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Atlanta
Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site
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Location: 450 Auburn Ave., Atlanta
The Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site,
administered by the National Park Service, includes King's birth home, church and
grave. The National Park Service's Visitor Center features exhibits about Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., and the Civil Rights movement. This traditionally black neighborhood
of several blocks in Atlanta includes Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birth home, the
Ebenezer Baptist Church where he was a pastor, and his gravesite. Martin Luther
King, Jr., was the nation's most prominent leader in the 20th-century struggle for
civil rights. Born in 1929, he excelled as a student and graduated from Atlanta's
Morehouse College in 1948. Also in 1948 he was ordained at the Ebenezer Baptist
Church. Following his ordination, he became Assistant Pastor of Ebenezer.
He later studied at the Crozer Theological Seminary
in Pennsylvania, then graduate studies at the University of Boston. In 1954, King
became the pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. Following
Rosa Parks' refusal to move to the back of a bus in Montgomery, Martin Luther King,
Jr., led the successful Montgomery Bus Boycott from 1955 to 1956 (381 days). In
1957 he was elected president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC),
an organization formed to provide new leadership for the now burgeoning civil rights
movement.
He moved back to Atlanta in 1960 and was co-pastor
with his father at the Ebenezer Baptist Church while still President of the SCLC.
Martin Luther King, Jr., worked tirelessly to assure the passage of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. He was arrested 30 times for his
participation in civil rights activities and delivered some of the most famous speeches
of the 20th century including his speech at the March on Washington in 1963, his
acceptance speech of the Nobel Peace Prize, his last sermon at Ebenezer Baptist
Church, and his final "Mountaintop" speech in Memphis.
King was assassinated in 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee,
where he was helping striking sanitation workers. Martin Luther King, Jr., was born
in a two-story Queen Anne style house at 501 Auburn Avenue, in a neighborhood known as Sweet Auburn. The house has a one-story partial front and side porch with scroll
cut woodwork trim, two porthole windows, a shingled gabled end, and a side bay.
The porch sits on an enclosed brick foundation. Dr. King was born in an upstairs
middle
room on January 15, 1929 and lived here until 1941.
The Ebenezer Baptist Church, where for eight years
he shared the pulpit with his father, is a short walk away at the corner of Auburn
Avenue and Jackson Street. It is a three-story red brick building detailed in stone
and has several groupings of stained glass windows. Construction of the church began
in 1914 and was completed in 1922.
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. King's gravesite occupies most of the cleared lot east of the Ebenezer
Baptist Church to Boulevard Street. In 1976 a memorial park was installed around
the marble crypt. The park consists primarily of a brick and concrete plaza with
arch-covered walkway and chapel partially surrounding a reflecting pool. In the
center of the pool, on a raised pedestal rests the King crypt.
On it is engraved the inscription: "Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. 1929-1968, 'Free at last, free at last, thank God almighty, I'm
free at last." This National Historic Landmark historic district is also featured
in our We Shall Overcome: Historic Places of the Civil Rights Movement travel itinerary.
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