What was it like to work with Dr. King?
Back in 1963, Don Rose was an organizer for Midwest states at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. He’s made plenty of other marks in Chicago politics — leading school boycotts, managing the anti-machine campaign that elected Jayne Bryne the city’s first female mayor — but today we wanted to talk with him mostly about 1966, when Martin Luther King brought his civil rights work to Chicago, and Rose worked as his press secretary.
GUEST:
Don Rose
Longtime activist in Chicago | Press Secretary, MLK’s Chicago Freedom Campaign, 1966
Don Rose, living legend, worked with MLK at a critical moment of the civil rights movement, helped spearhead the antiwar protests at the 1968 Democratic Convention, mentored David Axelrod, and knew Charlie Bird Parker when bebop started in the 1940s. https://t.co/hZaf4idEJe
— Jonathan Alter (@jonathanalter) December 30, 2021
Prepared for web by Owen Henderson
Help shape our coverage on The 21st by joining our texting group and answering weekly questions. To join, text “TALK” to 217-803-0730 or sign up with your phone number below: