"Stone of Hope, Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial, 2016." by U.S. National Park Service , public domain
Martin Luther King, Jr. MemorialBrochure |
Official Brochure of Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial in the District of Columbia. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Martin Luther King, Jr.
Memorial
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Washington, D.C.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat
to justice everywhere"
T
his memorial preserves the memory of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. (1929-1968): visionary, faith leader and public intellectual,
unwavering advocate of social justice, and martyr to peace, equality, and
justice. As he traveled the "torturous road" toward racial equality during
the 1950s and 1960s, Dr. King sought to maintain an "abiding faith in
America and an audacious faith in the future of mankind"1 Although
most widely known for his leading role in the African-American civil rights
movement in the United States, Dr. King was also a tireless advocate for the
nations working class and the oppressed around the world.
"The fierce urgency of now"2
D
boycotts in the face of stern opposition. Images of
the violence faced by Dr. King and those allied to
the cause spread across the nation, introducing
him to a public embroiled in the bitter process of
desegregation. Advocates and denouncers alike
came to know him through his powerfully rendered
speeches and writings, in which he called for those
seeking equality to "protest courageously and yet
with dignity and love."
r. King's sense of urgency was made
famous in his "Letter from Birmingham
Jail" (1963), in which he took exception to
eight fellow clergymen who suggested that AfricanAmericans wait patiently for civil rights. Yet his
vigorous inclination to decisive action preceded
his involvement with the movement for civil rights
and world peace. Coming from a family of readers,
he made an impression as an exceptionally gifted
young man, which accelerated his graduation
from high school by the age of 15. Descending
from an ancestral line of Baptist ministers, his
formative years were spent surrounded by various
communities of faith and service. By 1955, at the age
of 26, he himself was an ordained Baptist minister,
had earned his bachelor of arts, bachelor of divinity,
doctorate of philosophy, and started a family.
In 1957, the newly-formed Southern Christian
Leadership Conference (SCLC) dedicated to racial
equality and economic justice, and co-founded
by Dr. King, elected him as their president. He
asked of those in the movement: "Are you able to
accept blows without retaliating?" "Are you able to
endure the ordeals of jail?" He proved unafraid of
reinforcing his words in leading by example. He
organized sit-ins, kneel-ins, mass meetings, and
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Dr. King with wife and children.
"An amazing
universalism"3
T
he civil rights movement, galvanized by Dr.
King's leadership, resulted in the passage
of a series of Civil Rights Acts (1957,1960,
and 1964) and the Voting Rights Act (1965). Yet the
movement was not bound by the limits of national
borders. The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded
Dr. King the 1964 Peace Prize for his dedication to
nonviolent tactics, an honor which resonated as loud
as his powerful writing and oratory to advocates
of peace worldwide. His method followed the
example of Mohandas K. Gandhi and the Indian
independence movement to develop a broad strategy
for unarmed resistance. Dr. King was acutely aware
of the parallels between the condition of AfricanAmericans and others around the world. Dr. King
was personal witness to this relationship, as he
visited other nations where such change ocurred.
He remarked: "An old order of colonialism, of
segregation, of discrimination is passing away now." 4
31
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Dr. King accepting the Nobel Peace Prize, 12/10/1964.
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President Lyndon Baines Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act, 7/2/1964.
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Dr. King speaks to marchers, 8/28/1963.
Dr. King speaks to marchers, 8/28/1963.
For more information about National Mall and
Memorial Parks, please contact:
1
"Acceptance Speech at Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony," 10
December, 1964.
2
"I Have a Dream," 28 August, 1963
3
"The American Dream," 4 July 1965
4
"The Birth of a New Nation" 7 April, 1957
Superintendent
National Mall and Memorial Parks
900 Ohio Drive, SW
Washington, D.C. 20024-2000
202.233.3520
www. n ps.gov/na ma
"Not an end but a
beginning"5
C
onceived by members of the Alpha Phi
Alpha fraternity, and completed under the
leadership of the Martin Luther King, Jr.
Memorial Foundation, the memorial was dedicated
on August 28, 2011, the 48th anniversary of the
March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. The
location of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial
accentuates his story within the larger narrative of
the nation. It reinforces the place of his courageous
leadership in the nation's march toward freedom,
proudly standing in the vista between the Lincoln
Memorial and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial. In
1957, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, a clear
symbol of freedom, Dr. King delivered his first
national address, "Give Us the Ballot." He returned
to the Lincoln Memorial as a key figure supporting
the 1963 March on Washington. There, in the
defining moment of his leadership in the movement
for civil rights, Dr. King delivered his immortal
"I Have a Dream" speech. Before an audience of
over 200,000 people, he reaffirmed his belief in
the ultimate redeemability of the words in the
Constitution and the Declaration of Independence
as that "promissory note to which every American
was to fall heir."6This statement stresses the basic
freedoms and rights which the Thomas Jefferson
Memorial's presence clearly reinforces. Prominently
in the center of his memorial, the image of Dr.
King stands thoughtful and resolute. The work of
master sculptor Lei Yixin, his frame emerges from
the Stone of Hope, which stands an impressive
28 feet, 6 inches. It serves as a testament to Dr.
King's leadership in the civil rights movement as a
"drum major" for justice, peace, and righteousness.
The enormity and strength of the granite reflects
the steadfastness with which Dr. King and other
members of the movement confronted the
"Unconditional
obstacles of segregation and injustice. His image,
facing the Tidal Basin, reinforces the boundless
opportunities for advancement in the future. The
Stone of Hope stands forward of, and is detached
from, the Mountain of Despair, a massive gateway
representative of the struggle faced in the pursuit of
social equality and peace. It also serves as a central
entryway for the memorial. Water, representative
of vitality and life, descends from fountains flowing
from the sides of the Mountain of Despair. The
quotations chosen for the inscription walls, which
frame the Mountain of Despair and the Stone of
Hope, stress four primary messages of Dr. King:
justice, democracy, hope, and love.
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Dr. King delivering his "I Have a Dream" speech, 8/28/1963.
love will have the final
z
word"7
T
he flowering Japanese cherry trees and their
beautiful blossoms, which appear for just a few
days every spring, are reminders of the beauty
and brevity of life itself. Their return reinforces the
tragedy of the untimely passing of Dr. King on April
4,1968, and the need for persistence in subsequent
generations in the struggle for human rights. As the
memorial and its environs echo these sentiments in
stone, earth, and water, so do the words of Dr. King,
delivered in a sadly prophetic speech the day before
his death.
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Young child in March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom at
Washington, D.C., 8/28/1963.
W
ell, I dorit know what will
happen now; we've got some
difficult days ahead. But it doesn't
really matter with me now, because
I've been to the mountaintop. And I
don't mind. Like anybody, I would
like to live a long life - longevity
has its place. But I'm not concerned
about that now, I just want to do
God's will. And He's allowed me
to go up to the mountain. And
I've looked over, and I've seen the
Promised Land. I may not get there
with you. But I want you to know
tonight, that we, as a people, will get
to the Promised Land."
5
"I Have a Dream," 28 August, 1963.
Ibid.
7
"Acceptance Speech at Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony,"
10 December, 1964.
8
"I've Been to the Mountaintop" 3 April, 1968
6
The name, likeness and quotations of Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. are the intellectual property of The Estate of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., Inc. and are used with express permission.