Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Visiting Memphis 50 years after King’s assassinat­ion.

- By Jay Jones

SHORTLY after noon, as Sunday services at Memphis’ abundant churches conclude, another gathering of the faithful is getting underway at a restaurant popular for its soul food.

“Hi, welcome to The Four Way,” owner Patrice Thompson greets every customer, often in quick succession.

Many dressed in their Sunday best, the diners are a diverse crowd — a far cry from decades past, when the folks here were nearly all African-American.

The walls of the 72-year-old restaurant are covered with photos of the celebritie­s who’ve eaten here: Singers such as Aretha Franklin and Isaac Hayes, who would drop by after recording sessions at nearby Stax Records, and some of the biggest names in the civil rights movement: Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson and, most notably, Martin Luther King Jr.

“He’d come in every time he was in town,” Thompson said, though she’s too young to have ever met the famous preacher.

‘Born out of the tragedy’

Just like The Four Way was a regular stop for King, so, too, was the Lorraine Motel, where he would stay during visits to Memphis. He last checked in on April 3, 1968. The next night, King, was dead at age 39, felled by an assassin’s bullet as he stood on a balcony outside his second-floor room.

The Lorraine — and some might say the nation — would never be the same. Within hours of King’s murder, Loree Bailey, who owned the motel with her husband, suffered a stroke. She died five days later. Even as the motel fell into disrepair, the building remained a shrine to the slain leader — the beginning of the movement that, eventually, would allow visitors to walk in King’s footsteps.

Half a century later, commemorat­ions of King’s profound impact on America are underway. The National Civil Rights Museum, which incorporat­es the old motel, is leading the charge.

“It is clear that the museum was born out of the tragedy of his assassinat­ion,” noted Faith Morris, a museum executive. “This is probably the most comprehens­ive storytelli­ng of the American civil rights movement.”

‘I Am a Man’

That story begins with the arrival of the first slaves in America in 1619. Exhibits discuss the Civil War and Reconstruc­tion before visitors arrive in the ugly years of the mid20th century: the Montgomery bus boycott, the Freedom Riders and the sanitation workers’ strike that brought King to Memphis.

As newspaper headlines are projected onto a vintage garbage truck, an oft-forgotten chapter in the struggle for equality is as The Four Way’s Thompson put it, “there’s a church on every corner.”

Clayborn Temple, then an African Methodist Episcopal church, was where the strikers strategize­d over meals cooked by family members. Despite broken windows and gaping holes in the plaster — stark evidence of a long-leaking roof — the temple is again a center for gatherings on social justice issues.

The church’s civil rights history is shared during prearrange­d tours. It’s a history unknown even to many locals.

“I grew up in Memphis and had no idea there was a sanitation strike,” said Deondra Henderson, Clayborn’s operations manager. “A lot of times, the sanitation strike is overlooked because of the assassinat­ion.”

The Withers Collection

Along Beale Street, the downtown boulevard renowned for its blues clubs, it’s easy to overlook the Withers Collection, a small museum that shares the civil rights movement in Memphis through one man’s photograph­s.

Guide Connor Scanlon estimates that during his life, Ernest Withers took about 1.3 million photograph­s, starting in middle school.

Withers became King’s personal photograph­er during the Montgomery boycott that began just after Rosa Parks’ arrest. He not only documented racial inequality but also poignant, private scenes of King. In one picture, King unwinds on his bed at the Lorraine Motel, two years before he was assassinat­ed on the adjacent balcony.

‘It’s part of the history’

The boarding house across the street, from which James Earl Ray fired the fatal shot, is now the civil rights museum’s Legacy Building. There are various exhibits, but most guests gravitate to the second-floor replica of Ray’s small bedroom and the nearby bathroom window through which he stuck a rifle on that fateful April 4.

Just as with John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion, conspiracy theories continue to cloud King’s death. The museum gives them voice through exhibits that ask, “Did Ray have help?” and “Did someone else do it?”

“We almost do a ‘you be the judge’ kind of thing,” Morris said. “Whatever actually happened … it’s part of the history.”

 ?? Charles Kelly The Associated Press ?? Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his moving, tragically prophetic “Mountainto­p” speech April 3, 1968, at Mason Temple.
Charles Kelly The Associated Press Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his moving, tragically prophetic “Mountainto­p” speech April 3, 1968, at Mason Temple.

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