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Martin Luther King’s first ‘I have a dream’ speech – months before
“And when he comes on stage, everybody, and I mean everybody, got to their feet and got to hollering and jubilation with excitement”, he said.
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Miller came across the reel-to-reel tape in a town library while conducting research for his book on how King drew inspiration from the poetry of Langston Hughes, Associated Press reports.
“I have a dream tonight”.
Before the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech to hundreds of thousands of people gathered in Washington in 1963, he fine-tuned his civil rights message before a much smaller audience in North Carolina.
North Carolina State English professor Jason Miller says he discovered the recording of the speech King gave on November 27, 1962, in Rocky Mount, North Carolina.
Herbert Tillman remembers that day well. “Everything was full. Everyone was attentive, and Martin Luther King had always been a great speaker”. “Also, I at no other time heard Dr Ruler join each one of those sorts into one specific minute”.
Tolokun Omokunde, now the pastor of Timothy Darling Presbyterian Church in Oxford, recalled being an unruly teen student, forced by his grandmother to rake his teacher’s yard after saying the mild expletive “Shoot” in frustration.
Miller confirmed that the tape could be played safely and he had audio expert George Blood digitize the tape.
‘It proves once again that the “I have a dream” portion was not a good climax to a speech for mere applause, but an enduring call to hopeful resistance and a nonviolent challenge to injustice’.
And 50 years from now, said Cash Michaels, editor of The Carolinian newspaper, recordings of Tuesday’s event better not be hidden in a library drawer.
“I’ve never heard King combine a public address with the energy of a mass meeting and the force of a civil rights speech”, he said. On the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, King changed that to “sit down together at the table of brotherhood”. “Hearing those words was absolutely remarkable”.
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Rocky Mount: “I have a dream that one day men all over this nation will recognize that all men were created equal and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights“. Just that day, he’d made a speech at the high school gym in her hometown, where he’d first uttered his famous wish for all God’s children, from the prodigious hilltops of New Hampshire to the snow-capped Rockies of Colorado.