Where were you on the night MLK died?

Forty-three years ago this evening, I was inside the College Park High School auditorium, where the students of nearby Lakeshore High School had just put on a talent show dubbed “April Follies.”

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (right), two years before his death, talking with Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen (center) and the Rev. Ralph Abernathy. New York Times.

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (right), two years before his death, talking with Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen (center) and the Rev. Ralph Abernathy. New York Times.

I had tagged along with my two older sisters – I was going on 13, in 7th grade. The show was over – perhaps it was as late as 8:30 — and everyone had just stood up.

You literally could see the news waft row-by-row through the mostly white crowd: “Martin Luther King’s been shot. They say he’s dead.”

We were an evening-paper family – the Atlanta Journal sported Art Buchwald and his political humor — and the six o’clock news was over. So we wouldn’t get the details until late the next day, after school. A Thursday.

Classes were at Meadows Elementary, which is still just off Old National Highway – though it’s a storage center of some sort now. The next morning must have been cold, because we boys were sitting on top of the heaters that lined the classroom windows, waiting for the bell to ring.

Fulton County schools had been integrated, but just barely. I don’t recall that any black students attended the school, but we had just gotten our first African-American teacher, a Mrs. Betsy Phillips. Martha Pendley was our lead teacher. She is still sharp, and may have a better memory for the specifics.

Atop the row of heaters, my friend Dennis was the first to speak about King. “My daddy says he’s going to be the head n—— devil in hell,” the young boy said. It was a remark aimed at me, since I was one of the few known Yankees in the class. I tended to walk away from confrontations, even back then.

Darrell walked away with me. Possibly the bell had just rung. Darrell was a hood in the making. He hadn’t made the complete transition to the white T-shirt, leather jacket and blue jeans that would be his uniform in high school. But he was coming on.

“I don’t know why they had to shoot him,” Darrell said, in search of someone who agreed with him. “He never did anybody any harm.”

I have not heard from Darrell in decades. At some point, he dropped the leather jacket and had become a pastor himself, like King. Strange how that works.

If you’re of an age to remember, add a few lines down below — for posterity’s sake.

- By Jim Galloway, Political Insider

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91 comments Add your comment

Don Cook

April 4th, 2011
5:46 pm

Was at work at Elson’s Book Store at Lenox Square when the daughter of the manage called to let us know. Didn’t know what to think. Still don’t know why biggots still hate him. Stupid.

Newton

April 4th, 2011
5:47 pm

1968 was the closest we came to a meltdown. King, Bobby Kennedy and Wallace all shot. Cities burning, including Cincinnati where I was attending college.

Don Cook

April 4th, 2011
5:52 pm

Newton, Wallace shot during 72 campaign.

Was in Memphis

April 4th, 2011
5:55 pm

I was in Memphis, 10 years old. I remember my father days before reading the paper and grumbling about the garbage strike(MLK JR was there to help organize the demonstrations) but there were no overt racial comments in our house. We did have a black housekeeper who came in once a week – the day it happened she called my mother and told her to not come into town and pick her up as there was many riots going on downtown.

I recall our next door neighbor saying “good, they got him” and my father telling them what a terrible thing to say that was to say. I don’t think things were ever the same with them again. There were many days of riots and although we were several miles from downtown our parents kept us inside and we could occasionally hear sirens which we of course attributed to the unrest.

sosha1

April 4th, 2011
6:01 pm

I was only 3 years old but I remember a lot of screaming in my Grandmothers house…..my aunts…my mom….my grandmother. It scared me to no end. Later in life I asked my mom about that day and she was shocked that I could remember that day (I told her where i was lying down for my nap..how the screams woke me up etc) . It was sealed into my memory because i had never head such raw emotion in my life………….. so even as a 3 year old child I remember the pain of that day.

Will

April 4th, 2011
6:17 pm

I was a 17 year old high school senior and had just watched NBC Nightly News when the announcement was made on TV.

I have to admit, although I knew that African-Americans were not treated fairly, at the time I thought Dr. King was always complaining, always asking for more. I think I just wanted not to be reminded of the ways things had always been in my native state.

As I matured, I better understood and was much more appreciative of the work of Dr. King and remained ashamed of my “stick your head in the sand and hope it goes away” mentality of a teenager.

J Moore

April 4th, 2011
6:20 pm

Well I remember playing golf the day he was buried. I forget the course in Atlanta that we played on. I try to keep the tradition every year.

Elvis

April 4th, 2011
6:29 pm

Probably at home smoking a joint.

ant banks

April 4th, 2011
6:36 pm

J MOORE,

thanks for reminding us that ignorance still exists. the question was what was your where about when you got the news that he was shot.

Alabama Communist

April 4th, 2011
6:36 pm

It was a typical governmentl inside job ..like JFK, RFK,9/11, nothing changes or happens anymore by accident……….

ant banks

April 4th, 2011
6:38 pm

MR. GALLOWAY,

thanks for this piece, sir. i attended the meadows in ‘79 and if you are talkin’ about the same ms. phillips, she was a teacher, also, at md. collins high school, which i attended as well.

we have come a long way as a society, but still have a long way to go. i hear a lot of comments, from whites, about mr. obama, and they are the “cleaned up” version of vitriol that was aimed at king.

may God’s peace be on the king family at this time.

Whitey

April 4th, 2011
6:48 pm

Why, oh why does the AJC have to write a story about MLK or his offspring EVERY SINGLE week? Can we please have a month or so with no MLK stories?

Thank you.

Doris M

April 4th, 2011
6:51 pm

I was 18 years old and at home in Knoxville TN watching my mother cry after hearing the news about the death of Martin Luther King, Jr. It was the only the second time I’d seen her break down sobbing. The first time was after the announcement about the death of John F. Kennedy.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
6:51 pm

the MiLK man wasn;t much different than other tv preachers it seems..

Ralph Abernathy, a close associate of King’s, stated in his 1989 autobiography And the Walls Came Tumbling Down that King had a “weakness for women”.[173][174] In a later interview, Abernathy said he only wrote the term “womanizing”, and did not specifically say King had extramarital sex.[175] King’s biographer David Garrow wrote about a number of extramarital affairs, including one with a woman King saw almost daily. According to Garrow, “that relationship, rather than his marriage, increasingly became the emotional centerpiece of King’s life, but it did not eliminate the incidental couplings that were a commonplace of King’s travels.” King explained his extramarital affairs as “a form of anxiety reduction.”

Lucy Minogue Rowland

April 4th, 2011
7:00 pm

That evening in 1968, I was a principal organizer at Virginia Tech for a program on race relations, CONFLICT ‘68.

Our two speakers who were expected to debate that evening were Roy Wilkins, Executive Director of the NAACP and Senator Strom Thurmond.

The pity is a great deal must have been lost about the program we organized. I sent all that I had saved to Special Collections at the Virginia Tech Librariers.
http://spec.lib.vt.edu/archives/blackwomen/flag.htm

Too bad...

April 4th, 2011
7:16 pm

Too bad the race pimping “leaders” of the black community today haven’t learned something from MLK. Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, and the rest of the race-baiting scammers are holding blacks back far more than any redneck Clansman ever could. Time for blacks to clean up the criminal mindset that pervades their society, ditch the entitlement mindset, and become self-reliant.Only then will they realize their full potential.

kim

April 4th, 2011
7:16 pm

I remember the next day when I heard the news on the radio. I was 9 years old at the time. I was riding in the car with my Grandmother and she said,” there’s going to be some stuff now”. There was rioting and the National Guard presence in the city. I am from Baltimore, MD. I wasn’t old enough to fully understand the impact of Dr. King’s assassination except to know that a man who was the same age as my Mother, had died tragically. As I grew older, I understood how hatred and bigotry turns otherwise decent people into self serving idiots.

flower power

April 4th, 2011
7:16 pm

Lucy,

Thank you for your post and corresponding link.

Aubrey

April 4th, 2011
7:21 pm

Rioting in Detroit for no apparent reason.

Jesse

April 4th, 2011
7:31 pm

Rubbing MLKs blood on my clothes to make it look like I held him in my arms while he died.

Taylor Swift

April 4th, 2011
7:32 pm

I was swimming in the Testes River, waiting on a egg to hatch.

Chuck Norris

April 4th, 2011
7:33 pm

I was kicking Bruce Lees Ass

Motocross Survivor

April 4th, 2011
7:46 pm

Nothing wrong with his message; too bad he was a compete phony.

Motocross Survivor

April 4th, 2011
7:46 pm

complete phony that is.

smart dawg

April 4th, 2011
7:56 pm

Jim,
It was April Capers, not April Follies. And Martha Pendley died last year in Fayetteville.

Coastal Cavalier

April 4th, 2011
8:08 pm

I was watching “Ironside” on television. Chet Huntley broke in with the bulletin. I remember my Mom saying something about she hoped there would be no riots.

tim

April 4th, 2011
8:25 pm

Most “black leaders” such as J Lowery, the Black Caucuses, the NAACP, and any other group who segregates themselves solely on their skin color still don’t understand MLK’s message.

In MLK’s eyes, they are racist. Too bad they can’t see beyond their opportunist racist noses.

Just waitin for whitey to bring em down……….

rufus

April 4th, 2011
8:26 pm

I was doing the nasty with my sister in law

Marietta Methodist

April 4th, 2011
8:35 pm

I was not born yet. However, because of him I was able to be born in a society where it was possible for me to be all that I am now… educated, Christian, Black, a minister, and accepted by people of all races openly! Like every other person on the planet, King is not without faults. However, none of those faults changes his impact on our society. You can point to his issues. What about yours? We have all sinned. However, some of us move past our own selves and think of others. That is what King did and what we should all strive towards. God bless him and his family. God knows they have struggles recently. I pray for mercy for all.

Time Flies

April 4th, 2011
8:35 pm

I was 10 years old, watching Bewitched when the news broke. I cried.

Whoknowz

April 4th, 2011
8:36 pm

Too bad some people can’t resist being obnoxious.

I was at home and if coastal cavalier is correct, that would be how I heard it too. I don’t remember that part just being incredibly sad that there was such hatred and mostly awed on the color of the skin.

Whoknowz

April 4th, 2011
8:38 pm

That was supposed to be based on the color of the skin

Marietta Methodist

April 4th, 2011
8:38 pm

Also, people look too much at his speeches and ignore his writings. He wrote beautiful things about the beloved community and what it meant. He as not a Black leader. He was about all people coming together as one. Most of us miss that. He was not so much about lifting the Black race as he was about lifting the human race. The saddest thing to me is that the church is the slowest area to integrate. Churches are pretty much just as they were when he was killed. Less than 2.5% of churches are multiracial in the USA. That is pathetic.

ryan

April 4th, 2011
8:40 pm

in my dads reproductive unit stiill :-P

Chuck

April 4th, 2011
8:42 pm

I was 10 years old, about to have my 11th birthday in a few days. I lived in north Memphis. My next door neighbor was a Memphis fireman and I had an uncle who was a Memphis policeman. I remember my parents were concerned for our neighbor as the rumors were that as firemen were going to calls to put out fires in the riot areas that they were being shot at. As a 10 year old, I wasn’t really worried about my uncles safety, but I was very concerned for our neighbor, because, I reasoned that he didn’t carry a gun like my uncle did. Also. schools were cancelled the following Monday, which happened to be my birthday. At the time I thought this was great.

As I have grown older and look at history with a more mature view, I admire the unselfish bravery and methods used by Dr. King to make this a better country. I sincerely believe that had he lived a complete life, with his guidance, some of the lingering social problems in the African American community would not be a significant. They lost a true leader on that day.

SGT SABAN

April 4th, 2011
8:48 pm

I was 10, living in Huntsville, AL. It was my parents wedding anniversay, i heard the news on my transistor radio. My Mom was getting ready to go out, i ran in to tell her.,, Mom, Mom, Martin Luther King has been shot…. she told me to get ouf of there, it did not seem to register with her. Mom grew up in Memphis.. back when blacks had separate water fountains and bathrooms she used to tell me. She grew up like that, did not really try to pass any of that on. I remember we had like one or two black guys in my class. I liked them, we all used to talk, for many of us it was our first time to interact with a black person, so we had an interest in learning about each other.. it was really still bad back then, later we started having lots of racial fights, bad ones too, for a young kid, i did not understand what was going in .. heck i lived a small little world, no cable, no internet, just a little transistor radio but i heard about it on the night it happened. I thought it was important to tell people…

Thaddeus works

April 4th, 2011
8:50 pm

I was three years old in Albany Georgia

Steve H

April 4th, 2011
8:53 pm

I was just short of 10 years old living about 5 miles north of Baltimore City that day, the following day I think was a Friday and the riots broke out in Balt and DC, from my house between the hours of 7pm and 5am there was a bright glow just south of us, it was from a steady stream of fires that burned for 3 days. My family had a liquor store in NW Baltimore, my father brought all of the expensive liquor to our house late on Friday. Our store survived the riots because that particular neighborhood was mostly white, however most of the stores owned by others were stripped to the ground. One neighbor next to ours had a Grocery store in a mostly black neighborhood, he went to the store the following Monday and said he only found one pack of cigarettes under a pile of debris, everything else was gone.

Lucy Minogue Rowland

April 4th, 2011
8:59 pm

Thank you to all who have shown respect for the man and his work. The world would be a lot better off with those like you.

For others, please but your hate aside. Martin Luther King Jr. died in 1968. Let your hate go away.

Sadly

Elvis

April 4th, 2011
9:02 pm

I never heard Martin refer to himself as an African-American. He didn’t see any point in looking at things from that perspective. WHAT HAPPENED!!!

Lynn

April 4th, 2011
9:07 pm

I was 7 years old and I remember my mom crying. I asked her “why are you crying” and she said Martin Luther King was killed

MJ

April 4th, 2011
9:07 pm

I was in Korea in the field in the wake of the Pueblo and Blue House Raid.

LivingWellDCH

April 4th, 2011
9:10 pm

I was with my mother, exiting a department store called “Alexander’s” in the Bronx, and upon exiting the store, my mother heard the news and she boo-hoo’d profusely. People on the bus home were all crying.

By the way...

April 4th, 2011
9:22 pm

King was OK in my book, but how about his kids? What a group of total POS’s they are. Greedy, squabbling and nasty. In a weird way, it’s good that he’s not around to see how they have acted in his absence.

Chris P. Bacon

April 4th, 2011
9:25 pm

I was nine years old. My dad got very, very drunk, sitting in his easy chair, watching the news reports…which scared the hell out of me, because I don’t ever recall him drinking before or since.

Gene Harris

April 4th, 2011
9:27 pm

It was my 15th birthday. My family was just sitting down to birthday dinner and ice cream and cake when the announcement came on tv. Only time I saw my mother and grandmother cry.

Powder Springs

April 4th, 2011
9:39 pm

Most people won’t remember where they were. His demise wasn’t the kind of momentous event that creates a memory marker, like for example where one was on 9/11/2001, when JFK was assassinated, and when The (other) King died.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
9:44 pm

The topic intrigues me..I was not born until 1984 so i called my Dad and asked him. My dad was born in 1956 so he would have been 12. He said he was in Nashville visiting his grandma (my great granny) and that all the men in the family went down to the family’s car dealership in Hendersonville with guns to prevent any riot damage.

@MJ

April 4th, 2011
9:48 pm

Thanks for your service!

MrLiberty

April 4th, 2011
9:51 pm

Too young to have known what it all would have meant. But now that I am old enough to know better, I know that the government’s version is likely a crock, there were likely members of the government, local police, FBI, and others directly connected with the conspiracy and that James Earl Ray probably had absolutely nothing to do with it other than being framed. I know enough to know that the america of our fantasies is far from the america of our reality.

ed

April 4th, 2011
9:51 pm

trish,

your daddy left out the part about your kinfolk wearing white sheets and burning a cross in glee.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
9:52 pm

@powder springs..

I do remember where I was on 9/11..I was sitting in the family room home from school to go to the orthodontist, 8:46 am the first plane hit, 9:03 the second plane hit..then 9:37 the pentagon is hit. I kept thinking, dad, how are they gonna tear down these burned out buildings in the middle of manhattan after the fire is out..then they collapsed. I knew we were going to war, and I wanted blood..I remember the muslims dancing that day. yeah..

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
9:53 pm

ed, the only reason to burn a cross if if someone you hate is already nailed to it..get a life

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
9:55 pm

Although, ed, since offending the thin skinned is one of the GREAT joys of life, in HS I used to remind people that when they get the monday after Jan 15th off school, James Earl Ray was the reason for the season.

Native Atlantan2

April 4th, 2011
10:02 pm

Oh…so after Trisha throws mud all over MLK’s legacy she decides she’s “intrigued”. I continue to be intrigued Trisha by the vitriolic comments you make daily across the various AJC blogs. It was a simple question posed by our host and you couldn’t even bring yourself to display a minimal amount of respect. It’s not the progressives, or parasites as you frequently call them, driving this country into the toilet — it’s the self-absorbed conservatives like you.

@Mr Liberty

April 4th, 2011
10:03 pm

Yeah, and we need to wear our tinfoil hats. Watch out- here come the aliens!

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
10:05 pm

native, yep I was intrigued.

re: Native Atlantan

April 4th, 2011
10:05 pm

Hey- all of us conservatives aren’t bad!

mike

April 4th, 2011
10:09 pm

Don’t you just love all the hate being posted here today. No matter what the situation there will always be those good white folks with those good ideas how black folks should be. I am so glad they post their knowledge on here. I always enjoy reading the comments to the kids so they can understand why white folks are the way they are. I guess their hate is just a natural part of their everyday existence. Pretty sad though.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
10:11 pm

ima gonna eat this pigs foot in honor of my racist kin long live the klan and god bless my racist daddy

Native Atlantan2

April 4th, 2011
10:14 pm

Agreed — not all conservatives are bad. As for Trisha…there is certainly much more she should be intrigued about given her limited view of reality.

ed

April 4th, 2011
10:15 pm

mike,

i concur. i don’t want to make excuses for a history of ignorance within certain family genealogy, but for trish it’s obviously nurture vs. nature…

mecq

April 4th, 2011
10:16 pm

I remember vivdly the day Dr.King was killed. JFK, and RFK as well. I was raised to be politicallly aware of to always giveback to my community. I was one of 5children to integrate the schools of Madison County Florida in 1965.My parents were very involved in the struggle and the Churches in our community hosted numerous walkins/marches, etc. When i see how our community has eroded to it’s current status it saddens me; because I remember the struggle. I bear the scars of racism that will probably never go away. We were 5little African-American girls. But we broke the mold.!!!! And Madison County was never the same. We fought in the streets that day(when Dr King was killed) and many more to come. If truth be told we’re still floundering from the lost of our Leader. Instead of our community standing together to accomplish soething we’ve bought into the hype of the media. Thus instead of our advesaried destroying our community we’re doing that on our own. Everyday, AJC front page, tells of lack of respect we have for ourselves, each other, and the community as a whole. Know from whence you came, to prepare a positive. I’m not so sure that integration was the answer because i recieved a much much better education when were were being taught by our own people. They were determined to educate us so that we would not live in ignorance. Now, our youth, don’t have a chance to grow. They’re incarcerated and enslaved before they even reach the age of maturation. Remember those that came before you. Remember their sacrifices and never deminish their importance in your struggle.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
10:16 pm

ah name cloning losers strike this blog too

Native Atlantan2

April 4th, 2011
10:18 pm

I’ll give u credit Trisha..the 10:11 post certainly didn’t sound like you.

To Mike

April 4th, 2011
10:22 pm

Mike- Sorry to surprise you, but all white folks aren’t haters. I suggest you stay away from stereotypes. My guess is that you probably don’t like the young black male sterotype.

Bottom line is that there are good and bad people in every group. Mine, yours, and theirs.

TrishaDishaWar Eagle

April 4th, 2011
10:23 pm

Mmmmm….. I’m moist

TrishaDishaWar Eagle

April 4th, 2011
10:28 pm

Where’s my cuzin at? I’m a-itchin fer him.

mecq

April 4th, 2011
10:31 pm

Trish……You’re a coward just like the rest of your family. Come from behind that sheet and be a real woman. My African American Father taught me tha no man was free in America unless he/she was armed. In view of that he taught me to use a weapon at a very young age. Thankfully I inherited his marksmanship ability and was/am never affraid to defend myself. My father was a real MAN. If he had a beef with a man..be they Black or White, he confronted them like a man. He did not hide behind a sheet during his confrontations. There was not a White Man in the County that would cross my African American Father because he never missed when he aimed.He was ledgendary. He, also, taught us all his skills. So your pork-feet eating ignorant racist self should come out in the open; let’s see how far into the ATL you’ll get. Go on YouTube and post your rant. Let the world know your views and see your face. I’m going to be looking out for you “TrishaDishaWarEagle”.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
10:41 pm

mecq, so you admit the ATL is much like a black jungle where whites are preyed upon? BTW I am vegetarian, I would never eat a pigs foot..the name cloner who said that was likely one of yours..black. I never wear a sheet, but if you intend to shoot me, you had best not miss.

TrishaDishaWarEagle

April 4th, 2011
10:43 pm

Three words for blacklantans who think whitey is their main problem.. Wayne Bertram Williams

Dixie Cybill Presley

April 4th, 2011
11:09 pm

I was 4 years old and was out with the family. We had finished some shopping and were sitting in a Kentucky Fried Chicken having dinner on Danny Thomas Blvd./Hwy 51 in the Frayser portion of Memphis. A police officer came in and told us that Martin Luther King Jr. had been shot and killed and we had better head home for our safety as riots were breaking out.

Being from Memphis you tend to remember exactly where you were when you hear the news of the deaths of both Martin Luther King Jr. and Elvis.

Marietta Mary

April 4th, 2011
11:25 pm

It was the day after my 21st birthday. Then came RFK. Not the best senior year.

flower power

April 4th, 2011
11:42 pm

My mom took me and my siblings to Church for MLK, JFK, and RFK. To young to understand hatred. Church didn’t mean much to me, comfort to my mom. I understood her need for a place to weep when Lennon was judged by the hate. I went to a gay bar for comfort.

Deric

April 5th, 2011
12:18 am

I was 13, living in Kansas at a military base, Ft. Riley, my father was a proud soldier who had served as a guinea pig intergrating his unit on his first two to Korea (later served two tours in Nam). He was also subject to the nuclear testing in the Yucca Flats out west.
Yet he loved his country and I never heard him speak a racist or derogatory word about anyone, even if they sought to oppress and denigrate him.
That evening, as my mother, who was clearly angry, my sister and I sat in silence watching the news for cut-ins about what had happened in Memphis.
For the first time in my life, I watched in shock as silent tears streamed down my fathers face.

mecq

April 5th, 2011
12:48 am

Again Trish…there is no accounting for ignorance. I don’t believe that The ATL is a Black Jungle and I certainly don’t agree with you on any of that ignorant garbage you’re sprewing. A vegan….yeah right you’re too stupid and country. I’m African American. I know my a lineage. What’s your’s.???? And if you/or your kinfolks take the sheets off and I feel the nessesity to take aim I won’t miss..!!!! It’s in my blood to never leave a threat unanswered. I’m protected by the laws that state I have a right to defend myself with force when threatened. Are you threatning me..????

mecq

April 5th, 2011
12:51 am

Oh and by the way Trish…when whitey thinks of terrorism and 911 please don’t forget the original terrorist..!!! Timothy McVeigh!!!!!! Another coward..!!!!

Lt. Dan

April 5th, 2011
7:51 am

These were all periods in time which, frozen in the memory banks of many, helped to mold us, both individually and as members of a generation which transitioned from the innocence of 50s era Beaver and Howdy Doody, through the turmoil of National leaders slain, our youthful “knees skined” by the cruelty of war, and National pride in conquoring the frontiers of space. Though we neither realized nor appreciated the fact that we were leading the Country in directions unimagined, we, nonetheless, prevailed. In our own little ways, we created a Country which, despite the warts, still endures as the greatest Country on the face of the Earth. Those among us who persist in magnifying those warts will surely fade into oblivian; we can piss and moan/bitch and complain over the “relative unfairness” to which we bear witness daily, but one thing will always ring true…WE WERE THERE…WE SURVIVED, PREVAILED, AND GREW.

The Centrist

April 5th, 2011
8:33 am

I was a freshman in college here in Atlanta. First it was shock and the tone shifted to anger. Here was a man who promoted peace, but died a violent death. My dorm mates debated whether we needed to be calm and follow King’s lead or follow the forces that did not agree with turning the other cheek. One classmate said there was nothing dumber on earth than a scared person and nothing more fearless than a revengeful one. The next day, we decided to follow King’s lead and peacefully go forth and challenge the system of race, class, and gender discrimination.

FactChecker

April 5th, 2011
8:35 am

We were on our way from Tennessee to South Carolina to see my grandmother. My mom was driving and had the four of us kids in the Plymouth station wagon. My dad was in Viet Nam. It was an awful rainy night in Atlanta and we decided to spend the night at a friend’s in Fort Mac rather than continue in the storm. We got lost and pulled off at Techwood to ask directions. An elderly black man told us Dr King had been shot and it was not safe for us to be in the ghetto. He got in his car and had us follow him to Ft Mac. I was only ten but remember his concern and kindness to a lost white women and her four children. Caring for our fellow man transends all race.

BTW- Ignore Trish- based on what she says, “she’s” probably a 13 year old boy just trying to be provocative and starved for attention. Giving credence to what “she” says only prolongs the game.

The Centrist

April 5th, 2011
8:39 am

While some banter about Black ministers Sharpton and Jackson, and what they did or did not do in following King. They fail to talk about those who certainly took one of King’s actions to a whole different level such as Marvin Gorman, Jim Bakker, Jimmy Swaggart, John Paulk, Paul Crouch, Ted Haggard, Paul Barnes, Lonnie Latham, Earl Paulk, Coy Privette, Joe Barron, Tony Alamo, and George Alan Rekers.

joe

April 5th, 2011
8:52 am

Wasn’t born yet…ha ha…youth.

Orange&Blue

April 5th, 2011
9:07 am

From the bigot, Christinazi TrishaDisha “BTW I am vegetarian”

I’ve never know of a fascist vegetarian. Wow.

COMMON SENSE CITIZEN

April 5th, 2011
9:35 am

I was awakened from sleep in my bunk at Torrejon Air Base, Spain by the commotion and noise in the hallway in the barracks. There stood in the middle of the hallway a close friend who was born & raised in Atlanta, screaming at the top of his voice that Martin Luther King, Jr had been shot and killed. Within the next very tense couple of hours, the base siren blew which meant everyone was to report to their duty station. The base population was very tense as several fights had broked out and property had been damaged by a few very emotional people. Unit commanders immediately advised everyone to calm down and focus on their assigned duties. I grew up in a rural area about 30 miles north of Montgomery and had attended Dr. King’s church when I was in my early teens; I was 24 at the time and eventually I went to my room and cried.

Douglas

April 5th, 2011
10:33 am

I was seven, and the mood at our house was just as dark as pitch. My mom and dad were on the forefront of civil rights in Atlanta’s white community — they had known Dr. King personally, and they took this personally, too.

I am glad that the serious posts outnumber the trivial, vitriolic ones today. Seriously, if you are going to hate someone, do it because, as Dr. King said, the “content of their character.” Unfortunately, there are a number of people posting today who character does not measure up at all.

Douglas

April 5th, 2011
10:37 am

Trisha, I’ve always pretty much figured you were misguided, but hearing that you are a vegitarian seals it. Bless your heart.

A Conservative Voice

April 5th, 2011
11:54 am

What????He died????Why didn’t someone tell me?????

pb

April 5th, 2011
12:08 pm

I was 13 years old in a Sears store in Laurel, MS. My friends and and I were looking at stuff in the store, when someone said King had been killed. I remember the clerk saying,” I hope he took his Peace Rrize with him.” I was too young to be mad, but knew that was the wrong thing to say. But sadly, that was the feeling of many in the South back then.

pb

April 5th, 2011
12:10 pm

Sorry, that was supposed to be Peace Prize, not Rrize.

LMAO

April 5th, 2011
1:19 pm

4 years old living on Parkway Drive a few miles down from Ebenezer Baptist Church. Don’t remember the exact moment but later I do remember seeing the funeral cortage going down Auburn Avenue from the back seat of Mr. White’s Chevrolet Impala.

Jim if you attended Lakeshore then you are part of the Westwood, Lakeshore and Westlake Family!!

Former Memphian

April 6th, 2011
8:55 am

I was also living in Memphis at the time, a freshman in college. Tension had been building there for weeks, due to the garbage workers’ strike. There was a ferocious storm that came through town the night of April 3rd, spawning several tornadoes in the area. The next day, our afternoon classes were cut short (for fear of rioting connected with the scheduled march downtown), and I went home earlier than usual.

We got the sad news first from our local broadcasters and then again from the national networks. Spring break was moved up to start immediately following the shooting, many other schools closed too. The religious and political leaders joined together to hold a 100 days of prayer for our community.