By Chris Mahin
The
4th of April is one of the saddest days of the year. On that day in
1968, the Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.
Although many events are held each year to honour Dr King’s memory, too often
people forget – or have never learned – why he was in Memphis that spring. Dr
King went to Memphis to help striking sanitation workers – and paid for his
stand with his life. That makes 4th April an important anniversary
not only in African American history (and in US history in general), but in the
history of the labour movement as well.
On 12th February 1968, hundreds
of Memphis sanitation workers went on strike. At the time, they were making
less than $1 per hour and were eligible for welfare. They decided that they had
had enough of poor wages, terrible working conditions and a viciously
anti-union mayor.
The workers were members of Local 1733 of
the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). The
strike was the culmination of years of mistreatment. The workers worked 12
hours per day carrying garbage with busted, leaking pails. Some of the pails
were infested with flies and maggots, and the workers had no place to wash up
in the yard when they had to leave the trucks. Some of the workers had no
running water when they returned home after work. The workers had no real
benefits of any kind.
This dire situation came to a crisis point
on 1st February 1968, when the accidental activation of a packer
blade in the back of a garbage truck fatally crushed workers Echol Cole and
Robert Walker.
Almost 1,400 sanitation workers joined the
strike. They shut the city down.
The workers and their supporters marched
daily to pressure the mayor and the city council to recognise the sanitation
unit under AFSCME Local 1733. The men wore signs that read “I AM a Man,” a
slogan that was eventually recognised around the world.
Tension grew in the city as Memphis Mayor
Henry Loeb called the strike illegal and threatened to hire new workers unless
the strikers returned to work. On 14th February, the mayor issued a
back-to-work ultimatum for 7am on 15th February. The police escorted
the few garbage trucks in operation. Negotiations broke off. The newspapers
began to report that more than 10,000 tons of garbage was piling up.
It was in that tense environment that
AFSCME organisers appealed to Dr King to come to Memphis to speak to the
workers. Initially, King was reluctant. He was immersed in work preparing for
the Poor People’s Campaign. This was a huge undertaking, an effort to bring
poor people of all ethnicities to Washington DC in the summer of 1968 to
protest against poverty. But when AFSCME organiser Jesse Epps pointed out that
the fight of the sanitation workers in Memphis was part of the same struggle as
the Poor People’s Campaign, King agreed.
Once in Memphis, King immediately grasped
the importance of what was unfolding there. On his first visit to the city, on
18th March, he spoke to a crowd of 17,000 people and called for a citywide
march.
On Thursday 28th March King led
a march from the Clayborn Temple, the strike’s headquarters. The march was
interrupted by window breaking at the back of the demonstration. The police
moved into the crowd, using nightsticks, mace, tear gas – and guns. A
16-year-old, Larry Payne, was shot dead. The police arrested 280 people and
reported about 60 injuries. The state legislature authorised a 7pm curfew and
4,000 National Guardsmen moved in.
On Friday 29th March some 300
sanitation workers and ministers marched peacefully and silently from Clayborn
Temple to City Hall – escorted by five armoured personnel carriers, five jeeps,
three huge military trucks and dozens of National Guardsmen with their bayonets
fixed.
In
the last days of March, King cancelled a planned trip to Africa and made
preparations to lead a peaceful march in Memphis. Organisers working on
preparations for the Poor People’s Campaign in other cities were directed to
leave those cities and come to Memphis, for it was clear that the Poor People’s
Campaign could not be won without winning the fight in Memphis.
On 3rd April 1968, Dr King
returned to Memphis. That evening, he gave an extraordinary speech to hundreds
of people at Mason Temple. The speech has gone down in history as the “I’ve
Been to the Mountaintop” speech. Anyone who reads it today will notice that it
is an eloquent statement of support for the sanitation workers. (That night,
King called them “thirteen hundred of God’s children here suffering.”) But it
is also a farewell speech, the oration of a man who knew he might not have long
to live, and who was searching his soul to make sense of his life and his place
in history.
In the speech, King emphatically rejected
the calls not to march again because of an injunction: “Somewhere I read of the
freedom of assembly. Somewhere I read of the freedom of speech. Somewhere I
read of the freedom of the press. Somewhere I read that the greatness of
America is the right to protest for right!”
At the end of his remarks he referred indirectly
to the underhanded attempts by racists, the FBI and other forces to sabotage
his leadership and destroy the movement, declaring: “Well, I don’t know what
will happen now. We’ve got some difficult days ahead. But it doesn’t matter
with me now. Because I’ve been to the mountaintop. And I don’t mind. Like
everybody, 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. And I’m happy, tonight. I’m not
worried about anything. I’m not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory
of the coming of the Lord!”
Less than 24 hours after uttering those
words, Martin Luther King Jr was shot dead whilst standing on a balcony of the
Lorraine Motel in Memphis. Urban rebellions broke out in more than 60 cities.
In response to pressure from all over the country, the federal government sent
Labor Department officials to Memphis to mediate a settlement to the strike.
On Tuesday, 16th April AFSCME
leaders announced that an agreement had been reached. The agreement included
union recognition, better pay and benefits. The strikers voted to accept the
agreement.
It was a bittersweet end to a long battle.
The strike ended in victory but at a terrible cost – the death of one of the
foremost symbols of the fight for justice in that (or any) era. AFSCME’s
victory in Memphis inspired other workers in Memphis to join unions and other
employees throughout the South to join AFSCME. The Poor People’s Campaign,
which Dr King had been working on when he went to Memphis, did take place later
in the tumultuous year 1968. As King had hoped, it brought together poor people
of all ethnicities to demonstrate in Washington, DC – African Americans,
Latinos, Native Americans and whites.
Given Dr. King’s role in the Memphis
sanitation strike and the tremendous community support that the strikers
received, perhaps the month of April ought to be a time to remember that not
all labour leaders have an official position with a union –- and that labour
comes in all colours, and includes both employed and unemployed people. If we
hold on to those lessons, we will honour what was won with such great sacrifice
in Memphis in April 1968.
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