How Did Coretta Scott King Influence The Civil Rights Movement

Words: 818
Pages: 4

Although Southern states had laws to ensure segregation, after World War II, opponents of these laws began to challenge their legality. Coretta Scott King resented violence to receive contributions since she was young. Throughout her childhood, King had experienced harsh segregation and demeaning racism. With the aftermath of the Civil War, it created economic depression and violent racism was present against African Americans. When she met Martin Luther King Jr., she supported him throughout his life as she started her own rallies. Coretta Scott King was a leader who positively affected the lives of others throughout the Civil Rights Movement with her involvement in the Montgomery Boycott, the Civil Rights Act, and the King Center.
First of
…show more content…
While King Jr. led protest campaigns, she had three more children, still greatly participating in movement activities from behind the scenes. She planned marches, boycotts, and gave influential speeches all over the country, sometimes standing in for her husband (King 194). King’s planned marches were the backbone to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. These marches opened new ideas and rights that were being treated unlawful. Her boycotts improved each time and showed society the wrongful terms used to describe Africans (King 198). This caused her boycotts to increase and become more powerful as more people joined her. King and her husband worked together as a team to spread their beliefs. When King Jr. traveled across the country for his boycotts, King knew it was her time to express her thoughts along with her husband’s (King 199). “Braving death threats and surviving the bombing of their home by white supremacists, Coretta Scott King stood by the cause and her husband, from the Birmingham jail to the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, from the March on Washington, to a stage in Oslo, Norway where he accepted the Nobel Prize for Peace”(“Profile of Coretta Scott King”, www. achievement.org). A huge victory was made when President Jonson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, prohibiting discrimination based on race, color, religion, and national