Parting the Waters (163 page)

Read Parting the Waters Online

Authors: Taylor Branch

BOOK: Parting the Waters
3.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

church outreach programs: Ibid. Also E. Smith, “Ebenezer,” p. 5.

“tell you this morning, Ebenezer”: Int. Rev. Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1983.

highest-paid Negro minister: King Sr.,
Daddy
, p. 94.

glorious trip for King: Ibid., p. 97.

“Royally Welcomed on Return”: ADW, Aug. 28, 1934, p. 1.

from Michael to Martin: Reddick,
Crusader
, pp. 50—51. Also King Sr.,
Daddy
, p. 88.

freedom to choose a name: See Litwack,
Storm
, pp. 247—55. See also Douglass,
Narrative
, pp. 114—15; and Fenderson,
Thurgood
, p. 23.

what to call themselves as a race: Litwack,
Storm
, pp. 541ff.

The New York Times
: Kluger,
Simple Justice
, p. 546.

Chicago
Defender
: Ottley,
Lonely
, pp. 109—10.

Abbott hated the word: Ibid., pp. 110, 213, 221, 287, 288.

J. H. Meredith: Meredith,
Three Years
, p. 53. See also Mays,
Born
, pp. 113—16.

Air Force: Lord,
The Past
, p. 33.

calling himself Martin: Reddick,
Crusader
, pp. 43, 48, 50—51.

autobiography, Reverend King: King Sr.,
Daddy
, pp. 26, 88.

State Department records: Passport application of Martin Luther King, Jr., filed Feb. 12, 1957. The clerk made a note on the passport after inspecting King's birth certificate.

“Big Mike”: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 43.

“earned” his name:
Time
, Feb. 18, 1957, p. 17.

roughly two-thirds: Lewis,
King
, p. 7.

“anti-capitalistic feelings”: King Jr., “Autobiography.”

“get ahead of me”: Ibid.

five fingers: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 54. Also Clayton,
King
, p. 18.

head with a telephone: This story first appeared in Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 59. Also King Sr.,
Daddy
, p. 127. Characterizations of the children drawn from the King biographies and from interviews, notably Alberta King's friend Lavata Lightner, Feb. 3, 1972, A/OH, and King Jr.'s high school friend Emmett Proctor, April 15, 1970, A/OH.

out the window: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 60. Also Lewis,
King
, p. 13, and Oates,
Trumpet
, pp. 8—9.

reserved the primal “Mama”: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 51. Also Clayton,
King
, p. 27.

“was Harvard's”: A common folklore, repeated for National Public Radios's 1980 profile of Du Bois. See also Wilkins,
Standing Fast
, p. 93.

by their first names: Arthur Spingarn, March 6, 1968, CRDPOH.

White had no brains: Ibid.

fashion show: Wilkins,
Standing Fast
, pp. 77-81.

“finest address in Harlem”: Ibid., pp. 106, 117.

“tucked among the most august”: Ibid.

word “nigger”: ADW, Jan. 30, 1934.

NBC Radio censored: Ross,
Spingarn
, p. 154. Also ADW, Feb. 15, 1934.

“embrace Jim Crow”: Wilkins,
Standing Fast
, p. 153.

“biggest plate-glass window”: Ibid.

hire him back at Atlanta: Davis,
Leadership
, p. 144.

“lick boots”:
The Crisis
, June 1934, p. 182.

Roy Wilkins first: Ross,
Spingarn
, p. 210.

rumors about his sex life: Ibid., p. 212. Also Arthur Spingarn, March 6, 1968, CRDPOH.

H. L. Mencken: H. L. Mencken, “Notes on Negro Strategy,”
The Crisis
, October 1934, p. 289.

led several hundred people: King Sr.,
Daddy
, pp. 99-102.

King abandoned the project: Ibid., pp. 104-7.

alleged embezzlement: English,
Prophet
, p. 42.

“Seven Minutes at the Mike”: Int. William H. Borders, March 7, 1984, and Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1984.

unknown speeches: For examples of some of the better speeches made by Negro leaders during Reconstruction, see Woodson,
Negro Orators
.

U.S. Communist Party had to fire him: NYT, Dec. 22, 1939, p. 1, and Dec. 24, 1939, p. 14.

The Ebenezer choir: ADW, Dec. 15, 1939, p. 1.

ferocious attack: ADW, Dec. 20, 1939, p. 1. Also Raines,
My Soul
, p. 59; int. William H. Borders, March 7, 1984; NYT, Dec. 16, 1939, p. 1.

35,000 cheering Baptists: ADW, July 27, 1939, p. 1. Also int. Rev. Joel King, Jan. 7, 1984.

Reinhold Niebuhr and Paul Tillich: Stone,
Paul Tillich's
, p. 108.

offered Mays instead: Int. Benjamin Mays, March 6, 1984. Mays identified the Rockefeller associate as Trevor Arnett.

The tenor soloist: Int. Robert Williams, April 3, 1984.

and the violin case: Lewis,
King
, p. 16.

snatches of the “Moonlight Sonata”: Int. Robert Williams, April 3, 1984.

his grandmother was dead: King Sr.,
Daddy
, p. 109. Also Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 60, Oates,
Trumpet
, p. 13, and King Jr., “Autobiography.”

could not sleep: King Sr.,
Daddy
, p. 109.

young man overnight: Clayton,
King
, p. 31.

“dreaming about”: King Sr.,
Daddy
, p. 109. Settlement was on Nov. 1, 1941. Fulton County Deed Book 1872, p. 114.

executor and sole heir: Records of the Fulton County Court of Probate, Estate #31740. Also Deed Book 1540, p. 317.

“upper upper class”: King Jr., “Autobiography.”

“mostly lower middle class”: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 55.

“middle middle class”: Emmett Proctor, April 15, 1970, A/OH.

penchant for tweed suits: Ibid.

“Sack,” and “Mole”: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 55.

close for the duration: Mays,
Born
, p. 184.

Read finally triumphed: Davis,
Leadership
, p. 145.

two kinds of students: Int. Robert Williams, April 3, 1984. Such boastful sayings were rather common. Students spoke wryly of “Harvard, Yale, and Morehouse.” Also Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 65.

“larger than a hamburger”: Int. Samuel Du Bois Cook, April 4, 1984.

friends King made: Ibid. Also int. Robert Williams, April 3, 1984.

“revolutionary stage”: Walter McCall, A/OH.

“nobody there was afraid”: Bennett,
What Manner
, p. 26.

first frank discussions: Ibid.

dancing and card-playing: Walter McCall, A/OH.

“organically quiescent”: Oates,
Trumpet
, p. 18.

laugh out loud in disbelief: Int. Robert Williams, April 3, 1984.

calling him “nigger”: Lewis,
King
, p. 21.

six Negro war veterans: Grant,
Black Protest
, p. 218.

first multiple lynching since 1918: NYT, July 27, 1946, p. 1.

180 bullet holes: ADW, July 17, 1946, p. 1.

“best people in town”: AC, July 28, 1946, p. 1.

“My God!”: Donovan,
Conflict
, p. 244. Also Wilkins,
Standing Fast
, p. 193.

first campus chapter of the NAACP: Int. Samuel Du Bois Cook, April 4, 1984.

little interest: Ibid.

three Sundays a month: Int. Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1983, and Rev. William Holmes Borders, March 7, 1984.

proof of intrigue: Int. Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1983.

cut off his friendship: Int. Juanita Sellers Stone, March 6, 1984.

rejoined the Morehouse: Christine King Farris, “The Young Martin,”
Ebony
, Jan. 1986, pp. 56-58.

antics culminated: Int. Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1983.

soften the blow: Ibid.

later they joked: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 75.

“It won't hold 'em!”: Int. Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1983.

oration had been borrowed: Ibid.

King became “Shady”: Int. Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1983.

“The Wreckers”: Int. Emmett Proctor, Nov. 20, 1984; Garrow,
Bearing
, p. 36.

closing his sermon folder: Int. Emmett Proctor, Nov. 20, 1984.

first American president to address: Donovan,
Conflict
, p. 333.

“To Secure These Rights”: Released Oct. 27, 1947. Discussed in Kluger,
Simple Justice
, p. 253.

call McGill a “weasel”: Ashmore,
Hearts
, p. 110.

“The Purpose of Education”: Bennett,
What Manner
, p. 29.

apologize publicly: C. King,
My Life
, p. 99. Also int. Larry Williams, Dec. 27, 1983.

among his own: King Sr.,
Daddy
, p. 141.

“there are moral laws”: Int. Samuel Du Bois Cook, April 4, 1984.

Three
NIEBUHR AND THE POOL TABLES

possible for Jonah: Int. Rev. George W. Lawrence, Feb. 24, 1984.

naked children: Ibid.

gold cross: Int. Rev. Edward Spath, Oct. 4, 1983.

poolroom beneath: The poolroom was mentioned by all Crozer alumni interviewed for this chapter.

full third of the class: Int. Rev. Marcus Wood, Oct. 4, 1983.

pagan deities: Int. Rev. Francis Stewart, Dec. 23, 1983.

taught Benjamin Mays: Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 78.

least intelligent class: Int. Rev. Marcus Wood, Oct, 4, 1983, and Rev. Edward Spath, Oct, 4, 1983.

“he that is not against”: Mark 9:40 and Matthew 12:30.

Jesus and John: Int. Kenneth Lee Smith, Oct. 12, 1983. In spite of Mark 1:9, Matthew 2:13-14, etc.

Moses was an uncorroborated: Int. James B. Pritchard, June 25, 1984.

The standing joke: Int. Kenneth Lee Smith, Oct, 12, 1983.

B—in Pritchard's: Int. James B. Pritchard, June 25, 1984.

utterly transformed: Walter McCall, A/OH.

“One ever feels his twoness”: Du Bois,
Souls
, p. 45.

“loud and always laughing” and “grimly serious”: King interview in
Redbook
magazine, as cited in Reddick,
Crusader
, p. 86. In this passage, Reddick suggests that the interracial composition of Crozer was the principal cause of King's radically improved scholarship.

tear down the students' religious: Int. Rev. Lester Loder, Feb. 27, 1984, and other Crozer classmates.

read all night: Walter McCall, A/OH.

King would ever cite specifically: Smith and Zepp,
Search
, p. 37. This book, coauthored by one of King's teaches at Crozer, is the primary authority on his intellectual experience during the seminary years.

Pittsburgh steel mills: Ibid., p. 22.

Davis' personal copy: Ibid., p. 48.

King never accepted pacifism: Ibid., Ch. 3 generally. Also King Jr.,
Stride
, p. 95.

attacking A. J. Muste's: “War and Pacifism,” a book review King wrote for Kenneth L. Smith's course in Christian social philosophy in the spring of 1951, BUK.

nearly one-third: Smith and Zepp,
Search
, p. 21.

“fall in line”: King Jr., “Autobiography.”

his behavior eccentric: Int. James B. Pritchard, June 25, 1984.

something of a bigot: Int. Rev. Francis Stewart, Dec. 23, 1983.

Other books

He's the One by Jane Beckenham
Beauty and the Werewolf by Mercedes Lackey
The Primal Blueprint by Mark Sisson
Holding Court by K.C. Held
Students of the Game by Sarah Bumpus
Season of Second Chances by Brighton Walsh