PHOTORevisit some Michigan places where Malcolm X spent timeThe Detroit NewsMalcolm X speaks at the Cadillac Square Building in Detroit on June 13, 1962. Detroit News ArchiveMalcolm X had significant ties to Michigan and Detroit. He spent part of his childhood in Lansing. His wife was from Detroit.Robert Haggins/AP, Robert Haggins/APThis is the second floor of the Inkster house where Malcolm X lived in the early 1950s during his conversion to Islam.Todd McInturf, The Detroit NewsThis is the original bathtub at a home in Inkster, Mich., which a young Malcolm X and others used to wash their feet in the early 1950s during his conversion to Islam.Todd McInturf, The Detroit NewsMalcolm X seated on a dais at Olympia Stadium in Detroit on June 10, 1962. The event was held to protest the police shooting of seven Nation of Islam members, one fatally, in Los Angeles in April.Archives Of The Detroit NewsMalcolm X and Betty Shabazz were married at the courthouse in Lansing in 1958. Photo of Lansing City Hall taken February 14, 2023.Clarence Tabb Jr., Detroit NewsA historical marker at the Little family homesite, where Malcolm X lived with his family lived in the 1930s. A historical marker has been at this site since 1975, but it was revised and reinstalled in 2022. Clarence Tabb Jr., Detroit NewsA pair of reading glasses that were uncovered during an archeological dig at the house in Inkster where Malcolm X lived in 1952.Courtesy Tareq RamadanMalcolm X attended one year at Mason High School before dropping out and moving to Boston. Clarence Tabb Jr., Detroit NewsDetroit Mayor Dave Bing makes brief remarks before demolition of the Ford Auditorium begins on July 8, 2011. Malcolm X delivered his last speech at Ford Auditorium on Feb. 14, 1965.John T. Greilick, The Detroit NewsBoarded up home in the Krainz Woods neighborhood that Malcolm X may have lived in for a short time in 1953 in Detroit, Michigan on February 10, 2023.Daniel Mears, The Detroit NewsRenovation work underway at house where Malcolm X lived with his brother Wilfred after his release from prison in 1952, in Inkster, Michigan on February 10, 2023.Daniel Mears, The Detroit NewsRenovation work underway at house where Malcolm X lived with his brother Wilfred after his release from prison in 1952, in Inkster, Michigan on February 10, 2023.Daniel Mears, The Detroit NewsMalcolm X addresses a rally in Harlem in New York City on June 29, 1963.Associated PressMalcolm X speaks to reporters in Washington, D.C., May 16, 1963.AP, FileThe childhood home of Betty Shabazz, on Hague St. in Detroit, February 16, 2023.David Guralnick, The Detroit NewsHistoric marker at the site for Temple No. 1, the first Nation of Islam temple in Detroit, February 16, 2023.David Guralnick, The Detroit NewsThe Masjid Wali Muhammad mosque which is the site of the first Nation of Islam temple in Detroit, February 16, 2023.David Guralnick, The Detroit News