During the
Red Summer of 1919,
three African Americans were lynched over a two-day period. According to
University of Alabama historian
David Beito, Montgomery "nurtured the
modern civil rights movement." In December 1955,
Rosa Parks was arrested for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white man, sparking the
Montgomery bus boycott. The
Montgomery Improvement Association was created by
Martin Luther King Jr., then the pastor of
Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, and
E.D. Nixon, a lawyer and local civil rights advocate, to organize the boycott. Nixon, along with
Fred Gray and
Clifford Durr, argued the case of
Browder v. Gayle before the
U.S. District Court in Montgomery. In June 1956, Judge
Frank M. Johnson ruled that Montgomery's bus segregation was illegal. After the
Supreme Court upheld the ruling in November, the city desegregated the bus system, and the boycott was ended. King gained nationwide fame as a result of the Boycott. He remained in Montgomery until 1960, during which time he led the founding of the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In 1960, inspired by the
Greensboro sit-ins, students from
Alabama State College organized their own
sit-in at the
State Capitol's lunch counter to protest segregation. After the involved students were expelled at the insistence of Governor
John Malcolm Patterson, thousands of students marched on the capitol. On May 20, 1961, the
Freedom Riders, attempting to test desegregation laws on inter-state buses, arrived in Montgomery. After meeting with violence in
Anniston and
Birmingham, Governor Patterson pledged to protect the riders during their journey from Birmingham to Montgomery, but Montgomery city police did not continue to protect the riders. They were met by a mob who beat the riders and
Justice Department officials who attempted to intervene. Police eventually intervened—and served the riders with injunctions for inciting violence. Days later, more riders departed Montgomery to continue the ride, only to be arrested upon reaching
Jackson, Mississippi. Martin Luther King would return to Montgomery in 1965. Local civil rights leaders in
Selma had been protesting
Jim Crow laws blocking Black people from registering to vote. Following the shooting of a man after a civil rights rally, the leaders decided to
march to Montgomery to petition Governor
George Wallace to allow free voter registration. After meeting with resistance from state troopers, an incident that became known as "
Bloody Sunday", Dr. King joined the effort. The march began on March 21, after Judge
Frank M. Johnson authorized the march. By March 24, the marchers reached Montgomery, and the group camped and held a rally at the
City of St. Jude that night. The next morning, the march reached the Capitol, and King gave a speech,
How Long, Not Long, to the crowd of 25,000. ==1967 fire==