Progressive and leftist labor unions like the United Auto Workers and the International Union of Electrical Workers played a key roll in supporting the March on Washington for Jobs and Justice. |
Like
a lot of people back in ’63 I was glued to the television for the beginning-to-end coverage provided by CBS News of the March for Jobs and Justice on August 28. I was a 14
year old in Cheyenne, Wyoming at
the time. I was both thrilled and awestruck. Listening to Dr.
King’s I Have a Dream Speech literally changed my life.
The march originally was the brainchild
of an elder of both the Labor and Civil Rights movements. A. Philip Randolph, President of the Brotherhood of
Sleeping Car Porters and of the Negro
American Labor Council as well as a Vice
President of the AFL-CIO modeled his call for a march on Washington on a similar event he had planned
back in 1941 to force President
Franklin D. Roosevelt to open up
employment in the burgeoning defense
industry to Blacks. Just the threat of thousands of Negros descending on the Capital had been enough to cause the
President to establish the Committee on
Fair Employment Practice and bar
discriminatory hiring in the defense industry. Randolph wanted to bring similar pressure on President
John F. Kennedy and Congress to move
on stalled Civil Rights legislation,
but also to bring up new issues of jobs and that had been overshadowed by the tumultuous battle for civil rights in
the South.
The March was the brain child of A. Phillip Randolph of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, a veteran Civil Rights leader, and a leading Socialist. |
Randolph brought together the leaders of all of the largest
national Civil Rights organizations including James Farmer, President of
the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); John Lewis, President of
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC); Roy Wilkins, President of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); Whitney Young, President of the National Urban League; and Dr. King, President of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
to form a coalition to sponsor the march. It was no small feat because of turf wars, ideological differences, and egos.
In addition Randolph sought support from the Labor
movement, most significantly from Walter
Reuther, President of the United Auto Workers (UAW). The White dominated craft unions
of the AFL, however, were notable for their absence.
Bayard
Rustin
of the pacifist Fellowship of
Reconciliation (FOR) and the
organizer of the 1947 Journey
of Reconciliation, an early forerunner of the Freedom Rides that was meant to test a Supreme Court ruling that
banned racial discrimination in interstate travel, was tapped to coordinate volunteers and logistics,
recruit marchers from across the
country, and attend to all of the other
details of the march while Randolph pulled
together political, labor and religious support for the march.
Other than being a star
speaker that day King was not
heavily involved in the planning or management of the event. He even left
the details of mobilizing SCLC
supporters to his aides.
As word spread,
it became apparent that the march
was going to turn into the largest event
of its kind in history. The media began to pay attention. On the day of the march, buses poured into the city from sleepy Mississippi towns and from gritty
industrial hubs like Detroit and
Chicago. Trains from Boston, New York, and Philadelphia
were jammed. Thousands of local Washington residents swelled
the throng.
Peter, Paul and Mary were among the notable entertainers who performed. They led the crowd in Pete Seger's anthem If I Had a Hammer. |
Marian
Anderson, who had sung on the same steps at the invitation of Eleanor Roosevelt after she was denied
use of the Daughters of the American
Revolution Constitution Hall in 1939, opened the program with the National Anthem. Several other performers took to the stage
over the course of the program, perhaps most notably Peter, Paul and Mary, Joan
Baez, Bob Dylan, and Mahalia Jackson.
The Catholic
Archbishop of Washington, Patrick
O’Boyle led the invocation. Other religious leaders on the program
included Dr. Eugene Blake on behalf
of the Protestant National Council of
Churches and two leading Rabbis.
After Randolph’s opening
remarks each of the major civil rights leaders took the stage in turn. Floyd McKissick had to read the remarks of CORE’s James
Farmer, who was in a Louisiana jail.
The youngest leader, John Lewis of the militant SNCC, excoriated the Kennedy Administration for not acting to protect Civil Rights workers who were under regular and violent attack across the
South. Randolph and others who were
trying to flatter and coax the President into action forced Lewis to strike the
most inflammatory portions of his speech,
but what was left was still plenty
critical.
Slain NAACP
organizer Medgar Evers’s
wife Myrlie was on the announced
program to lead a Tribute to Negro
Women, but did not appear.
In fact several prominent female figures in the Movement were either not
invited or had their requests to be added to the program rejected by
Randolph. In the end the only woman
to speak was jazz singer and dancer Josephine Baker
who wore her World War II Free
French uniform emblazoned with
her medal of the Légion d’honneur.
It all led up the last major address—the highly anticipated speech of Dr.
King. If civil rights veterans knew what
to expect from the notoriously eloquent
leader, millions of Americans viewing at home were in for an eye opening experience. The speech, built to the thundering
crescendo:
Let freedom ring. And when this happens, and when we allow freedom ring—when
we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every
city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God's children—black men
and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics—will be able to
join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual: “Free at last!
Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!”
Dr. King's great speech is the best remembered part of the March, but the event was even bigger and more significant than he was. It helped change a nation. |
The nation, or
most of, it was awestruck and impressed. That speech, along with the continued televised violence against
Blacks struggling for equal access
to public accommodation and the vote, helped set the stage for the major Civil
Rights legislation enacted in the next three years.
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