Mayor Mike Duggan | Mayor Mike Duggan Official Website
Mayor Mike Duggan | Mayor Mike Duggan Official Website
Mayor Duggan joined city officials, Detroit Branch NAACP President Reverend Wendell Anthony and faith leaders to unveil a statue of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. at Hart Plaza, exactly 60 years after he gave his “I Have a Dream” speech in Detroit two months before delivering it in Washington, D.C. at the iconic March on Washington on the National Mall.
Dr. King, the late civil rights leader who led a national movement to guarantee basic and economic rights to African Americans, was no stranger to Detroit. And in the summer of 1963, he joined prominent ministers and community leaders for the Detroit Walk to Freedom, a mass march down Woodward Avenue on June 23.
The march drew an estimated 125,000 participants and spectators, making it the single largest civil rights demonstration in the nation’s history prior to the March on Washington in Washington D.C. in August 1963.
The march was organized by the Rev. C.L. Franklin, the father of singer Aretha Franklin, the Rev Albert B. Cleage, and organizers for the Detroit Council for Human Rights (DCHR).
The walk ended at the city’s convention center, where Dr. King gave the “I Have A Dream” speech while thousands listened inside and outside the arena.
The Walk To Freedom had three goals:
The statue was designed by Salt Lake City Artist Stan Watts, who convinced the businessman who owned it to donate it to Detroit because of the “I Have a Dream speech” being delivered in Detroit. |