From Deseret News archives:
MLK assassination stained Memphis, limited city's prosperity
Ex-worker recalls sanitation strike that drew King to city
Warren, 86, was one of the 1,300 black sanitation workers who walked off the job in 1968 with a strike that tore at the foundation of the city's white-only rule.
"They talked to you like you were a dog, and they worked you like a dog," he said, his shoulders trembling. "But I couldn't find a job nowhere else."
The 65-day strike for the right to unionize ended with a victory for the workers. But King's assassination stained this Southern city for years, limiting its prosperity and hurting its reputation worldwide.
"It took a decade of growth out of the Memphis regional economy," said David Ciscel, a University of Memphis economist. "It was a time of fairly rapid growth in the South, and it was a time when Atlanta and Nashville kind of left us behind ... People just didn't want to associate with us."
The city's fortunes eventually improved, thanks largely to a young cargo airline named Federal Express that in the early 1980s showed that Memphis could still be a good place to do business. The airline grew into today's FedEx Corp.
"It rescued Memphis," Ciscel said.
In the 1960s, close to 60 percent of black families in Memphis lived in poverty, Honey said, and few jobs other than manual labor were open to blacks.
Today the city has a poverty rate of nearly 24 percent overall, almost twice the national figure, and 30 percent among black residents.
But the good jobs, in government and the private sector, are no longer reserved for whites. Memphis, which was 40 percent black in the 1960s, is now more than 60 percent black. It has had a black mayor since 1991.
The strike began in February 1968 after two sanitation workers were crushed by a trash compactor when they climbed in a garbage truck to get out of the rain.
The accident was blamed on faulty equipment, but it inflamed tensions that had festered for years over low wages, poor working conditions and racist treatment of black workers by white superiors.
Recent comments
I lived in Memphis for about 4 years back in the mid-90s. Trust me -...
Anonymous | April 3, 2008 at 1:44 p.m.
- Funds help Utah science education 4:46 p.m.
- Growing pot earns man 5 years 4:42 p.m.
- Boyle hopes debut album 'delivers' 4:17 p.m.
- Fans greet returning Real Salt Lake 4:16 p.m.
- RSL protects 11 players from draft 4:00 p.m.
- Man allegedly fired at motorist 4:00 p.m.
- Doctor faces voyeurism charges 3:57 p.m.
- Payson, chamber seek medical firm 2:49 p.m.
- Protests against Phoenix LDS temple 2:47 p.m.
- Palin's book tour hits Fort Bragg 2:42 p.m.
- Buttars wants to limit gay rights laws
214 - Glenn Beck to enter politics?
212 - RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks
190 - Palin plans tour stop in Utah
178 - BYU records with win
132 - Palin's book shows she's unqualified
131 - Bronco, Kyle rubber match
110 - Officer cleared in Cardall Taser case
103 - BYU cuts Women's Research Inst.
103 - Jazz finally win in San Antonio
99
byu needs to get out of the MWC. such a waste of football talent to play in a...
Wow! Watching the MLS Cup game last night on ESPN was a nail-biter for sure....
I made the trek up to Seattle and watched our boys beat the LA Galaxy it was...
To Moses 3:49 - I would love to have a Mosque near any and all LDS Temples. I...
You are wrong. This is a liberal/conservative one. That's not to say that...
Are you kidding me???? I take my life in my hands driving around the wards...
For Rep. Matheson to waver on the moderate U.S. Senate health reform bill...
Call me crazy but I somehow doubt they would equally oppose a library being...
Sarah Palin did Not Quit, Sarah Palin moved on. If you never left a job...
Yes you can opt out but guess what.... you still get to pay for it!! Sort of...



