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Stew Lilker’s

Columbia County Observer

Real news from Florida for working families since 2007

Florida / National

MLK Day: A Look back at Dr. King, His Nobel Peace Prize & a History of the Lake City Logo

For Civil Rights and Social Justice

Martin Luther King dreamt that all inhabitants of the United States would be judged by their personal qualities and not by the color of their skin. In April 1968 he was murdered by a white racist. Four years earlier, he had received the Peace Prize for his nonviolent campaign against racism.

King adhered to Gandhi's philosophy of nonviolence. In 1955 he began his struggle to persuade the US Government to declare the policy of racial discrimination in the southern states unlawful. The racists responded with violence to the black people's nonviolent initiatives.

In 1963, 250,000 demonstrators marched to the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, where King gave his famous “I have a dream” speech. The following year, President Johnson got a law passed prohibiting all racial discrimination.

But King had powerful opponents. The head of the FBI, John Edgar Hoover, had him placed under surveillance as a communist, and when King opposed the administration's policy in Vietnam, he fell into disfavour with the President. It has still not been ascertained whether King's murderer acted on his own or was part of a conspiracy. (Nobel Prize)

Read Dr. Kings Nobel Lecture here: The Nobel Prize
(scroll down after clicking link to read Dr. King's lecture)

Read about the history of the Lake City logo here.

The Lake City current logo was an inside deal which never involved the public.

In August of 2015, Councilman George Ward suggested a City-wide logo contest which the Council would judge.

It never happened. 

 

 

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