Martin Luther King was was generally a quiet man preferring to mind his own business, but, he soon realized he had to fight for the equality of blacks and when things turned violent he became active from the start of the Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955 to 1956 until his murder in April 1968.
Martin Luther King was born in Atlanta, Georgia on January 15th, 1929. The church was very much a part of his life as both his father and grandfather had been Baptist preachers. They themselves were involved in the Civil Rights Movement. King came from a reasonably comfortable background and after graduating from college in 1948 he was not sure about which profession to join. He considered a career in medicine and law but rejected both and joined the Baptist Church. He studied at the Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania. It was while studying here, that King learned about the non-violent methods used by Mahatma Gandhi against the British in India. King became convinced that such methods would be of great value to the civil rights movement.
He became a Baptist pastor at the Dexter Ave., Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. He was appointed the president of the Montgomery Improvement Association which was created during the boycott and he became a prominent leader of the boycott - even driving some of the black community to work as the buses had been boycotted. King was arrested for starting a boycott as a result of an ) and fined $500. His house was fire-bombed and others involved with MIA were also intimidated - but by the end of 1956, segregation had been lifted in Montgomery and bus integration had been introduced.
Not long after the Montgomery Bus Boycott, King wrote 'Stride Towards Freedom'. This was read by some students at Greensboro, North Carolina and they started the student sit-in of the Woolworth's lunch counter which had a policy of not serving African-Americans. The same tactic - a non-violent response to violence - was also used by the Freedom Riders in their campaign to desegregate transport.
Buoyed by this response, King toured the country making speeches and urging more and more people to get involved in the civil rights movement. King had also noted the economic power that the black community had - as was seen in Montgomery. He tried to get communities to use companies/individual shop keepers etc. who were sympathetic to the civil rights campaign but also to boycott those who were not.
King also placed great faith in the power of the vote. Many black Americans in the South still faced enormous problems doing something as basic as registering to vote such was the intimidation they faced. In Mississippi, 42% of the state's population was black but only 2% registered to vote in the 1960 election. However, more and more did register throughout the South and in 1960, their support (70%) helped to give the Democrat J F Kennedy the narrowest of victories over Richard Nixon.
In 1963, Kennedy proposed his civil rights bill. To persuade Congress to support this bill, King, with other civil rights leaders, organised the legendary March on Washington. Baynard Rustin was given overall control of the march.
The march - officially the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom - was a major success. Held on August 28th, 1963, it attracted between 250,000 and 400,000 people. The final speaker was Martin Luther King and it was here that he made his legendary 'I have a Dream' speech which was heard throughout the world and did a huge amount to publicise the civil rights movement in America across the world. Congress did accept Kennedy's civil rights bill and it became the 1964 Civil Rights Act - a far reaching act that many saw as a fitting tribute to the assassinated Kennedy.
King then moved on to a bill that would guarantee the voting rights of the black community in America. This led to the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
From this time on, King became more and more concerned with the poverty of those in America - both black and white. For whatever reason, King became more radical - or so it seemed to those who distrusted him. He used the word "revolution" in some of his speeches and he voiced his opposition to the Vietnam War. King also became involved in trade union issues.
On April 4th, 1968, Martin Luther King was shot dead by an assassin. His death sparked off riots in many cities not to mention the blacks in the Vietnam War. In March 1969, James Earl Ray was found guilty of King's murder and sentenced to 99 years in prison.
Martin Luther King Jr. became a civil rights activist because of all the discrimination he was given, and to his African American community. He wanted to fight back not in a violent way but a way with words, verbal.
Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr was born on January 15, 1929 in Georgia. Martin Luther King Jr was a pastor and a human rights activist.
Martin Luther King Jr.
Answer Variant # 1: Martin Luther was founder of the religious sect eloquently called the Lutherans. Answer Variant # 2: Martin Luther King Jr. was a major Civil Rights activist.
said to be the greatest person to speak out against civil rights
Martin Luther king was a civil rights activist
Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr.Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther king Jr
Martin Luther King Jr was born on January 15, 1929 in Georgia. Martin Luther King Jr was a pastor and a human rights activist.
Martain Luther King Jr. is considered to be a civil rights activist.
MLK Jr. was a Minister and a Civil rights Activist
Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther king Jr. and Rosa parks
Civil Rights Day is a state holiday in Arizona and New Hampshire and is celebrated on the third Monday of January. It honors civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr. was his real name. He was an American civil rights leader and activist. He started the African-American civil rights movement.
American author and civil rights activist who was the widow of martin Luther king