Representatives from each of the sponsoring organizations addressed the crowd from the podium at the Lincoln Memorial. Speakers (dubbed "The Big Ten") included The Big Six; three religious leaders (Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish); and labor leader
Walter Reuther. None of the official speeches was by a woman. Dancer and actress
Josephine Baker gave a speech during the preliminary offerings, but women were limited in the official program to a "tribute" led by
Bayard Rustin, at which
Daisy Bates also spoke briefly (see "excluded speakers" below.)
Floyd McKissick read
James Farmer's speech because Farmer had been arrested during a protest in
Louisiana; Farmer wrote that the protests would not stop "until the dogs stop biting us in the
South and the rats stop biting us in the
North." The order of the speakers was as follows: • 1.
A. Philip Randolph – March Director • 2.
Daisy Bates – Little Rock, Arkansas • 3. Dr.
Eugene Carson Blake – United Presbyterian Church and the National Council of Churches • 4.
John Lewis – Chair,
SNCC • 5.
Walter Reuther –
UAW,
AFL–CIO • 6.
Floyd McKissick – CORE • 7. Rabbi Uri Miller—President of the Synagogue Council of America • 8.
Whitney Young – National Urban League • 9.
Mathew Ahmann - NCCIJ • 10.
Roy Wilkins – NAACP • 11. Rabbi
Joachim Prinz – American Jewish Congress • 12. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. – SCLC. His "I Have a Dream" speech has become celebrated for its vision and eloquence. Closing remarks were made by A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin, March Organizers, leading with The Pledge and a list of demands.
Official program The actual order of events differed slightly from the official printed program. Noted singer
Marian Anderson was scheduled to lead the
national anthem but was unable to arrive on time;
Camilla Williams performed in her place. Washington's Roman Catholic Archbishop
Patrick O'Boyle delivered the invocation. The opening remarks were given by march director
A. Philip Randolph, followed by a tribute to "Negro Women Fighters for Freedom", in which
Daisy Bates spoke briefly in place of
Myrlie Evers, who had missed her flight. The tribute introduced
Daisy Bates,
Diane Nash,
Prince E. Lee,
Rosa Parks, and
Gloria Richardson. Following that, speakers were Presbyterian Church leader
Eugene Carson Blake, SNCC chairman
John Lewis, labor leader
Walter Reuther, and CORE chairman
Floyd McKissick (substituting for arrested CORE director
James Farmer). The Eva Jessye Choir sang, and Rabbi Uri Miller (president of the Synagogue Council of America) offered a prayer. He was followed by National Urban League director
Whitney Young, NCCIJ director
Mathew Ahmann, and NAACP leader
Roy Wilkins. After a performance by singer
Mahalia Jackson, American Jewish Congress president
Joachim Prinz spoke, followed by SCLC president
Martin Luther King Jr. Rustin read the March's official demands for the crowd's approval, and Randolph led the crowd in a pledge to continue working for the March's goals. The program was closed with a benediction by Morehouse College president
Benjamin Mays. Although one of the officially stated purposes of the march was to support the civil rights bill introduced by the Kennedy administration, several of the speakers criticized the proposed law as insufficient. Two government agents stood by in a position to cut power to the microphone if necessary.
Roy Wilkins Roy Wilkins announced that sociologist and activist
W. E. B. Du Bois had died in
Ghana the previous night, where he had been living in exile; the crowd observed a moment of silence in his memory. Wilkins had initially refused to announce the news because he despised Du Bois for becoming a Communist—but insisted on making the announcement when he realized that Randolph would make it if he did not. Wilkins said: "Regardless of the fact that in his later years Dr. Du Bois chose another path, it is incontrovertible that at the dawn of the twentieth century his was the voice that was calling you to gather here today in this cause. If you want to read something that applies to 1963 go back and get a volume of
The Souls of Black Folk by Du Bois, published in 1903."
John Lewis John Lewis of SNCC was the youngest speaker at the event. He planned to criticize the
Kennedy Administration for the inadequacies of the Civil Rights Act of 1963. Other leaders insisted that the speech be changed to be less antagonistic to the government.
James Forman and other SNCC activists contributed to the revision. It still complained that the Administration had not done enough to protect southern black people and civil rights workers from physical violence by whites in the Deep South. Deleted from his original speech at the insistence of more conservative and pro-Kennedy leaders were phrases such as: of the
Library of Congress on the 50th anniversary, August 28, 2013 Lewis' speech was distributed to fellow organizers the evening before the march; Reuther, O'Boyle, and others thought it was too divisive and militant. O'Boyle objected most strenuously to a part of the speech that called for immediate action and disavowed "patience." The government and moderate organizers could not countenance Lewis's explicit opposition to Kennedy's civil rights bill. That night, O'Boyle and other members of the Catholic delegation began preparing a statement announcing their withdrawal from the March. Reuther convinced them to wait and called Rustin; Rustin informed Lewis at 2 A.M. on the day of the march that his speech was unacceptable to key coalition members. (Rustin also reportedly contacted
Tom Kahn, who had edited the speech and inserted the line about
Sherman's March to the Sea. Rustin asked, "How could you do this? Do you know what Sherman
did?) But Lewis did not want to change the speech. Other members of SNCC, including
Stokely Carmichael, were also adamant that the speech not be censored. The dispute continued until minutes before the speeches were scheduled to begin. Under threat of public denouncement by the religious leaders, and under pressure from the rest of his coalition, Lewis agreed to omit the 'inflammatory' passages. Many activists from SNCC, CORE, and SCLC were angry at what they considered censorship of Lewis's speech. In the end, Lewis added a qualified endorsement of Kennedy's civil rights legislation, saying: "It is true that we support the administration's Civil Rights Bill. We support it with great reservation, however." In it, King called for an end to legalized
racism in the United States. It invoked the
Declaration of Independence, the
Emancipation Proclamation, and the
United States Constitution. At the end of the speech,
Mahalia Jackson shouted from the crowd, "Tell them about the dream, Martin!", and King departed from his prepared text for a partly improvised
peroration on the theme of "I have a dream". Over time it has been hailed as a masterpiece of rhetoric, added to the
National Recording Registry and memorialized by the
National Park Service with an inscription on the spot where King stood to deliver the speech.
Randolph and Rustin A. Philip Randolph spoke first, promising: "we shall return again and again to Washington in ever growing numbers until total freedom is ours." Randolph also closed the event along with Bayard Rustin. Rustin followed King's speech by slowly reading the list of demands. The two concluded by urging attendees to take various actions in support of the struggle.
Walter Reuther Walter Reuther urged Americans to pressure their politicians to act to address racial injustices. He said, American democracy is on trial in the eyes of the world ... We cannot successfully preach democracy in the world unless we first practice democracy at home. American democracy will lack the moral credentials and be both unequal to and unworthy of leading the forces of freedom against the forces of tyranny unless we take bold, affirmative, adequate steps to bridge the moral gap between American democracy's noble promises and its ugly practices in the field of civil rights. According to
Irving Bluestone, who was standing near the platform while Reuther delivered his remarks, he overheard two black women talking. One asked, "Who is that white man?" The other replied, "Don't you know him? That's the white Martin Luther King."
Excluded speakers Author
James Baldwin was prevented from speaking at the March because his comments would be too inflammatory. Baldwin later commented on the irony of the "terrifying and profound" requests that he prevent the March from happening: In my view, by that time, there was, on the one hand, nothing to prevent—the March had already been co-opted—and, on the other, no way of stopping the people from descending on Washington. What struck me most horribly was that virtually no one in power (including some blacks or Negroes who were somewhere next door to power) was able, even remotely, to accept the depth, the dimension, the passion, and the faith of the people. was present but excluded from speaking. Despite the protests of organizer
Anna Arnold Hedgeman, no women gave a speech at the March. Male organizers attributed this omission to the "difficulty of finding a single woman to speak without causing serious problems vis-à-vis other women and women's groups". Hedgeman read a statement at an August 16 meeting, charging: In light of the role of Negro women in the struggle for freedom and especially in light of the extra burden they have carried because of the castration of our Negro men in this culture, it is incredible that no woman should appear as a speaker at the historic March on Washington Meeting at the Lincoln Memorial. The assembled group agreed that
Myrlie Evers, the recent widow of Medgar Evers, could speak during the "Tribute to Negro Women Fighters for Freedom". However, Evers was unavailable, having missed her flight, and
Daisy Bates spoke briefly (less than 200 words) in place of her. Earlier,
Josephine Baker addressed the crowd before the official program began. Although
Gloria Richardson was on the program and had been asked to give a two-minute speech, when she arrived at the stage her chair with her name on it had been removed, and the event marshal took her microphone away after she said "hello". Richardson, along with
Rosa Parks and
Lena Horne, was escorted away from the podium before Martin Luther King Jr. spoke. Early plans for the March would have included an "Unemployed Worker" as one of the speakers. This position was eliminated, furthering criticism of the March's middle-class bias. ==Singers==