
RALPH DAVID ABERNATHY
Civil Rights Leader (1926-1990)
Ralph David Abernathy, was born in
Alabama in 1926. He received his bachelor's degree from Alabama State College, after
having served in the Army during the second World War. He did his graduate work at
Atlanta University, and became a minister in Montgomery, where he had as a colleague
Martin Luther King Jr. In 1955, he organized the Montgomery Improvement Association,
and a short time later, he and King became known nationally because of their leadership of
the successful bus boycott. It was then that they organized the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference, soon the nation's leading advocate of nonviolence,
and resisted strenuously by militant factions. Upon King's death, Abernathy
succeeded him as president.
He organized the Poor People's Campaign
in Washington where Resurrection City was built, a group of huts in the center of the
nation's capital. He was jailed for twenty days for refusing to obey the police
order to remove the huts. He went on to organize the SCLC Operation Breadbasket, to
exert financial pressure against companies that had poor records in extending equal
opportunities to Blacks. In 1961, he had become pastor of an Atlanta church and his
honors came to include honorary degrees from such institutions as Long Island University,
Alabama State University, Morehouse College, and Kalamazoo College in
Michigan.
Revised: July 18, 2013.