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Memorial to striking Memphis sanitation workers opens

The opening of I AM A MAN plaza drew a crowd intent upon saluting the striking sanitation workers of 1968. (Photo: George Tillman/The New Tri-State Defender)

A memorial honoring sanitation workers who led a strike that brought Martin Luther King Jr. to Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968 is now open.

Sanitation workers, city leaders and the architects who designed the I AM A MAN plaza gathered at the Clayborn Temple on Thursday to dedicate the new memorial.

The temple was the headquarters of the striking workers, who had sought better pay and safer working conditions. King came to Memphis 50 years ago to support the strike. He was killed at a Memphis motel on April 4, 1968.

Many of the 1,300 sanitation workers have passed on. Some of those who live on are pictured here with Mayor Jim Strickland. (Photo: George Tillman/The New Tri-State Defender)

The plaza’s name comes from “I Am A Man” placards held by marchers during the strike. It features a 12-foot (3.5-meter) bronze and stainless steel sculpture and a wall with names of the 1,300 strikers. It is illuminated at night.

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