln University, May 7,
                1978
  • News release from the Creative Artists Workshop (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania),
                1981
  • Dawson's compositions continue to be performed both nationally and internationally.
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Broadside: "Crusade for Citizenship Mass Meeting," Tuskegee Civic Association, Greenwood Missionary Baptist Church, 13 August 1956

Flyer of Tuskegee crusade for citizenship, 1957

Dawson and his wife, Cecile, were active participants in the Civil Rights Movement and lifetime members in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Cecile's date book records the "March on Montgomery" on March 25, 1965, an event in which they both may have participated. The Dawson collection also holds materials pertaining to the 1957 “Crusade for Citizenship” organized by the Tuskegee Civic Association (TCA). Its intent was to fight a proposed bill that would remap Tuskegee such that its black neighborhoods would no longer fall within the city limits. After the bill was passed in July, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. sent a message and a donation to the cause.