Kansas City Public Library Exhibit
The "’68: Marking 50 Years of Kansas City’s Deadly Riot" exhibit opens Monday, April 9 at the Central Branch of the Kansas City Public Library.
The "’68: Marking 50 Years of Kansas City’s Deadly Riot" exhibit opens Monday, April 9 at the Central Branch of the Kansas City Public Library.
A Look Back at the Deadly '68 Riots
Fifty years ago this April, Kansas City experienced deadly riots that put the national spotlight on our city. They left six people dead, hundreds arrested and multiple blocks of the city in flames. Frustrated with the slow pace of civil rights reforms and outraged at the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., protesters in Kansas City took to the streets on April 9, 1968.
An Exchange of a Lifetime
Amid the riots unleashed following the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., a spark of hope quietly ignited in the center of the country. That flicker was right here, in Kansas City, where Catholic leaders launched an experiment that confronted race head-on by bringing black and white students literally face to face through a student exchange program.
1968 Kansas City Race Riots: Then & Now
The spring and summer of 1968 was a tumultuous time of civil unrest across the United States. Riots, triggered by the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. but also tied to deeply-rooted issues, erupted in more than 100 cities nationwide. Kansas City was one of them. King was killed on April 4, 1968.
Kansas City, 1968: Photos of MLK assassination protest found
During a routine inspection of donated filing cabinets, a warehouse worker at Kansas City's Surplus Exchange made a surprisingly timely discovery: around 24 photos of the April 9, 1968, protest at KCMO's City Hall following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.