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<?I97 127 STAT. ?>
<?I98 127 STAT. ?>
<?I99 127 STAT. ?>
<?I50 PUBLIC LAW 113–11—MAY 24, 2013?>
<?I51 PUBLIC LAW 113–11—MAY 24, 2013?>
<?I52 PUBLIC LAW 113–11—MAY 24, 2013?>


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<meta><dc:title>Public Law 113–11: To award posthumously a Congressional Gold Medal to Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, and Cynthia Wesley to commemorate the lives they lost 50 years ago in the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, where these 4 little Black girls’ ultimate sacrifice served as a catalyst for the Civil Rights Movement.</dc:title>
<dc:type>Public Law</dc:type><docNumber>11</docNumber>
<citableAs>Public Law 113–11</citableAs><citableAs>127 Stat. 446</citableAs>
<approvedDate>2013-05-24</approvedDate>
<dc:date>2013-05-24</dc:date>
<dc:publisher>United States Government Publishing Office</dc:publisher><dc:creator>National Archives and Records Administration</dc:creator><dc:creator>Office of the Federal Register</dc:creator><dc:format>text/xml</dc:format><dc:language>EN</dc:language><dc:rights>Pursuant to Title 17 Section 105 of the United States Code, this file is not subject to copyright protection and is in the public domain.</dc:rights>
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<preface><centerRunningHead>PUBLIC LAW 113–11—MAY 24, 2013</centerRunningHead>
<page identifier="/us/stat/127/446">127 STAT. 446</page>
<dc:type>Public Law</dc:type><docNumber>113–11</docNumber>
<congress value="113">113th Congress</congress>
</preface>
<main>
<longTitle>
<docTitle class="centered fontsize12" style="-uslm-lc:I658005">An Act</docTitle>
<officialTitle class="indentUp0 firstIndent1 fontsize8" style="-uslm-lc:I658011">To award posthumously a Congressional Gold Medal to Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, and Cynthia Wesley to commemorate the lives they lost 50 years ago in the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, where these 4 little Black girls’ ultimate sacrifice served as a catalyst for the Civil Rights Movement.<sidenote><p class="centered fontsize8" id="x61ed6268-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" style="-uslm-lc:I658076"><approvedDate date="2013-05-24">May 24, 2013</approvedDate></p><p class="centered fontsize8" id="x61ed6269-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" style="-uslm-lc:I658076">[<ref href="/us/bill/113/hr/360">H.R. 360</ref>]<?GPOvSpace 08?></p></sidenote></officialTitle>
</longTitle>
<enactingFormula style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><i>  Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representa­tives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,</i></enactingFormula><sidenote><p class="leftAlign firstIndent0 fontsize8" id="x61ed626a-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" style="-uslm-lc:I658180"><ref href="/us/usc/t31/s5111">31 USC 5111 note</ref>.</p></sidenote>
<section id="d397698e90" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1" style="-uslm-lc:I658146"><num class="bold" value="1">SECTION 1. </num><heading>FINDINGS.</heading><chapeau class="indentUp0 firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="x61edd79b-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  The Congress Finds the following:</chapeau><paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd79c-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/1" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="1">(1) </num><content>September 15, 2013, will mark 50 years since the lives of Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, and Cynthia Wesley were suddenly taken by a bomb planted in the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd79d-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/2" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="2">(2) </num><content>The senseless and premature death of these 4 little Black girls sparked “The Movement that Changed the World”.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd79e-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/3" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="3">(3) </num><content>On that tragic Sunday in September of 1963, the world took notice of the violence inflicted in the struggle for equal rights.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd79f-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/4" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="4">(4) </num><content>The fact that 4 innocent children lost their lives as they prepared for Sunday School shook the world’s conscience.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd7a0-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/5" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="5">(5) </num><content>This tragedy galvanized the Civil Rights Movement and sparked a surge of momentum that helped secure the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and later the Voting Rights Act of 1965 by President Lyndon B. Johnson.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd7a1-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/6" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="6">(6) </num><content>Justice was delayed for these 4 little Black girls and their families until 2002, 39 years after the bombing, when the last of the 4 Klansmen responsible for the bombing was charged and convicted of the crime.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd7a2-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/7" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="7">(7) </num><content>The 4 little Black girls are emblematic of so many who have lost their lives for the cause of freedom and equality, including Virgil Ware and James Johnny Robinson who were children also killed within hours of the 1963 church bombing.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd7a3-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/8" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="8">(8) </num><content>The legacy that these 4 little Black girls left will live on in the minds and hearts of us all for generations to come.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd7a4-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/9" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="9">(9) </num><content>Their extraordinary sacrifice sparked real and lasting change as Congress began to aggressively pass legislation that ensured equality.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd7a5-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/10" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="10">(10) </num><content>Sixteenth Street Baptist Church remains a powerful symbol of the movement for civil and human rights and will host the 50th anniversary ceremony on Sunday, September 15, 2013.</content></paragraph>
<paragraph class="fontsize10" id="y61edd7a6-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s1/11" style="-uslm-lc:I658122"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="11">(11) </num><content>It is befitting that Congress bestow the highest civilian honor, the Congressional Gold Medal, in 2013 to the 4 little <page identifier="/us/stat/127/447">127 STAT. 447</page>
Black girls, Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, and Cynthia Wesley, posthumously in recognition of the 50th commemoration of the historical significance of the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church.</content></paragraph>
</section>
<section id="d397698e158" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s2" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="2">SEC. 2. </num><heading>CONGRESSIONAL GOLD MEDAL.</heading><subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y61edfeb7-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s2/a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="a">(a) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Presentation Authorized</inline>.—</heading><content>The Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President Pro Tempore of the Senate shall make appropriate arrangements for the presentation, on behalf of Congress, of a gold medal of appropriate design to commemorate the lives of Addie Mae Collins, Denise McNair, Carole Robertson, and Cynthia Wesley.</content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y61edfeb8-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s2/b" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="b">(b) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Design and Striking</inline>.—</heading><content>For purposes of the presentation referred to in subsection (a), the Secretary of the Treasury (referred to in this Act as the “Secretary”) shall strike a gold medal with suitable emblems, devices, and inscriptions to be determined by the Secretary.</content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y61edfeb9-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s2/c" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="c">(c) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Award of Medal</inline>.—</heading><content>Following the award of the gold medal described in subsection (a), the medal shall be given to the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in Birmingham, AL, where it shall be available for display or temporary loan to be displayed elsewhere, as appropriate.</content></subsection>
</section>
<section id="d397698e190" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s3" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="3">SEC. 3. </num><heading>DUPLICATE MEDALS.</heading><content style="-uslm-lc:I658120">  The Secretary may strike and sell duplicates in bronze of the gold medal struck under section 2, at a price sufficient to cover the costs of the medal, including labor, materials, dies, use of machinery, and overhead expenses, and amounts received from the sale of such duplicates shall be deposited in the United States Mint Public Enterprise Fund.</content></section>
<section id="d397698e198" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s4" style="-uslm-lc:I658141"><num class="fontsize12" value="4">SEC. 4. </num><heading>STATUS OF MEDALS.</heading><subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y61ee25ca-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s4/a" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="a">(a) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">National Medals</inline>.—</heading><content>The medals struck under this Act are national medals for purposes of <ref href="/us/usc/t31/ch51">chapter 51 of title 31, United States Code</ref>.</content></subsection>
<subsection class="firstIndent0 fontsize10" id="y61ee25cb-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" identifier="/us/pl/113/11/s4/b" style="-uslm-lc:I658120"><num class="fontsize10" style="-uslm-lc:emspace2" value="b">(b) </num><heading class="fontsize10"><inline class="smallCaps">Numismatic Items</inline>.—</heading><content>For purposes of sections 5134 and 5136 of <ref href="/us/usc/t31">title 31, United States Code</ref>, all medals struck under this Act shall be considered to be numismatic items.</content></subsection>
</section>
<action>
<actionDescription style="-uslm-lc:I658030">Approved</actionDescription> <date date="2013-05-24">May 24, 2013</date>.</action>
</main>
<legislativeHistory>
<heading style="-uslm-lc:I658031"><inline class="underline">LEGISLATIVE HISTORY</inline>—<ref href="/us/bill/113/hr/360">H.R. 360</ref>:</heading>
<note>
<heading style="-uslm-lc:I658032">CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, Vol. 159 (2013):</heading>
<p class="indentUp4 firstIndent-1" id="x61ee25cc-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" style="-uslm-lc:I658035">Apr. 24, considered and passed House.</p><p class="indentUp4 firstIndent-1" id="x61ee25cd-e89a-11f0-bc57-ad3ac4b1618c" style="-uslm-lc:I658035">May 9, considered and passed Senate.</p></note>
</legislativeHistory>
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</pLaw>