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LBJ Gettysburg address on race, May 1963
http://mobile.nytimes.com/2013/05/26/sunday-review/at-gettysburg-johnson-marked-memorial-day-and-the-future.html?This is apparently a 2013 piece, but I just discovered it -- and learned more about LBJ's early, and serious, commitment to civil rights.
. . .In American history, 1963 was a year rich in speeches. But of all the signature speeches that year, its the one that has been all but forgotten that might have transformed the country the most. Fifty years ago, on Memorial Day in 1963, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson gave a speech in Gettysburg, Pa., that foreshadowed profound changes that would be achieved in only 13 months and that mark us still. The occasion was a speech that almost wasnt given at all, for an anniversary that was still a month off, delivered by a man who had grown weary of his apparent uselessness in an office that neither interested him nor engaged his capacious gifts. It is a reminder that the titanic events of history sometimes occur away from the main stage and proof of the power of a great idea, even if it is delivered ahead of its time.
. ..Johnson nearly didnt give his Gettysburg speech at all. He dismissed the invitation with a shrug when it arrived in the vice presidents office. He was distracted, distressed and depressed. Almost nothing interested him. He was moping too much, and it was becoming obvious, George E. Reedy, a Johnson press secretary, said in an oral history recorded for the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library in Austin, Tex. He just looked lugubrious. He reminded me of one of those Tennessee bloodhounds, you know, with the drooping ears. "His closest aides never sent Johnsons regrets to the Gettysburg invitation, leaving the option open, hoping to lure the vice president to use the occasion to break out of his funk.. ... . .Busby drove over to the Elms, Johnsons house in the Spring Valley section of Northwest Washington, and sat by the pool as the vice president, who was deeply affected by his experience as a young man teaching Mexican-American children, thought aloud about race. Busby was so startled by how fluent and articulate Johnson was that on the way home he pulled his car over to the curb and recorded what Johnson had said.
The final product, shaped by Busby and Harry C. McPherson Jr., another close adviser, thus was more stenography than speech craftsmanship and it was all the more powerful if you looked carefully at Johnsons remarks and saw how they grew out of Kings Letter From Birmingham Jail, in which the civil-rights leader spoke of his frustration with the pace of change:
For years now I have heard the word Wait! It rings in the ear of every Negro with piercing familiarity. This Wait has almost always meant Never. We must come to see, with one of our distinguished jurists, that justice too long delayed is justice denied.
Johnsons speech directly addressed King: The Negro today asks justice. We do not answer him we do not answer those who lie beneath this soil when we reply to the Negro by asking, Patience. It is empty to plead that the solution to the dilemmas of the present rests on the hands of the clock.
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