How Did Martin Luther King Influence The Civil Rights Movement

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Many Americans have looked up to inspiring people who have done great things during our lifetime. There are all sorts of people who have made an impact on our daily lives. Martin Luther King Jr. plays an important role for equal rights that we have today. His “I have a dream” speech was an inspiration among millions of African Americans. This leads to the ultimate question, how has Martin Luther King Jr. influenced the civil rights movement? Martin Luther King was born in January 15, 1929 in Atlanta, Georgia. He was the middle child of his Michael King Sr. and Alberta Williams King. Martin’s grandfather, A.D. Williams who was rural minister for years and moved to Atlanta in 1893. Not long after, he took over at the Ebenezer Baptist Church…show more content…
Washington highs school, where he was great student. At the age of fifteen, he was enrolled at Moorehouse College and graduates in 1948. Martin Luther King Jr. married Coretta Scott in 1953 while being in Boston Graduate School and had four children. He soon completed his work at Boston Graduate School and received his PHD at the age of 25. During the time, Martin Luther King Jr. was well-known for Civil Rights Leader who was attempting to get rid of discrimination and segregation toward African Americans in the South. The King family began living in Montgomery for less than a year when it was in highly segregated city struggling for civil rights. It started when Rosa Parks who did not give up her seat was arrested. This lead him to have his people protest and get more involved to gain equal rights. Meanwhile, He was selected as leader for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Within this position, he realized that he had to influence billions of…show more content…
It started to struggle in the beginning, but it received a foundation grant for education project and foundation money to invest registration work in the South. Upholding a natural platform, King realized that he is helping this organization at its best place for voting progress. In 1959, with the help of American Friends Service Committee, and inspired by Gandhi’s success with non-violent involvement, MLK visited Gandhi’s birthplace in India. This trip surrounded him in deeply affect with the civil rights struggle. During his travel, he declared “Many years ago, when Abraham Lincoln was shot - and incidentally, he was shot for the same reason that Mahatma Gandhi, was shot for, namely, for committing the crime of wanting to heal the wounds of a divided nation - and when he was shot, Secretary Stanton stood by the dead body of the great leader and said these words: Now he belongs to the ages. And in a real sense, we can say the same thing about Mahatma Gandhi, and even in stronger terms: Now he belongs to the ages. And if this age is to survive, it must follow the way of love and nonviolence that he so nobly illustrated in his life. And Mahatma Gandhi may well be God's appeal to this generation, for in a day when sputniks and explorers dash through outer space and guided ballistic missiles are carving highways of
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