The inspiration behind the Durham movement and the ones it inspired came from an unlikely source. Back in 1955, Moore heard the news that his former classmate at
Boston University,
Martin Luther King Jr., was leading the
Montgomery bus boycott in
Montgomery, Alabama. Surprised at the change in the once-timid King, Moore decided to write him a letter. In it, he detailed his own experiences with the desegregation of buses in
North Carolina and
Virginia, noting that by relying “completely upon the force of
love and Christian witness”, he was able to achieve his goals. Moore went on to suggest “a regional group which uses the power of
nonviolence”, hinting that such a group, were it well-disciplined, could “break the backbone of segregated travel in North Carolina in less than a year”. King, however, continued to display reluctance to partake in Moore's radical agenda. In the end, Moore received only a polite thank-you note from King's secretary. However, he continued to let his faith play a role in his actions. Moore led a group of young Durham activists called “ACT”, which met at church every Sunday to talk about how to test the limits of the South's
Jim Crow laws. When the student activism movement began to take flight in Durham, it was backed by the city's African-American churches, especially the female members of the
congregations. Moore also became a board member of King's
Southern Christian Leadership Conference. With his new-found power, he was able to find new ways to get his message of a
nonviolent regional group across the South. For instance, Moore supported the efforts of McKissick to spread the gospel of
direct action to African-American students in North Carolina. In addition, the organizers of the SCLC sent out a call for clergyman to organize their congregations for a widespread protest in 1957. The growing
movement in the South soon became impossible for King to ignore. A week after the Durham sit-ins, he received an invitation from Moore to come to the city, which he accepted. The two visited the lunch counters that had been open just a few days earlier and spoke at White Rock
Baptist Church. King gave the sit-in movement his blessing, saying that the student activists had made the sit-in action itself “a creative protest that is destined to be one of the glowing epics of our time”. With the support of King, the movement continued to grow. Moore enlisted the help of other regional leaders such as
James M. Lawson Jr., another Methodist minister. Lawson, like Moore, taught college students at his church in
Nashville how to resist violence and employ the power of love to fight against segregation. Right after the Greensboro sit-ins, Moore urged Lawson to take action and organize a sit-in at his local Woolworth's, which he did. Activists around the South were soon making similar moves, thanks to
networks set up by Moore and his allies, whose work also helped to popularize what became known as “local movement centers”. These centers can be conceptualized as “micro-
social structures” that facilitated the
collective actions of African-American activists, especially students, across North Carolina and the rest of the South. As a result, during the spring of 1960, sit-ins spread through these networks and centers to every Southern state except Mississippi. Moore's tireless efforts had paid off, and the era of civil rights in America had begun in full force. ==Later life in Washington, D.C.==