
Martin Luther King Jr. In Grosse Pointe (MI)
N 42° 23.426 W 082° 54.224
17T E 343302 N 4694882
Dr. King's famous speech about the "two Americas" took place here at Grosse Pointe High School March 14, 1968.
Waymark Code: WM15AHD
Location: Michigan, United States
Date Posted: 11/23/2021
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Dr. King's speech here is memorialized on a Michigan Historical Marker at the currently named Grosse Pointe South High School. Here is the text:
Martin Luther King Jr. spoke at the Grosse Pointe High School auditorium on March 14, 1968, to a crowd of more than two thousand people. In a speech entitled “The Other America,” King depicted two worlds within the nation: one where white families flourished, and another where black families struggled due to inequality. Nearly two hundred protestors from Breakthrough, an anti-communist group based in Detroit, picketed outside the high school and heckled King during his speech. The protestors criticized King for his opposition to the Vietnam War. King allowed a few hecklers to voice their opinions during his presentation. At the end of the speech he received a standing ovation. Just three weeks after he visited Grosse Pointe, King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.
Speaking here in 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. described “two Americas”: “One America is beautiful for situation…. In this America children grow up in the sunlight of opportunity. But there is another America. This other America has a daily ugliness about it that transforms the buoyancy of hope into the fatigue of despair.… Thousands of young people are deprived of an opportunity to get an adequate education … the schools are so segregated … that the best in these minds can never come out…. “However difficult it is to live amidst the constant hurt, the constant insult and the constant disrespect, I can still sing we shall overcome … because the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends towards justice.”
Audio of this speech here: (
visit link)