On February 12, 1968, 1,300 Black sanitation workers in Memphis began a strike to demand better working conditions and higher pay. Their stand marked an early fight for financial justice for workers of color as part of the civil rights movement. The strike also drew Martin Luther King Jr. and fatefully became the setting for his 鈥淚鈥檝e Been to the Mountaintop鈥 speech and his assassination.
Hauling trash, sometimes in the pouring rain, was a taxing and dirty job. Yet the city of Memphis expected garbage collectors to work long hours for meager wages and without overtime pay. Their compensation, , was so low that many were eligible for welfare and food stamps.
Two Sanitation Workers' Deaths Spark Strike
A couple of weeks before the strike, workers鈥 dissatisfaction reached new heights when two men, Echol Cole and Robert Walker, were gruesomely killed while on the job. Cole and Walker had taken shelter from rain in the back of their truck when it malfunctioned and both men were crushed to death.
The fatalities sparked outrage鈥攚orkers had been lobbying the city in vain for properly functioning equipment. When the city then refused to provide compensation to the deceased workers鈥 families, workers walked off the job in disgust.
Until Memphis, both the NAACP and King had focused mainly on racial equality. The Sanitation Workers' Strike broadened their efforts to advocate for workers鈥 rights. This was part of a more significant trend of the time. 鈥淐lass had always been an issue in the civil rights movement, but in the late '60s [it] was having to deal with it explicitly,鈥 says , author of .
According to , the strike kicked off successfully with a several-hundred-person sit-in, which led the city council to acknowledge the sanitation workers鈥 union and support raises. The mayor, however, refused these concessions, and, on February 23, 1968, police confronted peaceful protesters with tear gas.
Martin Luther King Jr. Comes to Memphis
Memphis鈥 Black leaders, led by the Reverend James Lawson, formed a coalition to support the strike. Lawson 鈥渉ad a working relationship with King, so in March, he asked [him] to come and lend his voice to the struggle,鈥 says , author of .
This cause was well aligned with King鈥檚 priorities at the time. In 1968, King was building to advocate for underprivileged Americans of diverse races. The sanitation workers鈥 movement was 鈥渙ne that was explicitly about the link between economic injustice and racial injustice," says Sokol, so it was "exactly the type of thing that King was working on."
In a to a 25,000-person crowd in Memphis on March 18, 1968, King affirmed the value of the sanitation workers鈥 labor, saying, 鈥淲henever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth.鈥
On March 28, 1968, King returned to Memphis to lead a march with Lawson to support the strike. The protest turned ugly when an outside group infiltrated the marchers and became violent, leading to the death of an African American teenager.
Despite the tragedy, the strike continued, as did smaller demonstrations. Protesters marched wearing 鈥淚 Am A Man鈥 sandwich boards, demanding that they be treated with dignity. The signs, says Estes, 鈥渂ecame a rallying cry for the movement.鈥
King Delivers 'I've Been to the Mountaintop' Speech
King renounced the violence from the March 28 protest, but many of his critics still blamed him for it. On April 3, King returned to Memphis and delivered his last speech, which foreshadowed his impending death.
鈥淭hen I got into Memphis,鈥 King said. 鈥淎nd some began to say the threats or talk about the threats that were out. What would happen to me from some of our sick white brothers? Well, I don't know what will happen now. We've got some difficult days ahead.鈥
鈥淏y that time in his life, King was often depressed,鈥 Sokol says. 鈥淗e was often thinking about his own death. The death threats were coming every day, and they were coming fast and furious.鈥
On April 4, 1968, King was fatally shot at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis. 鈥淎 lot of people think of King as an all-American hero,鈥 Sokol says. 鈥淏ut he was really hated by a segment of the country while he was alive for a while, and that's what set the stage for his death, not necessarily anything specific in Memphis.鈥
King鈥檚 assassination brought deep mourning and civil unrest to cities around the country. In Memphis, the sanitation workers鈥 struggle continued, with the added support of King鈥檚 widow, Coretta Scott King. A few days after King鈥檚 assassination, she and other leaders returned to Memphis鈥 streets to support the workers.
The efforts finally paid off. President Lyndon B. Johnson sent James Reynolds, his undersecretary of labor, to Memphis to help resolve the strike. Nearly two weeks later on April 16, the city agreed to grant raises to African American employees and recognize the workers' union.