Douglass Project's sponsor/source for this text:                                                                                                                                                    Prepared by: D.   L. Oetting                                                      Accepted: 26 May 1999                                                     Last updated: 26 May 1999                         Home | Speech Guides & Notes | Reference | Featured                  Martin Luther King, "I Have a Dream," 28 August 1963                  Occasion: The keynote speech at the 1963 March on Washington for                 Jobs and Freedom, King gave the address from the steps of the                 Lincoln Memorial to about 250,000 people assembled before him. The                 speech was also broadcast on TV and published in newspapers. Since                 1963, King's "I Have a Dream" speech has become the most famous                 public address of 20th century America. The immediate effect of the                 speech also shaped American history. Julian Bond, a fellow                 participant in the civil rights movement and student of King, would                 write, "King's dramatic 1963 'I Have a Dream' speech before the                 Lincoln Memorial cemented his place as first among equals in civil                 rights leadership; from this first televised mass meeting, an American                 audience saw and heard the unedited oratory of America's finest                 preacher, and for the first time, a mass white audience heard the                 undeniable justice of black demands" (Seattle Times, 4 April 1993).                                   "I Have a Dream"                         I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history as the                 greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.                                                                         ...