Listen Live
Fantastic Voyage Generic Graphics Updated Nov 2023
Black America Web Featured Video
CLOSE

Today marks the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington when over 200,000 people heard Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s message. Many are familiar with his famous speeches, but only eight students had the privilege of receiving one-on-one instruction from Dr. King. In 1962, during his tenure at Morehouse College, Dr. King taught eight students Social Philosophy for one semester. The class was comprised of six men from Morehouse and two Spelman women. It is the practice of both colleges to intermix the curriculum to offer students a wide variety of courses toward their majors. Only one year later, Dr. King would stand at the Lincoln Memorial and tell the world “I have a dream.”

For the students’ final exam, Dr. King’s request was a paper answering the question: would Adam Smith or Karl Marx support the nonviolent theory of social change? The civil rights leader held his students to a high standard – with intense reading assignments examining the words of great world leaders.

As for Dr. King’s eight students, they became activists and made their own significant marks in history. Barbara Adams of Spelman College has done extensive work for President Obama and is now a book consultant. She has been in the company of John F. Kennedy when he served hot chocolate to the marchers in Washington and the family of benefactors of Spelman College – the Rockefellers. She still holds her final paper graded by Dr. King himself with a “B” grading.

The late Benjamin Berry Jr. was a minister and professor of history and African American studies at Virginia Wesleyan College. He told his wife that he remembers sitting outside for class with Dr. King, who discussed the topics with his students rather than lecture.

Charles Black, another former student, had been nicknamed “Sit-Down Black” because he was a part of so many sit-ins. He went on to work with his classmate, Julian Bond, on civil rights issues. Aside from being Dr. King’s student. Black and a few other students convinced the reverend to get out of his sick bed with the flu to help with a boycott at Rich’s department store. The store lost $10 million in revenue that year.

Julian Bond became the youngest and first black person to be nominated as Vice President of the United States. A published author, political and celebrity figure, Bond is no stranger to arrest for the cause. He’s been arrested several times, even recently for protesting at the White House to convince President Obama to rethink the Keystone Pipeline.

Rev. Amos Brown first met Dr. King in San Francisco after riding with Medgar Evers to an NAACP meeting. He is now the reverend at Third Baptist Church in San Francisco. Brown remembers being jailed with Dr. King for 10 days.

The remaining students: Graham Prindle, Mary Worthy, and Rev. Willie Right each had their own relationship with Dr. King in the struggle and went on to continue their work by participating in sit-ins and protests. They all considered Dr. King a significant part of their lives and positions in the Civil Rights Movement.

(Photo: AP)

#MLK50: Images From the New March on Washington
0 photos