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The former Lorraine Motel now houses the National Civil Rights Museum

That April 4 at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis

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As I have written here previously, we visited the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis back in 1999. The museum is housed within the former Lorraine Motel, where Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was gunned down 41 years ago tomorrow evening.

This morning, I heard on the news that LIFE magazine has posted a gallery of never-before-published photos by Henry Groskinsky from “The Day MLK Died” on their website. Here is the NBC Nightly News segment about these pictures:

This, in turn, got me thinking once again about one of the most haunting stories I have ever heard anywhere.

In 1993, NPR anchor Liane Hansen traveled to Memphis and the museum, and she spoke with the Rev. Samuel “Billy” Kyles, at whose home Dr. King had planned to eat dinner that evening.

Rev. Kyles’ vivid and moving eyewitness account of that day absolutely devastated me, and I ordered a CD copy of the segment from NPR which I still own. However, because it predates the vast archives of material that NPR has put online, I have never found an audio file of it at their site.

Until today.

Searching one more time, I finally found the piece. You can hear it by going to this page and looking under the “King’s Last Days” subheadline. The audio link is beneath it, titled “Listen: King in Memphis.”

The segment is 33 minutes long, and it is worthy of your undivided attention.

If you get a chance later today or this weekend, find someplace quiet and take the time to go back to that motel and that balcony.

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Comments

Words fail in describing the full emotions one experiences by listening to this. Thank you for posting this link.

kewl

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