Martin
Luther King
Martin
Luther King Jr. was born in Atlanta, Georgia in the large twelve
room house of his parents on January 15, 1929. His grandparents also
lived in the house.
He was born during a time when Negro people did not have the rights
which they have today.
M.L., as he was called, first experienced racial discrimination*
when their white neighbors refused to let him play with their boys.
This was hard for him to understand because the boys had grown up as
neighbors and had played together for years.
At a later time he and his father were asked to move to the back of a
shoe store to be fitted with shoes. They left without buying anything.
These early incidents made a deep impression on the young boy.
When he was five years old his mother persuaded the first grade
teacher, Miss Dickerson, to make room for him in her class. Even though
he started several weeks after the other children, he soon caught up
with them academically and even surpassed*
them before the year was over.
He attended Oglethorpe Elementary School which was a private school
associated with Atlanta University. His parents paid $25 a year which
covered all his expenses. Miss Lemon, his teacher taught him to be
independent. She taught him if there was an injustice, he could rebel,
but still keep his dignity and find quiet ways to resist. She inspired
her students to learn about Negro history and take pride in their
heritage*
. She took the class on field trips to visit with successful Negro
businessmen and professionals. Her students started each day by singing
the song, Lift Every Voice and Sing.
He attended Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta. He was younger
than most of the students and also skipped some subjects because he
already knew the subject matter.
On one occasion he and his teacher were riding on a bus. When the bus
filled up with people, the driver asked them to stand up and let two
white people have their seats. It was the law. Martin saw the injustice
of it, and he never forgot that incident.
When he was 15 years old he entered Morehouse College. After two years
in school he decided he could best serve others by becoming a minister.
He became assistant minister of the Ebenezer Baptist church where his
father was minister. The following year he graduated from college. He
was only 19 years old.
He then attended Crozer Theological Seminary in Chester, Pennsylvania.
While he was at Crozer he began to study the teachings of Mahatma
Ghandi, a man who brought about changes in India through "passive*
resistance". Ghandi urged people to not fight, but to protest
peacefully. Martin saw this method of non-violent resistance as the
answer to the unfair treatment Negroes received in America.
When he was a senior at Crozer he was elected class president and also
won an award as the most outstanding student.
He worked on his Ph.D. at Boston University. It was there he met
Coretta Scott who would become his wife. They would eventually have
four children; two boys and two girls. When he graduated from Boston
University he became the minister of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church
in Montgomery, Alabama.
Blacks and whites were segregated*
in Montgomery, attending different schools and sitting in separate
sections on buses. Sometimes blacks would be forced to stand on a bus
even though there were empty seats in the "white" section at the front
of the bus. On December 1, 1955 Mrs. Rosa Parks refused to give up her
seat on a bus. The police were called and she was arrested. This event
led to a Negro revolt all over America.
E.D. Nixon, who was a train porter, bailed Rosa out of jail, and he
started contacting others about starting a boycott*
of the buses. "Boycott" means they would refuse to ride the buses until
they received fair treatment. The newspapers heard of the plan and
wrote an article. This article was very helpful in getting the word out
about the boycott.
The black leaders were asking for courteous treatment from the drivers
and seating on a first-come, first-served basis, with whites in the
front of the bus and blacks in the rear. No one was to be asked to give
up a seat for someone else. They also wanted Negro drivers in the Negro
areas.
The boycott lasted for more than a year and Negroes walked, rode
bicycles, and rode in car pools to get to work. In December of 1956 the
Supreme Court ruled that bus segregation was unlawful.
In 1957 Dr. King helped establish the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference (SCLC) and he became its president.
Black students began to stage "sit-ins" at lunch counters. Up until
this time they had been forbidden food service at eating places.
Then the "freedom riders" began riding buses from state to state and
doing "sit-ins" at lunch counters and "white" waiting rooms. Th Jim
Crow laws that said blacks were to be denied certain rights began to be
challenged in many cities in America.
Peaceful marches were organized and people were arrested because they
were taking part. Even little children were sprayed with water hoses
and arrested! On August 28, 1963 Martin Luther King and other leaders
led a march into Washington D.C. Over 200,000 people marched from the
Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial. It was here Dr. King
delivered his "I Have Dream" message.
In 1964 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Norway. He
gave the $54,000 prize money to the civil rights groups which were
working to secure the rights Negroes deserved.
Dr. King was put in jail 30 times for his resistance. Some people tried
to kill him. Then on April 4, 1968 a gunman did murder him in
Memphis, Tennessee. His widow Coretta Scott King passed away January
30, 2006.
Many changes have taken place in America because of the leadership of
Martin Luther King. In 1986 when Ronald Reagan was president, Congress
passed a law establishing a national holiday, Martin Luther King Day.