American Decades
King, Martin Luther, Jr. 1929-1968
MINISTER AND CIVIL RIGHTS LEADER
New Pastor.
Martin Luther King, Jr., first attracted national attention as the president of the Montgomery Improvement Agency, which successfully conducted a bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama, from 1955 to 1956. This role began when, as the new pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, he was elected president of the ad hoc group organized in December 1955 to coordinate a one-day boycott of the Montgomery bus system to protest the arrest of Mrs. Rosa Parks. Parks had violated a city ordinance by refusing to give up her seat for a white man.
Success of the Boycott.
The success of the one-day boycott was such that it was continued for over a year as blacks refused to ride the buses until the Jim Crow restrictions were lifted. In time the bus company went into bankruptcy, and the city ordinance segregating blacks was struck down as unconstitutional. On 20 December 1956 King...
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1950's Religion
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Billy Graham New York Crusade, 1957
- Black Church Leaders and Civil Rights
- Communism in the Churches
- Dead Sea Scrolls
- Separation of Church and State
- Hollywood and Religious Films
- Integration of Churches
- The Banning of the Miracle
- National Council of Churches
- Revised Standard Version of the Bible
- Religious BestSellers
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Religion, 1950–1959
