Martin Luther King Jr.
The struggle to change conditions in America, and to win equal protection under the law for citizens of all races, formed the backdrop of Martin Luther King's short life.

 

Civil rights
It may be hard to believe that less than 40 years ago, America had separate drinking fountains for whites and blacks and "colored balconies" in movie theaters.


 

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.

1929

 


 

King graduates from Morehouse College in Atlanta, Ga., with a B.A

1948

 


 

Graduates with a B.D. from Crozer Theological Seminary in Chester, Pa.

1951

 


 

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).

1953

 


 

September. King moves to Montgomery, Ala., to preach at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church.

1954

Brown vs. Board of Education: U.S. Supreme Court bans segregation in public schools.


 

After coursework at New England colleges, King finishes his Ph.D. in systematic theology.

1955

Bus boycott launched in Montgomery, Ala., after an African-American woman, Rosa Parks, is arrested December 1 for refusing to give up her seat to a white person.


 

January 26. King is arrested for driving 30 mph in a 25 mph zone.
January 30. King's house bombed.

1956

December 21. After more than a year of boycotting the buses and a legal fight, the Montgomery buses desegregate.


 

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.

1957

Garfield High School becomes first Seattle high school with more than 50 percent nonwhite student body.

At previously all-white Central High in Little Rock, Ark., 1,000 paratroopers are called by President Eisenhower to restore order and escort nine black students.


 

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.

1958

 


 

King visits India. He had a lifelong admiration for Mohandas K. Gandhi, and credited Gandhi's passive resistance techniques for his civil-rights successes.

1959

 


 

King leaves for Atlanta to pastor his father's church, Ebenezer Baptist Church.

1960

The sit-in protest movement begins in February at a Woolworth's lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C. and spreads across the nation.


 

 

1961

Freedom rides begin from Washington, D.C: Groups of black and white people ride buses through the South to challenge segregation.
King makes his only visit to Seattle. He visits numerous places, including two morning assemblies at Garfield High School.


 

King meets with President John F. Kennedy to urge support for civil rights.

1962

Blacks become the majority at Garfield High, 51 percent of the student population - a first for Seattle. The school district average is 5.3 percent.

Two killed, many injured in riots as James Meredith is enrolled as the first black at the University of Mississippi.


 

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.

1963

Police arrest King and other ministers demonstrating in Birmingham, Ala., then turn fire hoses and police dogs on the marchers.

Medgar Evers, NAACP leader, is murdered June 12 as he enters his home in Jackson, Miss.

About 1,300 people march from the Central Area to downtown Seattle, demanding greater job opportunities for blacks in department stores. The Bon Marche promises 30 new jobs for blacks.

About 400 people rally at Seattle City Hall to protest delays in passing an open-housing law. In response, the city forms a 12-member Human Rights Commission but only two blacks are included, prompting a sit-in at City Hall and Seattle's first civil-rights arrests.

250,000 people attend the March on Washington, D.C. urging support for pending civil-rights legislation. The event was highlighted by King's "I have a dream" speech.

The Seattle School District implements a voluntary racial transfer program, mainly aimed at busing black students to mostly white schools.

Four girls killed Sept. 15 in bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala.


 

King's book "Why We Can't Wait" published.

King visits with West Berlin Mayor Willy Brant and Pope Paul VI.

December 10. King wins Nobel Peace Prize.

1964

Seattle City Council agrees to put together an open-housing ordinance but insists on putting it on the ballot. Voters defeat it by a 2-to-1 ratio. It will be four more years before an open-housing ordinance becomes law.

Three civil-rights workers are murdered in Mississippi.

July 2 - President Johnson signs the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Out of 955 people employed by the Seattle Fire Department, just two were African American, and only one was Asian ‹ 0.2 and 0.1 percent of the force, respectively. By the end of 1993, the department was 12.2 percent African American and 5.6 percent Asian.


 

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.

1965

Malcolm X is murdered Feb. 21, 1965. Three men are convicted of his murder.

August 6. President Johnson signs the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The act, which King sought, authorized federal examiners to register qualified voters and suspended devices such as literacy tests that aimed to prevent African Americans from voting.

August 11-16: Watts riots leave 34 dead in Los Angeles.


 

 

1967

Sam Smith elected Seattle's first black city councilman.


 

April 4. King is assassinated in Memphis, Tenn., by James Earl Ray.

1968

Aaron Dixon becomes first leader of Black Panther Party branch in Seattle.

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated in Memphis, Tenn., unleashing violence in more than 100 cities.

In response to King's death, Seattle residents hurled firebombs, broke windows, and pelted motorists with rocks. Ten thousand people also marched to Seattle Center for a rally in his memory.

Rally at Garfield High in support of Dixon, Larry Gossett, and Carl Miller, sentenced to six months in the King County Jail for unlawful assembly in an earlier demonstration. Before the speakers were finished, firebombs and rocks were flying toward cars coming down 23rd Avenue. Sporadic riots in Seattle's Central Area during the summer.


 

 

1969

Edwin Pratt, executive director of the Seattle Urban League and a moderate and respected African American leader, is shot to death while standing in the doorway of his home. The murder has never been solved.


 

 

1977

Seattle School Board adopts a plan designed to eliminate racial imbalance in schools by fall 1979.


 

 

1978

Seattle becomes the largest city in the United States to desegregate its schools without a court order; nearly one-quarter of the school district's students are bused as part of the "Seattle Plan." Two months later, voters pass an anti-busing initiative. It is later ruled unconstitutional.

In a blow to efforts to diversify university enrollment, the U.S. Supreme Court outlaws racial quotas in a suit brought by Allan Bakke, a white man who had been turned down by the medical school at University of California, Davis.


 

January 20 is the first national celebration of King's birthday as a holiday.

1986

 


 

 

1989

Douglas Wilder of Virginia becomes the nation's first African American to be elected state governor.


 

 

1992

The first racially based riots in years erupt in Los Angeles and other cities after a jury acquits L.A. police officers in the videotaped beating of Rodney King, an African American.