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Dr.MARTIN LUTHER KING.(1929-1968)
It marks the 86th
anniversary of the birth of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
The nation will celebrate
the man in honor of King's birthday. The following is a reflection of some of
poignant moments of Dr. King's life and his legacy in bringing the Civil
Rights movement to the foreground of America's conscience.
Martin Luther King Jr. was born to the
Reverend Martin Luther King, Sr., and Alberta Williams King on January 15th,
1929 in Atlanta, Georgia.
An excellent scholar, Martin Luther
King Jr. graduates from Atlanta's Morehouse College. Dr. King and other civil rights activists
mobilize a yearlong boycott of Montgomery's
bus system. Dr. King is arrested for
the first time for driving over the speed limit. Four days later, the lives
of the King family are threatened when a bomb is thrown onto the porch of
their Montgomery
home. Later this year, Dr. King is indicted on charges related to the Montgomery bus boycott.
The District court rules that bus segregation is unconstitutional and an
all-race inclusive Montgomery
bus system returns to black neighborhoods.
1957 -- Amid more threats against his
life, Martin Luther King Jr. founds the the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference. He is elected president of the organization.
1958 -- Dr. King's book "Stride
Toward Freedom: The Montgomery Story" is published. A mentally ill woman
stabs Dr. King in the chest during a book signing in Harlem.
1959 -- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. resigns
from the Dexter Avenue Baptist
Church and moves his family back to
his birthplace of Atlanta
to continue directing the SCLC. The King family travel to India to
study Mahatma Gandhi teachings of non-violence which would later become the
foundation of his Civil Rights campaign.
1960 -- Martin Luther King Jr. becomes
co-pastor of Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist
Church. King is
arrested in Atlanta after conducting a sit-in.
1961 -- A demonstration to desegregate
public facilities in Albany,
Georgia,
leads to Dr. King's arrest on charges of protesting without a permit. He is
later convicted on the charges.
1963 -- King writes his now-famous
"Letter From Birmingham Jail" while imprisoned for leading a
non-violent sit-in to protest the segregation of eating facilities. More acts
of civil disobedience lead to authorities unleashing fire hoses and police
dogs on protestors in Birmingham.
Later this year, in a victorious moment for Civil Rights, the Supreme Court
rules Birmingham's
segregation laws unconstitutional. Dr. King's book "Strength to
Love" is published. On August 28th, Dr. King delivers the speech which
critics would later deem the most powerful speech of the 20th Century. King's
"I Have A Dream Speech" was heard by thousands on the steps of the
Lincoln Memorial in Washington,
DC. It remains, in effect, one
of the most memorable speeches of all-time. On November 22, President Kennedy
is killed by a sniper's bullet while riding in an open-car motorcade in Dallas, Texas.
1964 -- Dr. King joins demonstrations in St. Augustine, Florida
for the integration of public accommodations. His book "Why We Can't
Wait" is published by Harper & Row. At age 35, Dr. King becomes the
youngest man, the second American, and third black man to receive the Nobel
Peace Prize.
1965 -- Civil rights activist Malcolm X is
gunned down in New York City
in February of this year. In Alabama,
thousands of protest marchers leave Selma for
a march to Montgomery.
Along their journey, they stop to hear a speech by Dr. King. Later this year,
President Johnson signs the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
1966 -- Dr. King launches a drive to make Chicago an open city in
regard to housing. He is stoned in Chicago
as he leads a march through crowds of angry whites. 1967 -- Martin Luther
King Jr. writes his final book "Where Do We Go from Here?" while
visiting Jamaica.
Alabama is
ordered to desegregate all public schools by theáfederal government. Dr. King
announces the formation of a Poor People's Campaign.
1968 -- Dr. King leads a parade of
protestors in support of striking black sanitation workers. King delivers his
"I Have Been to the Mountain Top" speech at the Memphis Masonic
Temple in Tennessee on April 3rd. It would be his
last speech. On April 4th, the day after he delivers his historic speech, a
sniper kills Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis. King was just
39 years old. Upon learning the news, Senator Robert Kennedy announces the
death of Dr. King in Indianapolis,
Indiana. Four days after Dr.
King's assassination, on April 8th, Democratic Michigan Representative John
Conyers submits the first legislation to propose King's birthday as a
holiday. James Earl Ray is captured, convicted, and sentenced to 99 years in
prison for the murder of Dr. King. Ray later recants his confession and
spends the rest of his life professing his innocence behind bars.
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