Lost In History: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Visit to Montclair High School

52 years ago, during a firey time in the United States and around the world, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. made a controversial visit to this very town, possibly at the peak of his notoriety.

Dr. King Waits In the Montclair High School Band Room Before Speaking to a Local Church Congregation

Just two years prior to his assassination and untimely death, King arrived in Montclair, making town history by stopping into the Montclair High School band room.

This often untold story starts with King’s childhood. During those summers, he would spend time with family in Paterson, New Jersey. While in Paterson, King found a mentor in a Baptist minister, Reverend Rice, who took the future preacher and civil rights leader under his wing. Fast forward to 1966. That same minister was retiring from his congregation in–you guessed it– Montclair.

Dr. King was invited to speak at the ceremony commemorating the reverend’s retirement. Due to the overwhelming number of people that wanted to attend Dr. King’s address, it became apparent that it would be nearly impossible to hold the ceremony in Reverend Rice’s church. In need of a venue, the Montclair High School auditorium was soon named as the location.

A Majority White Audience, Listening to Dr. King in the MHS Gym

In 1966, when segregation and polarization plagued the country, the announcement of this change in location caused a public outcry among Montclair’s white residents, angry that the church was using public property for the event. This prompted the municipality to order the church to take back half of the tickets already promised to the congregation. Despite the racial tension in the town, Dr. Martin Luther King went ahead with the speaking engagement.

On September 11, 1966, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. used this opportunity of strain on the community to impart wisdom on Montclair’s residents. On the day of the event, Dr. King first spoke in the brand new Montclair High School gymnasium, to the mostly white audience that had demanded the ability to attend.

The Immense Audience, Eager to Witness Dr. King

During the address, Dr. King spoke about the atrocities of school segregation and the “separate but equal policy,” addressing many parents of white children, while standing in a newly renovated school. Meanwhile, the schools designated for African American students were without the proper materials and physically falling apart. The hypocrisy was palpable.

Following this speech, Dr. King was to eventually speak to the church congregation in the auditorium, as planned. However, before the congregants had filed into the venue, Dr. King was kept in the Montclair High band room, captured by the now famous photo. As he is sitting and waiting to move on to the planned speaking engagement, protesters lined Park Street, deeply angered by Dr. King’s presence in Montclair. Due to the windows that line the East side of the band room, Dr. King was able to watch the protest unfold before him. But, after a few minutes spent in the music room, and months of commotion, Dr. King was finally able to speak to the church congregation, the reason for his Montclair arrival in the first place.

Now, over 50 years later, Dr. King’s Montclair High School moment has been honored with a plaque, placed in the band room. The Montclair Dispatch spoke with various Montclair High School alumni and faculty about this hidden gem of Montclair history.

Protesters Against Dr. King’s MHS Visit, Lining Park St

“I was genuinely surprised upon hearing that Dr. King spoke at MHS. I’m excited and proud that we can now share this history with our students and the community,” says Thomas Manos, Social Studies Lead Teacher for the Civics and Government Institute (CGI) at MHS.

Eve Mahaney, an MHS graduate (‘14) and recent Ithaca College graduate (‘18), who also serves as General Manager and Social Media editor for The Montclair Dispatch, told the publication “I was thrilled when I heard that MLK had visited MHS, I felt like I was a part of history. I was very surprised to learn about this and shocked that neither I nor the majority of the student body knew about. The most exciting part for me was seeing the photo that was taken of MLK in the band room, I can’t believe I had never seen that before. I think it’s important that the students are aware that Dr. King paid a visit to our school and honoring that with a plaque in MHS is a wonderful idea.”

Anjelique Melendez, a Montclair High School graduate (2017) and a University of Michigan sophomore (class of 2021) was blown away by the lack of awareness of Martin Luther King’s visit to Montclair High. “It’s interesting how in a town like Montclair, we don’t seem to talk about Martin Luther King’s visit. I can recall a time in middle school where I was once told about his visit to Montclair. Because of that, on the rare occasion when it is mentioned, I’m not shocked. Surprisingly though, it seems to be a topic left out of our curriculum for years. My siblings, Montclair High School graduates from the class of 2007 and 2011, were completely shocked when I told them of this historic part of Montclair High School.”

Andrea McLaughlin, the lead English teacher within CGI, said, “I was surprised to learn of Martin Luther King Jr’s visit to Montclair High School simply because I hadn’t heard this great news spoken of before, not because it’s unbelievable. It seems almost natural that Dr. King would have visited a place synonymous with diversity and progress.  It’s joyous to be in the place where the people you worship have been.”

Dr. King’s Band Room Visit

The Montclair Dispatch also spoke with Maryann Wasko, Executive Secretary to Dr. James Earl, former Principal of Montclair High School. “Learning that Dr. Martin Luther King spoke at Montclair High School in 1966 was a wonderful surprise; however, later seeing a photo of him sitting in the MHS band room was a jaw-dropping moment.  As my husband, James Wasko is the band director at MHS, it was very familiar indeed. Then to further learn that my good friend Stan White was a student usher during Dr. King’s appearance, gave new meaning to “it’s a small world.”

At the time of Dr. King’s speaking engagement, Stan White was a sophomore at MHS. Mr. White is currently President of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship Fund and a lifelong Montclair resident.

Now, a key player in this story is the Montclair High School band room, which provided a place of peace for Dr. King, while in between two deeply divided groups of Montclair residents. The Montclair Dispatch had the pleasure of speaking with Mr. James Wasko, the band director at Montclair High School. “It is truly an honor to work at MHS where so many of our nation’s greatest have walked these very halls and who have been in the MHS band room over the years, from Itzhak Perlman to Joe Walsh, and now Dr. King himself.  I am pleased that the memorial plaque is located in the band room at the very spot Dr. King sat waiting to go on stage to speak. Indeed an honor for MHS.”

Montclair is full of history–both hopeful, and at times shameful. But this event, in particular, might have served as a wake-up call for the town of Montclair, its system of educational segregation by race, and for a newfound social and moral awareness. But the moment of Dr. King’s visit to Montclair High School should be revered and taught, as it marks an incredible point in history.

 

“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter”- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

 

The author of the article is a Montclair native class of 2017, currently a student at McGill University, studying history and communications within the Faculty of Arts.

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