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Tue 31 Jan, 2006 06:57 am
Coretta Scott King, 78, Dies By ERRIN HAINES, Associated Press Writer
6 minutes ago
ATLANTA - Coretta Scott King, who turned a life shattered by her husband's assassination into one devoted to enshrining his legacy of human rights and equality, has died, former mayor Andrew Young told NBC Tuesday morning. She was 78.
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Young, who was a former civil rights activist and was close to the King family, broke the news during a phone call he made to the "Today" show. Efforts by The Associated Press to reach the family were unsuccessful. They did not immediately return phone calls.
Asked how he found out about her death, Young said: "I understand she was asleep last night and her daughter tried to wake her up."
King, who suffered a serious stroke and heart attack in 2005, did not appear at the birthday observance for her husband, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., for the first time in the 20-year observance of the holiday.
Coretta King was a supportive lieutenant to her husband during the most tumultuous days of the American civil rights movement. She had married him in 1953.
<sigh>
May she rest in peace. And, if there is a heaven as she believed there is, I'm sure she is well on her way.
I thought sure more folks than this would take note. For many, hers is reflected glory, I know, but, she was a mover in her own right.
Scott King
April 27, 1927 - Jan. 30, 2006
Human Rights Advocate
Those of you who believe in what Martin Luther King, Jr., stood for, I would challenge you today to see that his spirit never dies.
When Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968, his widow understandably could have retired from public life and devoted herself to bringing up her children. Instead, Coretta Scott King carried on her husband's work, trying to fulfill his dream of an America in which all people had equal rights.
Since that time, King has become a forceful public figure and an important leader in the civil rights movement. She has given hundreds of speeches, abroad as well as at home, and been active in such organizations as the National Council of Negro women and the Women's Strike for Peace. She has also taken on the role of writer, publishing a collection of her husband's quotations, The Words of Martin Luther King Jr. (1983), and her autobiography, My Life with Martin Luther King Jr. (1969).
Childhood in Heiberger
King was born April 27, 1927, in Heiberger, near Marion, Alabama. She spent her childhood on her parents' farm in Heiberger. The farm had been in the family since the Civil War, but the Scotts were not at all rich. They were so hard hit during the Depression that the children picked cotton to help earn money. There were three children ?- Edythe, Coretta, and Obie. Obie was named after his father, Obediah Scott, a resourceful man who was the first black person in the district to own a truck and who eventually opened a country store. Their mother, Bernice (McMurray) Scott, was also a strong character.
As a young child, King walked five miles each day to attend the one-room Crossroads School. When she was older, she studied at Lincoln High School in Marion, nine miles away. Since this was too far to walk, her mother hired a bus and drove all the black students in the area to and from school ?- a most unusual course of action for a black woman in the 1930s. The alternative would have been for the children to stay in Marion all week, returning home only at weekends, but Mrs. Scott did not want her children to be away from home so much.
King inherited a love of music from her mother, and at Lincoln High School she learned to play the trumpet and piano, and sang as a soloist at school recitals. An intelligent and hardworking student, she did well in her schoolwork too and was at the top of her class when she graduated in 1945. She then enrolled at Antioch College, Ohio, where her sister Edythe had been the first fulltime black student to live on campus.
Student in the North
At Antioch College, King majored in music and education. She also took part in the college's work-study program, acting as a camp counsellor, library assistant, and nursery school attendant. The fact that she was African American was not a barrier in any of these roles, but when she began to teach as part of her education course, she suddenly found her way blocked. Ordinarily, the education students did their practice teaching in the local public schools, but these schools had no black teachers and would not accept her. Her protests fell on deaf ears, even when she appealed to the college president, and in the end she had to do her teaching at the Antioch Demonstration School.
During this time, King was also a music student, learning the violin as well as studying singing and piano. She sang in the choir at the Second Baptist Church in Springfield, Ohio, and gave her first solo concert there in 1948. By the time she graduated in 1951, she had decided to become a professional singer rather than a schoolteacher and had been accepted by the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston.
Although King had a scholarship to cover her tuition at the conservatory, it did not pay for anything else, and she barely scraped by during her first year in Boston. To pay for her bed and breakfast, she cleaned the stairwells of the house she lived in, and for supper she usually made do with peanut butter and crackers. The following year was easier, because she received state aid from Alabama, but she still had to watch every penny.
While studying at the conservatory she met Martin Luther King Jr., who was also a student in Boston at the time, and they were married in 1953. The following year, after Coretta Scott King had graduated from the conservatory, they moved to Montgomery, Alabama, where Martin Luther King, Jr. began his work as a minister.
Mrs. King
In marrying a man committed to civil rights, King knew that she would not live the life of a quiet minister's wife. Their first child, Yolanda (Yoki), was born in 1955, just two weeks before the beginning of the Montgomery bus boycott. With the boycott came danger ?- the King house was bombed in 1956 ?-and from then on King had to be constantly alert on behalf of her children as well as her husband. The Kings were to have three more children: Martin Luther III, Dexter, and Bernice.
The next few years saw Coretta King sharing as full partner in her husband's work, walking beside him in marches, travelling abroad with him, and giving speeches when he was unable to do so. She also made her own personal contribution. On behalf of the Women's Strike for Peace, she was a delegate at the Disarmament Conference in Geneva in 1962, and she often gave concerts on behalf of the civil rights movement, for she was still keeping up with her music.
When her husband was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968, Coretta King took it for granted that she would continue his work. Just four days after his death she led a march of fifty thousand people through the streets of Memphis, and later that year she took his place in the Poor People's March to Washington.
Carries on the work
The following year, King traveled to India to accept an award that had been granted to her husband the previous year, and on the way there she visited Italy, where she was given a special audience by the Pope. She also stopped off in Britain, where she preached at St. Paul's Cathedral ?- probably the first woman ever to do so. However, King's main concern in 1969 was the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change, which she planned to create in Atlanta, Georgia.
Over the years, King has worked hard to raise funds for the center, which now covers three full blocks and houses a library and archives of the civil rights movement. King oversaw the center, which succeeded in achieving her other major goal ?- to get her husband's birthday honored as a national holiday. She has a third goal too, and this is a continuing one, for she continues to speak out against injustice, especially racial injustice, doing what she can to make her husband's dream of fairness and equality come true.
Reexamining the past
In recent years the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. has come back under examination. James Earl Ray, the convicted assassin, died in 1998 still serving his sentence for the murder, but swearing his innocence. The King family began publicly expressing doubts that James Earl Ray had acted alone. Coretta Scott King and her son Dexter King appealed to Attorney General Janet Reno and to President Bill Clinton for a national commission investigating the assassination. When Reno granted a limited Justice Department review, Coretta Scott King brought before her a collection of evidence of a conspiracy to kill her husband that she had amassed through the years. After a seven-month investigation, however, a Memphis District Attorney concluded that there was no reason to believe that Ray had not killed King and that it appeared he had acted alone.
The King family, not satisfied with these findings, filed a wrongful death suit against a former restaurant owner who says he was paid to plan the killing. In December 1999, a Tennessee jury found that the 1968 assassination was the result of a conspiracy and had not been accomplished by a single killer.
Update
King, who had suffered a stroke and a mild heart attack in August 2005, passed away Jan. 30, 2006. She was 78.
I took note! I didn't hear until just before lunchtime today. <sigh>
ATLANTA Jan 31, 2006 ?- On the day Coretta Scott King died, Lori Smith wanted to pay her respects by exposing her children to the legacy of peace and nonviolence created by the civil rights pioneer and her husband.
Smith, an accountant from Atlanta, watched videos and looked at exhibits Tuesday at the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change with her two daughters ages 7 and 16 months after learning that Coretta Scott King had died.
"I wanted my children to see," Smith said. "It's very important for them to know what I already know. It's important that we pass that along to future generations."
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Scores of other well-wishers left flowers and cards at the center, or toured a section that provides information and documentaries about King's slain husband, Martin Luther King Jr. Paul Green, 16, said a lot has changed since the civil rights era of the 1960s, as he watched a video about King's life. But, he said, in some ways things could be better.
"People could step up that aren't stepping up," he said. "People as a whole. There are things that could be done better."
Smith said she grew up during the tail end of the civil rights era and attended Martin Luther King's funeral as a youngster. She said other people will need to carry on the King message.
"I owe it to her," Smith said. "We owe it to her."
Dozens of schoolchildren who had come to the site to learn more about King walked past and watched as other adults some with tears in their eyes, many dressed in business suits or hospital scrubs stopped by on their morning commutes to pay their respects to his widow.
At the memorial near downtown Atlanta that Coretta Scott King built to her husband decades ago, people from all walks of life paused to honor the woman's legacy after learning of her death. Some laid flowers and kneeled in prayer. Most stood silent, staring at King's tomb and the surrounding reflecting pool.
At the neighboring Ebenezer Baptist Church, where King preached and his widow remained a member after his death, the telephone rang constantly as people offered their condolences.
What a woman.
I am actually crying.
SHANNON MCCAFFREY
Associated Press
Atlanta ?- When Janann Ransom arrived at Georgia's Capitol, about 1,400 people had already lined up in a cold, gusty wind to pay tribute to civil rights leader Coretta Scott King. But Ms. Ransom was undeterred.
"She's worth it," Ms. Ransom said. "She stood in line for me, her and her husband, when I couldn't."
Thousands of mourners poured into the Georgia Capitol rotunda Saturday to pay tribute to the widow of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the first woman and the first black person to lie in honour in a statehouse that was once a seat of segregation.
The governor's office estimated that 42,000 people passed briskly within about 5 feet of the open casket in the marble rotunda, where Ms. King lay in her pink suit. Gloria Mavins, 52, of Orangeburg, S.C., said she was deeply moved.
"I felt like I wanted to bow down right there and just thank her," Ms. Mavins said.
The bronze casket had been carried through the streets of Atlanta on a horse-drawn carriage before being ushered into the Capitol by an honour guard of the Georgia State Patrol. The crowd outside cheered and threw roses as the casket went by.
"It was beautiful," said Robert Washington, 40, just after the glass-walled carriage arrived at the Capitol steps.
Georgia's flag, which Ms. King had helped change to remove the Confederate Cross, flew at half staff.
Gov. Sonny Perdue and his wife, Mary, escorted the casket into the statehouse, a sharp contrast to the official snub afforded Martin Luther King Jr. nearly four decades ago by segregationist Gov. Lester Maddox.
"Coretta Scott King was a gracious and courageous woman, an inspiration to millions and one of the most influential civil rights leaders of our time," Mr. Perdue said during a brief ceremony. "She was absolutely an anchor and support for her husband."
Ms. King's four children ?- Yolanda, Dexter, Martin Luther King III and Bernice ?- spent a few minutes at the open casket before the doors were thrown open to the public. Yolanda King stroked her mother's face, and she and Bernice King wiped away tears.
"While we claim her, she was their mama," Mr. Perdue said of the King children. "It's hard to give up your mama."
Ms. King, the "first lady of the civil rights movement," died Monday at age 78.
A soloist sang the hymn Blessed Assurance which echoed in the cavernous marble hall.
Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, the first black woman to lead the city, said she owed her career to King. "I would not be here without her," Ms. Franklin said.
The largely black crowd came pushing strollers, leaning on walkers and dressed in military camouflage. Some made the sign of the cross as they moved past the casket.
Raymond Dutrieuille of Duluth, Ga. came with his wife, Nena, and 2-year-old son Raylin, "to experience part of history."
Some had travelled far. Chris Thomas, 50, came from New Haven, Conn., to see the procession. Connie Havis, 43, and her friend Caprice Wofford, 39, drove down from Chattanooga, Tenn.
"She looked beautiful," Ms. Havis said.
In 1968, then-Gov. Maddox ignored Martin Luther King Jr.'s death and refused to authorize a public tribute. He was outraged at the idea of state flags, then dominated by the Confederate Cross, flying at half-staff in tribute to a black man.
But immediately after Coretta Scott King died, the state flag was ordered lowered by Mr. Perdue.
Coretta Scott King died in Mexico at an alternative medicine clinic, where doctors said she was battling advanced ovarian cancer. She also had been recovering from a serious stroke and heart attack. In January, she made her first public appearance in a year on the eve of her late husband's birthday.
For most of Monday, Ms. King's casket will lie in Ebenezer Baptist Church, where her husband preached in the years before his death. Her funeral will be held at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia, where the Kings' youngest child, Bernice, is a minister.
Few details had been released about the funeral, including who will deliver the eulogy.
U.S. President George W. Bush, who will attend the service with first lady Laura Bush, is expected to make remarks during the service, according to the White House.