The Black Panther, 1966-2016Main Menucrystal am nelsona8c0d4166981909bee5f6307ade72fc185ed6296Cathy Thomasc194c1b18a8a0b957192be5b5fcddc54e7171304Kiran Garcha330f0fd93233f7f8a54631b3efe31dda36bdbfdf
The Black Panther Free Breakfast for School Children Program
12016-11-19T17:10:21-08:00crystal am nelsona8c0d4166981909bee5f6307ade72fc185ed6296123212Vitrine Number 6, 3rd Floor Hallwayplain2016-11-19T17:34:28-08:002016111812082820161118120828crystal am nelsona8c0d4166981909bee5f6307ade72fc185ed6296PICTURES and PROGRESS
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12016-11-19T17:05:19-08:00crystal am nelsona8c0d4166981909bee5f6307ade72fc185ed6296Vitrine Number 5, 3rd Floor Hallwaycrystal am nelson7Documentation of the 1968 Ruth-Marion Baruch and Pirkle Jones' exhibition, "A Photographic Essay on the Black Panthers"plain3413892016-11-19T18:09:03-08:002016111812091520161118120915crystal am nelsona8c0d4166981909bee5f6307ade72fc185ed6296
The Free Breakfast for School Children Program marked the Black Panther Party’s first community service program. Initiated soon after its establishment in 1966, by 1969 the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense had developed breakfast programs in hundreds of cities across the country. Through the donations of local merchants, private donors, churches and other funding sources, the program provided children from low-income cities with foods such as scrambled eggs, bacon, and fresh fruit before the start of each school day.