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Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birth home, church, and grave site comprise
this National Historic Site and Preservation District along with the previously
National Register-listed Martin Luther King, Jr., Historic District and
the historic black commercial area, the Sweet Auburn Historic District.
All of these properties are important in understanding both the life of
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the civil rights movement.
King was born in a frame house at 501 Auburn. Ebenezer Baptist Church,
where for eight years he shared the pulpit with his father, is a short
walk away at the corner of Auburn and Jackson. Next door to the church,
a memorial park surrounds King's crypt, nestled in a reflecting pool.
Across from the church at 449 Auburn is the Martin Luther King, Jr., Center
for Nonviolent Social Change, Inc., which continues King's legacy and
work.
The historic districts included in the Martin Luther King, Jr., National
Historic Site and Preservation District were the center of life for Atlanta's
African American community in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Auburn Avenue was the main thoroughfare through the area, and the phenomenal
growth of black businesses along the avenue led to it being called "the
richest Negro street in the world." Following the Civil War, African
Americans built businesses, residences, social and educational buildings,
and churches along Auburn Avenue, and nearby streets. Many of these buildings
remain today vital parts of the community.
Although King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, his international stature
did not preclude his involvement with local issues. For example, he joined
students in a fall 1960 sit-in at Rich's Department Store--an event that
landed him in jail for the first time. On another occasion in late 1964,
King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, headquartered in
the Sweet Auburn Historic District, sided with black workers against Scripto,
Inc., manufacturer of pencils and pens. At issue was a wage increase given
to skilled workers, mostly white, but not to unskilled workers, largely
black.
After King was assassinated, his body lay in state at Spelman College.
Ralph Abernathy, who had been with King since the Montgomery Bus Boycott,
conducted the April 9 funeral service at Ebenezer attended by civil rights
leaders, black entertainers and athletes and the four presidential candidates--Richard
Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, Robert Kennedy, and Eugene McCarthy. More than
60,000 people listened over loudspeakers outside, and as many as 50,000
joined in the funeral procession afterwards. King's casket was borne by
a mule-driven farm cart, symbolizing his support of the rights of poor
people.
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