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A historic landmark in downtown Memphis with ties to the Civil Rights movement tragically caught fire on Monday morning. According to WREG, the Memphis Fire Department and the ATF are still investigating what caused Clayborn Temple, a place of worship at the intersection of Hernando Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, to be engulfed in flames. In the meantime, community leaders in Memphis are left reeling over the destruction and hoping the temple will be restored.
A major fire significantly damaged the historic Clayborn Temple in Downtown Memphis, a key location during the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Workers Strike https://t.co/qayJdrewHU pic.twitter.com/UAxkFwOqvb
— philip lewis (@Phil_Lewis_) April 28, 2025
#BluffCityBravest battling a fire at the historic Clayborn Temple. Call came in at around 3:00am. (
Raymond Chiozza) pic.twitter.com/ISWJVxqu8q
— Memphis Fire Fighters (@mffa1784) April 28, 2025
“Clayborn Temple is more than a historic building. It is a sacred ground. It is the beating heart of the civil rights movement, a symbol of struggle, hope, and triumph that belongs not just to Memphis but to the world,” Memphis Mayor Paul Young said via press release. “Clayborn Temple has seen struggle before, and it has always overcome. So will we.”
Dr. Russ Wigginton, President of the National Civil Rights Museum, also lamented the tragedy, but, like the mayor, he expressed hope and optimism, declaring that the fire could take down the temple’s walls, “but it cannot destroy the spirit that built them.”
“The recent fire that consumed Clayborn Temple is a devastating blow, not only to Memphis but to the nation,” Wiggington said in a statement. “This historic church, a nerve center of the Civil Rights Movement, was more than just bricks and stained glass; it was a beating heart of a community that chose unity over division, progress over fear, and community over chaos.”
Here’s a little more history on the temple via WREG:
Clayborn Temple was the launching point for a march for sanitation workers’ rights that brought Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to Memphis in 1968. The iconic “I Am A Man” signs used in the march were printed there.
Dr. King planned to march with sanitation workers from Clayborn Temple on April 8, before he was assassinated April 4 on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel. His wife, Coretta Scott King, led strikers and thousands of supporters in his place.
The building dates to 1892, when it was originally Second Presbyterian Church.
In 2018, the National Trust for Historic Preservation officially named the church a national treasure. It has been undergoing a multi-million dollar restoration and is the site of the I Am A Man Plaza.
Fire Chief Gina Sweat reported that firefighters were still putting out hot spots around 9 a.m. Monday morning. It’s unclear how extensive the damage is, but photos taken at the scene show a building consumed in flames and a building in ruin in the aftermath, indicating that any road to recovery will be a long one.
SEE ALSO:
Memphis Police Sergeant Under Fire For Suggesting Descendants Of Slave Owners Are Owed Reparations
Candace Owens’ MAGA Meltdown: The Hypocrisy, The Flip-Flop, and the Fallout
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