1963
March on Washington, I Have a Dream
A quarter million people gathered at the Lincoln Memorial to demand jobs and freedom. From the platform Martin Luther King Jr. began reading a prepared speech, then set his text aside after Mahalia Jackson called out: Tell them about the dream, Martin. He did. The speech would echo through American memory.
Valentina Tereshkova orbits
A twenty-six-year-old textile worker and amateur parachutist became the first woman in space, circling Earth forty-eight times in three days aboard Vostok 6. Nineteen years would pass before another woman reached orbit. Soviet propaganda made the most of her. The Americans had not yet put a female astronaut in line.
Thich Quang Duc burns
At a Saigon intersection, a Vietnamese Buddhist monk sat down in the lotus position, had gasoline poured over him by a fellow monk, and set himself on fire to protest the persecution of Buddhists by the Catholic Diem regime. A photographer captured it. President Kennedy called the picture the most powerful news image he had ever seen.
JFK assassinated in Dallas
At 12:30 in the afternoon, as his motorcade moved through Dealey Plaza, rifle shots struck the president in the neck and head. Jackie Kennedy crawled across the limousine trunk. An hour later he was pronounced dead at Parkland Hospital. A nation watching television fell into a kind of public mourning it had never known.
Birmingham fire hoses and dogs
Police Commissioner Bull Connor ordered high-pressure fire hoses and police dogs turned on Black schoolchildren marching for civil rights in Birmingham, Alabama. The television footage, broadcast into living rooms across the nation, shocked Americans and finally moved the Kennedy administration to draft what became the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The movement had found its moment of undeniable moral clarity.
Medgar Evers assassinated
The NAACP field secretary in Mississippi was shot in his driveway in Jackson by a white supremacist. He died at a nearby hospital. The killer, Byron De La Beckwith, would walk free for thirty years until finally convicted in 1994. Evers's widow Myrlie kept fighting for justice for three decades. He was thirty-seven.