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V. P. Franklin, Biography: Martin Luther King, Jr. (New York, 1998), ii, 186. Author V.P. Franklin is professor of history at Drexel University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago, and has taught United States and African-American history at Yale University, Arizona State, and the University of Illinois, and as a Fulbright professor at the Universidad de Barcelona and the Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona in Spain. Dr. Franklin is the co-editor of New Perspectives on Black Educational History (1978), and the author of The Education of Black Philadelphia (1979), Black Self-Determination: A Cultural History of African-American Resistance (1992), and numerous essays on African-American history and education. His most recent book is Living Our Stories, Telling Our Truths: Autobiography and the Making of the African-American Intellectual Tradition (1996).i Although Franklin did not participate in any of the events partaken in this book, to my knowledge, I do believe he is well qualified to summarize the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Subject, Aim, and Scope of the Book The general subject of this book is to inform the reader of the life and struggles of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. This includes major events in his life, events that transpired during the Civil Rights Movement, and the events that led up to the creation of his legacy. This book guides the reader through his birth on January 15, 1929, to his cold-blooded assassination on April 4, 1968. Special Nature This literary selection is a series of Biography books, which includes novels of Muhammad Ali, Al Capone, Katharine Hepburn, Mickey Mantle, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Pope John Paul II, and Ronald Reagan. Content (Chapter by Chapter) Born to Mike and Alberta King on January 15, 1929, he was one of three King children. He began his schooling in the fall of 1933 at the Yonge Street Elementary School, but was quickly expelled due to an age limit. In September 1936, he transferred to another school, where he stayed until grade six. He began excelling in academics, and was entered in Booker T. Washington High School in 1942, his 10th grade year. His home life was deeply rooted in religion. When his grandmother passed away in 1941, he committed suicide for the second time. King Jr. wrote about his first encounter with legal segregation (the "race problem"), which led to a thorough explanation by his mother of slavery. In his junior year, he was selected to represent Booker T. Washington High School in Valdosta, GA at the statewide Elks oratorical contest; he won 2nd place with his speech, "The Negro and the Constitution"; this was marred by an ugly racial incident involving white students on the bus. He was offered admission to Morehouse College in September 1944, and during the next two summers, he and a group of Morehouse students worked on a tobacco farm in Simsbury, Connecticut. At Morehouse, he made lots of friends, most notably George D. Kelsey, head of the Department of Religion - this relationship resulted in King Jr. becoming a minister; his first trial sermon was at Ebenezer Baptist Church , and he was accepted into Crozer Theological Seminary in April 1948. During his stay at Crozer, he met a young woman and fell in love; unfortunately, the girl's parents sent her off away from King Jr., which ended up being a good thing. In 1951, King Jr. was accepted into the Ph.D. program in Systematic Theology at Boston University. While at the School of Theology,. he would meet Coretta Scott, his future wife; they are married on June 18, 1953 in Marion, Alabama. In April 1954, he accepts a pastorate position at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. 1955 would prove to be a busy year for Martin Luther King, Jr. he receives his Doctorate degree from Boston University on June 5, joins the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) Montgomery branch's executive committee in August, and a daughter, Yolanda Denise, is born on November 17. It is also during this time period when we see the emergence of a prominent African-American figure show up - Rosa Parks. On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks is arrested for refusing to give up her seat on a bus to a white passenger; this action resulted in a citywide boycott of the Montgomery city bus system. In January 1956, King Jr. was arrested for going five miles over the speed limit, fined, and released. He was met with threats of violence upon his release, and on January 30, his home was bombed. He was arrested for taking part in the bus boycott, which King, Jr. gladly accepted - he was "proud to be arrested for the cause of freedom." After his release, the Alabama bus segregation case went to trial, and after Browder v. Gayle went before a three-judge panel, it was ruled, by a margin of 2-1, that the segregation law was unconstitutional. Due to this, whites in powerful positions began to halt the bus boycott; the Ku Klux Klan also got involved, marching through black neighborhoods as a result. More bombings in Montgomery took place on the night of January 9, 1957, including three churches. Despite all this, a gathering of 60 people congregated at the Ebenezer Baptist Church and sounded the SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference) in Atlanta in August 1957; King Jr. was elected chairman. In July, King Jr. was the recipient of the NAACP's highest award, the Springarn Award, due to his contributions of race relations. As the Civil Rights Act of 1957 was passed, the SCLC made an effort to get the African-American race to go vote in free elections and to encourage the formation of local-voter registration committees. On October 29, he was blessed with the birth of a son, named Martin Luther King III. During a signing of his book Stride Toward Freedom, he was stabbed by Isola Curry, a mentally unstable woman; by staying calm, King Jr. suffered no fatal injuries. On November 29, 1959, King Jr. announces that he would be leaving Dexter Avenue Church to serve as co-pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. More civil rights sit-ins occurred, particualrly one in Greensboro, North Carolina, but students at North Carolina A&T College a the local Woolworth's Department Store - King Jr. gave his moral support. At another sit-in on October 19, 1960, King Jr. was jailed. Early in 1960, King Jr. was stopped for having no license in the state of Georgia; while in jail, it was discovered that he had violated parole - he is released on $2,000 bond on October 28. On January 3, 1961, his second son, Dexter, is born. In May 1961, King Jr. and James Farmer started launching 'Freedom Riders' throughout the South - they were met with white mobs, thus beginning the "Battle of Montgomery". On April 3, 1963, King Jr. issued the "Birmingham Manifesto", calling for the desegregation of all places within department and variety stores, which resulted in massive sit-ins. King Jr. staged a march on Good Friday on Birmingham's City Hall, which he was jailed for. He wrote his "Letter From a Birmingham Jail", which vindicated the non-violence approach he was taking. On August 28, 1963, he gave his now famous "I Have a Dream" speech in Washington, D.C. - as a result, he was honored as Time Magazine's Man of the Year. In June 1964 King's latest book, Why Can't We Wait, was published; it showed his perspective on the Birmingham campaign. In September 1964, he and Coretta took a trip to Europe, visiting such places as West Berlin, Rome, London, and Madrid. On December 10, 1964, King received the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, Norway. King received a package containing a crudely written letter and a tape, containing threats and sounds of love making - they concluded that it had to be the work of the FBI, and that indeed they had been tapping his phone. King led marchers in Selma, Alabama - King decided to go to Jail to promote national interest in the rally on February 1. While incarcerated, King wrote his "Letter From a Selma, Alabama Jail", which was published in the New York Times on February 5. He made it clear that even though the Civil Rights Act of 1964 had passed, much more was still needed to be done. An arrest of an SCLC member led to a mass rally at a nearby church - an attack by the local police and state troopers ensued, which led to King calling for a "Motorcade to Montgomery"; despite numerous warnings to halt the proceedings, the march was a success. After previous travels into the Northern states, it was concluded that the same problems afflicted the North as well as the South. On Friday, July 23, King went to Chicago for a marathon of speaking arrangements, rallies, and meetings; his visit was a huge success to African American causes in the North. By the end of March 1967, he had made the decision to speak out against the Vietnam War and on April 4 he addressed a large audience at New York City's Riverside Church, calling for an end to the war. His speech went unheralded, as almost everyone opposed it. His final book, Where Do We Go From Here? Chaos of Community, was written; it emphasized his belief that "it is morally right to insist that every person has a decent house, and adequate education and enough money to provide basic necessities for one's family." In March 1968, King had planned to give a speech in Memphis and promised to lead a march to support the city's sanitation workers. On Thursday, April 4, 1968 - four days before the march was to occur several shots rang out and hit King while he was standing on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel; King had been assassinated. King's funeral took place on April 9 at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta; an estimated 80,000 people attended the ceremonies, including Thurgood Marshall, Robert and Jacqueline Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy, and Richard Nixon. On the day of King's burial, a House committee agreed to the Senate's version of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, outlawing discriminatory practices that prevented African Americans and other minorities from obtaining housing in neighborhoods of their own choosing. Thesis Franklin's treatment reveals the public and the personal lives behind the man. Martin Luther King, Jr., dedicated his life to the cause of racial and economic justice and sought the creation of the Beloved Community. His message and vision for American society, given its long history of slavery, oppression, racism, and economic inequality, provides essential information for present and future generations who understand the need "to redeem the soul of America."ii This thesis is thoroughly presented in major events and times of the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Sources The author has used many books to base his findings upon, by such authors as Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph David Abernathy, Malcolm X, Rosa Parks, and Coretta Scott King. The author also used documentation from the historical events themselves. Opinion and Bias I thought this book was interesting, mostly because I did not know much about Martin Luther King, Jr. to begin with. I had no idea the harassment and struggles he went through just to express his point and he fought in such a way that proved what he believed in was right - he did what he did in a nonviolent manner. The African-American community had indeed been through many hardships - I believe King had a mission to change the way African Americans were treated - as free, equal men. Conclusion V. P. Franklin, the distinguished historian, gives us possibly the most succinct profile of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to date. Concise, factually rich, and incisive, Martin Luther King Jr. reveals the roots of King's dream for the future of race relations in America.iii I believe that this book is very informative. It gave many instances of civil rights violations, and the struggles that the African American community went through just to live as free, equal citizens. Dr. King personified this culture, as he was jailed numerous times for expressing his opinion. Although I cannot give a conclusion one way or the other, I attribute this to not being directly affected by this movement. I do, however, have a greater understanding of what Dr. King wanted to do - fight for something he believed in, and to succeed in an equal, free chance for all African Americans. Therefore, I consider this book a must read for anyone who does not understand anything that occurred during the Civil Rights Movement, or is not informed of Martin Luther King, Jr. himself. i Page 186, Martin Luther King, Jr. ii Page 168, Martin Luther king, Jr. iii Front Cover, Martin Luther King, Jr.