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Bill Lucy, Pioneering Labor and Civil Rights Leader, Dies at 90

Bill Lucy, Pioneering Labor and Civil Rights Leader, Dies at 90  at george magazine

He helped popularize “I Am a Man” as a demand for respect during the 1968 strike by Black sanitation workers in Memphis.

Bill Lucy, a trailblazing Black union leader who fought for civil rights in the American South and against apartheid in South Africa, and who pressured organized labor to address concerns about equal treatment for minority groups, died this week at his home in Washington. He was 90.

His death was confirmed by his daughter Phyllis Lucy, who said he died in his sleep either late Tuesday or early Wednesday.

Mr. Lucy was not as famous as many other figures in the civil rights movement. But he was instrumental in popularizing a four-word evocation of self-esteem and dignity — “I Am a Man,” which doubled as a demand for respect — that was embraced by striking Memphis sanitation workers in 1968 and evolved into a national hosanna.

He was organizing the workers for the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees when he and the Rev. Malcolm Blackburn, the white minister of Clayborn Temple, were brainstorming what message to place on the protest signs the church had promised to print. They then recalled how the Rev. James M. Lawson Jr., another lion of the movement, had defined racism a few days before.

“And finally we came up with four words,” Mr. Lucy said in an interview with the HistoryMakers Digital Archive in 2012.

Mr. Lucy worked with other civil rights leaders to create and popularize the slogan “I Am a Man” during the strike by sanitation workers in Memphis in 1968.Heritage Images, via Getty Images

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