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The Dream
Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Speech that Inspired a Nation
by 
Drew Hansen
Publisher: HarperCollins
Subject(s):  History
Nonfiction
Sociology
Language(s):  English
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Format Information

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Available copies:  
Library copies:  
Lending period:   14 days
File size:   1404 KB
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ISBN:   9780061462252
Release date:   Jul 03, 2007

Description

On August 28, 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr., electrified the nation when he delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. In The Dream, Drew D. Hansen explores the fascinating and little-known history of King's legendary address. The Dream insightfully considers how King's speech "has slowly remade the American imagination," and led us closer to King's visionary goal of a redeemed America.

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Excerpts

Chapter One

The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom

...

Some of the marchers left a few days early so that theywould be sure to reach Washington by August 28, 1963. A Los Angeles pants presser named David Parker loaded five friends into his Ford and set off across the countrybecause, as he later told a reporter, his people had troubles. In Brooklyn, twelve young members of CORE started walking the 237 miles to the capital. The Local 593 Mine, Mill, and Smelter workers took up a collection at the Anaconda American Brass Company plant in Buffalo and gave it to the NAACP to pay the fares of unemployed workers who wanted to go to Washington. Forty unemployed men from Cleveland, Mississippi, took the bus up North after raising the thirty-three-dollar fare by selling shares in their tickets at a dollar apiece.

In Chicago, the passengers of two chartered trains crowded together at the station to listen to final instructions from their captains. Then the trains took off for the overnight trip to Washington. A three-piece jazz combo set up at the end of one car and played tunes for the riders. Some passengers sang along:

This train don't carry no liars, this train ...

This train is bound for glory, this train ...

Six buses left Alabama on Tuesday morning, August 27,with garment bags holding fresh clothes hanging from theoverhead handrails. Some passengers started the trip singing, but as the twenty-two-hour journey went on, they began to talk about what it meant for them to go to Washington. Many of the marchers had been beaten by Bull Connor's troops or had spent time in the Birmingham jail. "They ought to know who we are," said one. "After all, we're the ones who started the whole freedom movement."

In the days before August 28, buses, cars, and trains from all over the country set out for Washington. Three buses with more than one hundred demonstrators left from the General Baptist Convention headquarters in Milwaukee. A chartered train left Pittsburgh, and another one left Detroit. A caravan of two hundred cars set out from North Carolina. Buses left Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana.

In Boston, a teacher at the Freedom School in Roxburyabandoned her plans to fly to the march and climbed aboarda bus. A sixty-seven-year-old dressmaker from Memphis saidto herself, "I'm going to lay aside my patterns and be apart of it." A cabdriver from New York drove his cab forawhile on Tuesday evening and then said, "That's it. I'mgoing to Washington because it's a duty that has to be done."

On Tuesday night, a band of SNCC staff members joinedteenagers from Albany, Georgia, in a vigil at the Department of Justice. Earlier in August, the Department had indicted several members of the Albany movement for obstruction of justice, in an action arising out of their boycott of a white man's store. Justice attorneys believed the boycott had been called because the store owner had served on a jury that had dismissed a civil suit brought by a black man who had been shot in the neck by a white sheriff. The Albany activists insisted that they were protesting the store's racist hiring practices. They wondered why their relatively insignificant boycott wasattracting so much federal attention when the government had not prevented the Albany police from assaulting the city's black citizens. One SNCC member carried a sign that read "when there is no justice, what is the state, but a robber band enlarged?" Another sign proclaimed "even the federal government is a white man."

At one-thirty in the morning on Wednesday, August 28,whole blocks of Harlem had all their lights on as residentsgathered at bus depots, community houses, and churches tocheer the departing marchers. "You tell them, tell them forme," yelled...

 

About the Author

Drew D. Hansen, a Harvard graduate and a Rhodes Scholar, studied theology at Oxford University, and went on to earn his J.D. at Yale Law School. He practices law in Seattle.

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