Memphis Trip Series: Clayborn Temple
“THE MOUNTAINTOP”
MEMPHIS TRIP SERIES: CLAYBORN TEMPLE
Clayborn Temple, formerly Second Presbyterian Church, was a historic place in Memphis, Tennessee, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979 for local architectural significance. It was upgraded to national significance under Clayborn Temple in 2017 due to its role in the events of the Sanitation Workers' Strike of 1968. On April 28, 2025, the church was destroyed in a fire, assumed to be intentionally set.
Reflections from the cast:
“The importance of Clayborn Temple to the Civil Rights movement in Memphis is undeniable. It was a cornerstone of community, culture, and religion. We were the only people at the temple when we arrived. A holy place, filled with such meaning, the souls, ghosts and stories of those who fought the good fight destroyed, burned down and seemingly forgotten. I can only hope that it can be restored to its former glory to honor the memory of everyone who called this place home and a safe place.”
– Himee Kamatuka
“Clayborn Temple is historical, yet spiritually awakening. The experience embodies what it means to be on hollow ground. My immediate intrinsic thought was sadness — a cry for what was lost. Ironically, the resonance of the past seemed to be even louder, especially given the timbre of the country present. On our return to Clayborn Temple for a second time, and after our visit to the gravesite of Larry Payne, the sixteen-year-old boy whose life was lost at the hands of the police on the very site of the temple, I felt an eerie shift and a deep sense of loss — loss for Larry Payne, loss for Dr. King in his attempt to see the strike to success, and a loss for humanity’s fight for equality and peace.”
– Tyson Williams
Introduction to the photos in this series from "The Mountaintop" director Darren Canady
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