Ask any grade schooler what they know about Martin Luther King Jr. and their response will almost certainly include his four most famous words: “I have a dream.”
The “I have a dream” speech that King gave on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963 became the most celebrated moment of his civil rights work, but it was not the first time he uttered the phrase.
Two months earlier, King marched in Detroit in a rally known as “The Walk to Freedom,” where he led 125,000 people in the largest civil rights demonstration the nation had seen at the time, protesting segregation in the South as well as inequality in wages, housing, and education in the North. During his remarks at the end of the march, he spoke about his dream.
“I have a dream this afternoon that my four little children, that my four little children will not come up in the same young days that I came up within,” he said “but they will be judged on the basis of the content of their character, not the color of their skin.”
The speech came not two weeks after President John F. Kennedy had given his famous televised civil rights speech, in which called upon the nation to embrace the cause. King acknowledge that indirectly in his Detroit speech. “There are some white people in this country who are as determined to see the Negro free as we are to be free,” he said.
On Saturday, Rev. Al Sharpton will join Martin Luther King III, NAACP President Ben Jealous, and Reverend Jesse Jackson to commemorate that march, following a route similar to that King and his legions of supporters took on June 23, 1963.
Read a portion of King’s 1963 speech below.
And so this afternoon, I have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream.
I have a dream that one day, right down in Georgia and Mississippi and Alabama, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to live together as brothers.
I have a dream this afternoon that one day, one day little white children and little Negro children will be able to join hands as brothers and sisters.
I have a dream this afternoon that one day, that one day men will no longer burn down houses and the church of God simply because people want to be free.









