King Hollands was one of the first Black students to integrate Father Ryan High School in the '50s, and he participated in the Woolworth's Lunch counter sit-ins of the '60s. He has died at 82.
Thousands of people in metro Nashville don’t have a war place to eat or sleep for the holidays and one organization is continuing a tradition to help those who are without a home.
King Madison Hollands, a member of the Nashville Student Movement, which challenged racial segregation in Nashville in the 1960s, died Wednesday at the age of 82 in Nashville.
It seems almost fitting, that inside a stadium centered around home plate, hundreds of Nashvillians came out to celebrate a man who provided a home to so many.