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Martin Luther King Jr. (1929-1968)
Martin Luther King Jr.,
Baptist
minister and president of the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference
(SCLC), was the most prominent African American leader in the
civil rights movement
of the 1950s and 1960s.
Early Life and Education, 1929-1955
Family, church, and education were the central forces shaping King's early life. Michael Luther King Jr. was born in
Atlanta
on January 15, 1929, the son of Alberta Williams and Michael Luther King Sr. In 1934, after visiting Europe, Michael King
Sr. changed his and his son's name in honor of the sixteenth-century German church reformer Martin Luther. King spent his
early years in the family home at 501
Auburn Avenue
, about a block from
Ebenezer Baptist Church
. His maternal grandfather, A. D. Williams, was pastor at Ebenezer from 1894 until 1931. After Williams's death, the elder
King succeeded his father-in-law at the pulpit.
King was educated in Atlanta, graduating from Booker T. Washington High School in 1944. He then followed in the path of his
maternal grandfather and father and enrolled at
Morehouse College
. King first considered studying medicine or law but decided to major in sociology. He ultimately found the call to the ministry
irresistible, however. He served as assistant to his father at Ebenezer while studying at Morehouse. In February 1948 King
Sr. ordained his son as a
Baptist minister
.
After graduating from Morehouse in June 1948 King studied for a divinity degree at Crozer Theological Seminary in Upland,
Pennsylvania, graduating in May 1951. The following September King enrolled at Boston University in the Ph.D. program in systematic
theology. There he met his future wife, Coretta Scott. King's father preferred that his son marry an Atlanta woman and initially
opposed King's plans to marry Coretta. When King refused to back down, his father relented, and on June 18, 1953, he performed
the marriage ceremony at the Scott family home in rural Perry County, Alabama.
During his last year of residential studies at Boston University, King sought employment while he finished his dissertation.
Through a family friend he learned of a vacant position at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. Desiring a
pulpit in a southern city and wanting to escape Atlanta and gain independence from his father, King arranged a trial sermon.
He was offered the position, and in 1954 he moved to Montgomery with Coretta. In June 1955 King received his Ph.D. The Kings'
first child, Yolanda Denise, was born November 17, 1955.
King and Civil Rights, 1955-1960
On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks, a respected member of Montgomery's black community, refused to surrender her bus seat to
a white passenger when asked to do so.
She was arrested for violating a city
segregation
statute. Community activists proposed a bus boycott in protest. They asked King if his church could be used as a meeting
place to discuss the boycott. Although he supported the plan to boycott, King hesitated to become involved because of his
existing commitments. After some persuasion, however, he agreed.
At the meeting black leaders agreed on a one-day boycott. When this was successful, they agreed to extend the action. King
was asked to head the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA), a new organization formed to run the bus boycott. He had not
planned to take a leading role, but he agreed to serve. The boycott ran for 381 days. Throughout, whites in Montgomery tried
to stymie it. King and other MIA members were arrested. Segregationists even bombed King's home.
The intimidation strengthened the resolve of the black community. The initial demands of the MIA for a modified system of
segregation on city buses evolved into a lawsuit that called for its total abolishment. The case went all the way to the U.S.
Supreme Court, which ruled segregation on Montgomery buses unconstitutional. On December 21, 1956, King was among the first
passengers to board an integrated bus.
The bus boycott made King a national symbol of black protest. In the next few years he spoke alongside other national black
leaders and met with U.S. president Dwight D. Eisenhower and a host of foreign dignitaries. In 1958 King published
Stride toward Freedom
, his account of the Montgomery boycott. But his newfound recognition came at a price. In September 1958 a mentally ill black
woman, Izola Ware Curry, stabbed King in the chest at a book signing in New York. King barely survived that injury. Earlier
that month, police in Montgomery had again arrested King. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) began to take an interest
in him, starting a covert surveillance of his activities that continued for the rest of his life.
All the while King looked to capitalize on the success of the Montgomery boycott. In August 1957 the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference,
an organization comprising religious, civic, and political affiliate groups, was launched with King as president. The SCLC,
with headquarters in Atlanta, initially focused on supporting bus boycotts and instituting drives to register black voters.
These campaigns made little impression. At the end of 1959 King resigned from his position at Dexter and in early 1960 moved
back to Atlanta, sharing the pastorate at Ebenezer with his father. There he could maintain closer contact with SCLC headquarters,
in the hope of launching more effective campaigns in the future. Though his work kept him away much of the time, Atlanta remained
his home base, and that of Coretta and his children, for the final eight years of his life.
Nonviolent Direct Action, 1960-1963
Events quickly overtook King and the SCLC. In February 1960 four black students staged a sit-in at a segregated lunch counter
in Greensboro, North Carolina. The sit-in movement rapidly expanded to other cities, where it met with some success in persuading
local communities to desegregate facilities. In April 1960 the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
(SNCC), based in Atlanta, was formed to support
student protest
. In 1961 the Chicago-based Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) held interracial "freedom rides" to test the court-ordered
desegregation of southern bus terminals. The freedom rides ultimately led to federal action in upholding the court order.
The success of sit-ins and freedom rides demonstrated the relevance of nonviolent direct action to the civil rights movement.
During the Montgomery boycott, two of King's close advisors, white pacifist Glenn E. Smiley and black activist Bayard Rustin,
tutored King in nonviolence. King's interest in nonviolence continued to develop and became a central tenet of his leadership.
King joined student sit-ins in Atlanta, though he declined an invitation to participate in the freedom rides.
King and the SCLC embarked upon their first nonviolent direct-action campaign in 1961 in
Albany
, at the invitation of local blacks. The
Albany Movement
encountered numerous problems. King and the SCLC lacked specific goals and a coherent strategy. Divisions in the black community
hampered demonstrations. Albany police chief Laurie Pritchett refused to engage protestors and instead made mass arrests that
quickly depleted the movement's resources. Without dramatic points of conflict, the tactic of nonviolence lacked potency.
The federal government refused to intervene, and the local white business community refused to enter into substantive negotiations.
The campaign dissolved without gaining any significant concessions.
Learning the lessons of Albany, in 1963 King and the SCLC carefully chose their next target. In Birmingham, the Alabama Christian
Movement for Human Rights (ACMHR) under the leadership of the Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth provided an established local base
for protest. Specific goals and a movement strategy were drawn up in advance. As expected, Birmingham police chief Eugene
"Bull" Connor met protestors with force, using police dogs and high-power fire hoses to break up demonstrations. The conflict
brought national news headlines and federal intervention, and pulled local white businessmen to the negotiating table. The
campaign won significant gains in desegregating downtown facilities and in opening up black employment opportunities, although
segregationist violence in the city remained a serious problem.
Desegregation and Voting Rights, 1963-1965
The years between 1963 and 1965 represented the high point of King's career. In August 1963 the civil rights movement
staged its largest gathering ever, with as many as 250,000 participants at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. King's
"I Have a Dream" speech was the most memorable event of the day and confirmed him as black America's most prominent spokesperson.
In 1964 King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, Norway.
The same year, Congress passed the 1964 Civil Rights Act, outlawing segregation in public facilities. In 1965 King and the
SCLC campaigned in Selma, Alabama, for black voting rights. The campaign led to the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act,
which abolished legal impediments to voting rights for African Americans and initiated greater federal protection for blacks
at the polls.
Not everything went King's way. Attempts to renew demonstrations in Birmingham after a surge in white violence met with stiff
opposition and failed to make much headway. U.S. president John F. Kennedy's assassination in November 1963 lost King a carefully
cultivated federal ally, although the new president, Lyndon B. Johnson, proved equally if not more sympathetic with the civil
rights movement. A new SCLC campaign launched in St. Augustine, Florida, in 1964 failed to win meaningful concessions for
local blacks. King's attempts to mediate the seating of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party delegation at the 1964 Democratic
Party convention failed. The FBI stepped up its campaign of harassment and intimidation against King.
As was often the case in King's relatively short public career, victory and defeat, advancement and setback, were never far
apart.
New Directions, 1965-1968
In the last few years of King's life, important changes were taking place in his thinking,
in the civil rights struggle, and in American society. Between 1965 and 1967 blacks rioted in several U.S. cities. In 1966
some activists adopted the slogan "Black Power," which represented a new wave of militancy that, frustrated with persistent
racism in American society, questioned the relevance and efficacy of nonviolence in addressing racial problems. The escalation
of the Vietnam War shifted public debate, material resources, and political will away from the civil rights movement. Conservative
politicians, playing to a white backlash against black gains, were increasingly successful in advocating a tougher law-and-order
stance to subdue protest.
King responded to these developments in a variety of ways. He took the SCLC into the northern ghettos in an attempt to alleviate
the conditions that caused the urban riots. He opposed much of the angry rhetoric of Black Power and continued to stress the
importance of nonviolence. He spoke out ever more stridently in opposition to American involvement in the Vietnam War. He
opposed conservative politicians who sought to exploit white racial fears. He also gained new insight about black problems
in the United States as the movement shifted from tackling segregation to confronting the problem of racial discrimination.
In 1965-66 the SCLC launched its first northern campaign in Chicago. King felt that the urban riots in northern cities underlined
the need for SCLC assistance, focusing on such issues as black employment, housing, and education opportunities. The Chicago
campaign highlighted the difficulties of fighting entrenched racism. The city was much bigger than previous communities in
which the SCLC had worked. Discrimination was much more difficult to dramatize than segregation. SCLC funds declined, making
operations even more problematic. Despite some successes, the SCLC failed to make the desired impact on black advancement
in Chicago.
The
Chicago campaign convinced King that many of the problems faced by African Americans were due to fundamental economic inequalities
in American society. Consequently, he called for a redistribution of wealth and resources, advocating a move away from the
harsher aspects of capitalism toward a society modeled on some form of democratic socialism. The last campaign King planned
with the SCLC was a Poor People's March to Washington to dramatize the problem of poverty in the United States. But on April
4, 1968, before the march took place, King was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, where he was supporting striking sanitation
workers. King was survived by his wife and four children, Yolanda Denise, Martin Luther III, Dexter Scott, and Bernice Albertine.
In 1968
Coretta Scott King
founded the
King Center
in Atlanta as a memorial to her husband. The center seeks to advance King's philosophies of justice and nonviolence through
its educational programs, exhibitions, and tours. In 1983 Congress passed legislation to make the third Monday in January
a national holiday in honor of King, who remains the only African American to be commemorated in this way. The first Martin
Luther King Jr. holiday was observed on January 20, 1986. Major collections of his
papers
are owned by Boston University, the King Center, and Morehouse College.
King was selected as one of the inaugural honorees for the Extra Mile Points of Light Volunteer Pathway, a monument in Washington,
D.C., that celebrates the efforts of national volunteer leaders. The pathway was unveiled in October 2005.
Suggested Reading
Taylor B. Branch,
At Canaan's Edge: America in the King Years, 1965-68
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 2006).
Taylor B. Branch,
Parting the Waters: America in the King Years, 1954-1963
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988).
Taylor B. Branch,
Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963-65
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1998).
Clayborne Carson, ed.,
The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr.
(New York: Warner Books, 1998).
Michael Eric Dyson,
I May Not Get There with You: The True Martin Luther King, Jr
. (New York: Free Press, 2000).
Adam Fairclough,
To Redeem the Soul of America: The Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Martin Luther King, Jr.
(Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1987).
David J. Garrow,
Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
(New York: Morrow, 1986).
David J. Garrow,
The FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr.: From "Solo" to Memphis
(New York: Norton, 1981).
John A. Kirk,
Martin Luther King Jr.: Profiles in Power
(New York: Longman, 2004).
John A. Kirk, Royal Holloway, University of London, United Kingdom
Updated 6/11/2007
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