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8 Things You Didn’t Know About Martin Luther King Jr.

Photo by The New York Public Library Unsplash

The American icon was a complicated man.

Liberty Project
Liberty Project

Feb 01 | 2024

Each year, we celebrate the life and accomplishments of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Most people are aware that King was a civil rights leader who fought against segregation and worked to secure voting rights for Black Americans and other minorities. His work helped push the Civil Rights Act of 1964 through Congress and into law.

But there’s far more about Martin Luther King Jr. that isn’t common knowledge. Here are a few things that have been forgotten over the course of history:

1. King was a strong supporter of democratic socialism.

During the 2016 election, Bernie Sanders brought the term “democratic socialism” to the forefront of American politics. But Martin Luther King Jr. openly supported the philosophy throughout his life. As a child, King saw the bread lines during the Great Depression. “I can see the effects of this early childhood experience on my present anti-capitalistic feelings,” he wrote in 1950 while he was a divinity student. King saw capitalism as “a system that takes necessities from the masses to give luxuries to the classes.”

2. King’s activism went far beyond the Civil Rights Movement.

He also protested the Vietnam War. In 1967, King delivered a speech entitled “Beyond Vietnam,” in which he called for the United States to stop bombing in Vietnam. He also argued that American troops should be pulled out of the area and the U.S. should enter into a truce that would lead to peace talks. King viewed the American intervention in Vietnam as imperialism. He was staunchly anti-war and a pacifist.

3. It wasn’t until the year 2000 that MLK Day was observed in every state.

While Martin Luther King Day became a federal holiday in 1986, not every state observed it until South Carolina was the final state to recognize the holiday in 2000. Because MLK Day is a federal holiday — not a national one — only federal employees received a paid day off. The holiday was met with resistance when it was first enacted because some felt King was too subversive to receive federal recognition.

4. King had numerous academic accomplishments.

Throughout his life, King’s intellect shined in his writing and activism. As an adolescent, he skipped both the 9th and 12th grades. At 15, he entered Morehouse College and eventually received his Doctorate of Philosophy in Systematic Theology from Boston University in 1955. He was awarded many honorary degrees — Doctor of Laws, Doctor of Letters, Doctor of Humanities, and Doctor of Divinity.

5. Over 900 streets in the United States are named after Martin Luther King Jr.

After his assassination in 1968, many cities and states re-named streets in his honor. His name even graces streets in foreign countries. Forty states in America have at least one street named after King. Unfortunately, many of the streets in the U.S. with his namesake often struggle economically. These streets tend to have high levels of poverty and racial segregation in comparison to other streets in their respective cities.

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6. He was the youngest person to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.

In 1964, King received the Nobel Peace Prize for his nonviolent resistance to racial prejudice in America. At 35, he was the youngest person to ever receive the award. Alfred Nobel, for whom the award is named, described the recipient of the Peace Prize as “the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses.”

7. King was a fan of Star Trek.

The classic science fiction TV show first aired in 1966. Star Trek made an indelible mark on American pop culture and civil rights. The U.S.S. Enterprise crew was composed of various races and nationalities, including Lieutenant Uhura. Nichelle Nichols sought King’s advice about whether she should leave the show after its first season. King encouraged her to stay on. He believed that the representation of an African-American woman in a position of leadership on the Starship Enterprise was too important.

8. He was TIME Magazine’s first Black Man of the Year.

In 1963, TIME Magazine named King the Man of the Year. That was the same year King delivered his famous “I Have A Dream” speech on the steps of President Abraham Lincoln’s memorial. The magazine cited King’s essay “Letter from Birmingham Jail” and his leadership of many peaceful protests as justification for the accolade.

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