King Assassinated: Civil Rights Movement Galvanized by Tragedy
James Earl Ray shot Martin Luther King Jr. with a Remington 760 rifle from a rooming house bathroom across the street from the Lorraine Motel in Memphis on April 4, 1968. King had come to Memphis to support striking sanitation workers. Ray fled the United States using a forged Canadian passport in the name of Ramon George Sneyd and traveled through London and Lisbon before being arrested at London's Heathrow Airport on June 8, 1968, when a customs officer noticed the name on a Scotland Yard watchlist. Ray was extradited to Tennessee, pleaded guilty to avoid the death penalty, and received a 99-year sentence. He recanted his guilty plea three days later and spent the rest of his life claiming he was a patsy in a larger conspiracy. The King family publicly supported Ray's efforts to obtain a new trial, believing government agencies were involved. A 1999 civil trial in Memphis found that the assassination was the result of a conspiracy, though the US Department of Justice rejected the finding after its own investigation.
March 10, 1969
57 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on March 10
The Roman fleet that won the First Punic War wasn't paid for by Rome. Wealthy citizens funded 200 warships out of their own pockets after the treasury went brok…
Maximian rode into Carthage celebrating victory over the Berbers, but he'd actually spent five years struggling to control tribes who knew every mountain pass a…
Liu Zhiyuan waited just sixteen days after the Khitan invaders abandoned Kaifeng before declaring himself emperor and founding the Later Han dynasty. The former…
Christopher Columbus sailed for Spain, leaving his brother Bartholomew to govern the fledgling settlement of Santo Domingo. This departure solidified the first …
The bishop ran out of wind. Fray Tomás de Berlanga was sailing from Panama to Peru in 1535 when his ship hit the doldrums — dead calm for six days straight. Oce…
The pretender won because his enemy's spiritual leader insisted on joining the battlefield. Abuna Petros II, patriarch of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, rode al…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.