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Martin Luther
King Jr.
1929-1968
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1929 January 15. Michael Luther King Jr., later renamed
Martin, born to schoolteacher Alberta King and Baptist
minister Michael Luther King. Boyhood in Sweet Auburn
district.
1948 King graduates from Morehouse College in Atlanta,
Ga. with a B.A.
1951 Graduates with a B.D. from Crozer Theological
Seminary in Chester, Pa.
1953 June 18. King marries Coretta Scott in Marion,
Ala.. They will have four children: Yolanda Denise (b.1955),
Martin Luther King III (b.1957), Dexter (b.1961), Bernice
Albertine (b.1963).
1954 September. King moves to Montgomery, Ala. to preach
at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church.
1955 After coursework at New England colleges, King
finishes his Ph. D. in systematic theology.
1956 January 26. King is arrested for driving 30 m.p.h.
in a 25 m.p.h. zone. January 30. King's house bombed.
1957 January. Black ministers form what became known
as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. King
is named first president one month later. In this typical
year of demonstrations, King traveled 780,000 miles
and made 208 speeches.
1958 King's first book published, Stride Toward Freedom
(Harper), his recollections of the Montgomery bus boycott.
While King is promoting his book in a Harlem book store,
an African American woman stabs him.
1959 King visits India. He had a lifelong admiration
for Mohandas K. Gandhi, and credited Gandhi's passive
resistance techniques for his civil-rights successes.
1960 King leaves for Atlanta to pastor his father's
church, Ebenezer Baptist Church.
1962 King meets with President John F. Kennedy to
urge support for civil rights.
1963 King leads protests in Birmingham for desegregated
department store facilities, and fair hiring. April.
Arrested after demonstrating in defiance of a court
order, King writes "Letter From Birmingham Jail." This
eloquent letter, later widely circulated, became a classic
of the civil-rights movement. August 28. 250,000 civil-rights
supporters attended the March on Washington. At the
Lincoln Memorial, King delivers the famous "I have a
dream" speech.
1964 King's book published: Why We Can't Wait . King
visits with West Berlin Mayor Willy Brant and Pope Paul
VI.
December 10. King wins Nobel Peace Prize.
1965 January 18. King successfully registers to vote
at the Hotel Albert in Selma, Ala. and is assaulted
by James George Robinson of Birmingham. February. King
continues to protest discrimination in voter registration,
is arrested and jailed. Meets with President Lyndon
B. Johnson Feb. 9 and other American leaders about voting
rights for African Americans.
March 16-21. King and 3,200 people march from Selma
to Montgomery.
1968 April 4. King is assassinated in Memphis, Tenn.
by James Earl Ray.
1986 January 20 is the first national celebration of
King's birthday as a holiday.