Inscription
(Front) On May 8, 1966, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. visited Kingstree. King’s speech, which came after passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, urged an audience of 5,000 who had gathered on the grounds of Tomlinson High School to “march on ballot boxes” and use the vote as a means to pursue social and economic justice.
King also called for grassroots mobilization and challenged each attendee to help register new voters. (Reverse) King referred to the current moment as a “second Reconstruction” and reminded the audience that during the first Reconstruction S.C. had elected African American representatives to serve in the State House and U.S. Congress.
If they had done so before, then they could do so again. His message ranged beyond political and civil rights, to a vision of a day when all would enjoy adequate jobs, food, and security. Sponsored by Williamsburg County Development Corporation, Tomlinson Alumni, Inc., and the citizens of Williamsburg County, 2016
Location
Sources
More markers in Williamsburg
Indiantown Presbyterian Church
ABOUT ½ MI. W OF INDIANTOWN, SC
Organized in 1757 with John James and Robert Wilson as founding elders.
Battle of Lower Bridge
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Gen. Francis Marion and his men defeated the British at this place in March 1781.
Battle of Kingstree
Kingstree, SC
Somewhere northwest of Kingstree on the night of Aug. 27, 1780, while scouting for Gen. Marion, a South Carolina militia company led by...
Old Muster Ground and Courthouse
Kingstree, SC
This lot was designated the parade ground in the original survey of the town in 1737.
Ebenezer United Methodist Church
ABOUT 3 MI. NE OF HEMINGWAY, SC
This church is said to be the oldest Methodist congregation in present Williamsburg County.
