SUBSCRIBE NOW

SIGHT

Be informed. Be challenged. Be inspired.

US SLAVERY ANNIVERSARY: MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA, CHURCHES PART OF CITY’S 200 YEAR HISTORY OF SLAVERY, CIVIL RIGHTS

Montgomery1

As the US marks 400 years since the arrival of the first African slaves in Jamestown, Virginia, ADELLE M BANKS reports from Alabama’s capital on the city’s historic connections with slavery – and the modern civil rights movement…

Montgomery, Alabama
RNS

Connections between Christianity, Confederacy and civil rights – and the history of slavery – are in plain sight here in Alabama’s capital.

Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church is known for its most famous pastor, Rev Martin Luther King, Jr, but one of its early locations was once a slave pen.

Montgomery1 

An installation art sculpture of slaves by artist Kwame Akoto-Bamfo at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama. PICTURE: Adelle M Banks/RNS. 

St John’s Episcopal Church, where Confederacy President Jefferson Davis worshipped, is across the street from the building where Rosa Parks was tried after she refused to give up her bus seat to a white man.

And just beyond downtown, Old Ship African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, a congregation that dates to before the end of slavery, sits across the street from the memorial that opened in 2018 to remember more than 4,400 lynching victims.

“It is the cradle of the Confederacy and the birthplace of the modern civil rights movement.”

– Kathy Dunn Jackson, volunteer historian of Old Ship AME Zion Church.

As the nation marks the 400th anniversary of the forced arrival of Africans in Virginia – and Alabama has its bicentennial – a walk through Montgomery’s streets reveals the legacy of slavery in America.

“It is the cradle of the Confederacy and the birthplace of the modern civil rights movement,” said Kathy Dunn Jackson, volunteer historian of Old Ship AME Zion Church.

Religion sometimes played a role in the violence that followed slavery, as seen at the Equal Justice Initiative’s National Memorial for Peace and Justice.

Montgomery3

Columns memorialising lynching victims are suspended above visitors at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama. PICTURE: Adelle M Banks/RNS

Amid the 800 six foot orangey-brown steel columns memorialising those lynched from 1877 to 1950 – often by white Southerners angered by the end of slavery – is an example of a religious ceremony being cited as a reason to kill.

“Arthur St Clair, a minister, was lynched in Hernando County, Florida, in 1877 for performing the wedding of a black man and white woman,” reads a sign.

The memorial, on a six acre site, is described by its creators as “a sacred space for truth-telling and reflection about racial terrorism and its legacy”.

Montgomery5

Soil from lynching sites fills jars at the Equal Justice Initiative’s Peace and Justice Memorial Center in Montgomery, Alabama. PICTURE: Adelle M Banks/RNS

About a mile away, the EJI’s Legacy Museum, which traces history “from enslavement to mass incarceration,” features holograms of black men, women and children, held in pens singing spirituals like “Lord, How Come Me Here?” and speaking of missed loved ones from whom they have just been taken.

Like Dexter Avenue’s early location, the site of the museum was once a slave pen: “You are standing on a site where enslaved people were warehoused,” read words on a wall at its entrance.

 Montgomery2

 Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church is where Rev Martin Luther King, Jr, preached in Montgomery, Alabama. PICTURE: Adelle M Banks/RNS

Another sign points out that in 1860 Montgomery, there were more places for trading slaves than hotels and churches.

The current site of the Montgomery church where King pastored was purchased for $US270 in 1879, and that spot also has ties to slavery – specifically the heart of the Confederacy in 1861.

“It’s one block from the state Capitol,” said Montgomery historian Richard Bailey. “Jefferson Davis was inaugurated within sights of what became that church.”

Montgomery4

Visitors tour the Dexter Parsonage Museum, where the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr, lived between 1954 and 1960, on 8th June, in Montgomery, Alabama. PICTURE: Adelle M Banks/RNS

At the time of Davis’ inauguration, slaves made up almost half (45 per cent) of the state’s population, or 435,080 people, according to the Encyclopedia of Alabama.

Steve Murray, director of the Alabama Department of Archives & History, said the capitol steps and that nearby church continued to be at the vanguard of major events a century after the start of the Civil War.

“At the bottom of those steps is where the Selma to Montgomery march culminated,” he said. “You pack an awful lot of really significant American history into a few square blocks.”

Montgomery6

The Alabama Capitol is blocks away from several famous churches in Montgomery. PICTURE: Adelle M Banks/RNS

A half a century later, tour director Wanda Howard Battle pointed out the lectern in the red brick church’s basement that was placed on a tractor-trailer flatbed for King’s speech when then-Gov. George Wallace would not allow the civil rights leader to speak on the Capitol steps.

Over the last 200 years, there has been a transformation on the street that changed from Market Street to Dexter Avenue and from slave markets to other kinds of commercial business.

The first pastor of the church that has been on one corner for most of that timespan was born a slave. The middle-class blacks who created the Second Colored Baptist Church changed its name twice, first to the street’s new name and then to honour King. Two blocks west, in an area where slaves were once confined, a fountain flows and signs recognise “outstanding Alabamans,” including King.

Montgomery7

This lectern, in the basement of Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church, was used by Rev Martin Luther King, Jr, when he spoke at the conclusion of the Selma to Montgomery March at the nearby Alabama Capitol in Montgomery, Alabama. PICTURE: Adelle M Banks/RNS

Curtis Evans, a historian of American religions at University of Chicago Divinity School, said the city’s changes are particularly striking because slave owners may have originally hoped to use Christianity as a “form of social control” but a century later many black clergy became active in the civil rights movement.

“What happened, ironically, is that many enslaved people adapted Christianity to their own circumstances and used it as a very different form of imagining justice in the United States,” he said, “compared to, for example, white evangelical Protestants who have such different views about the role of government and political issues.”


RELATED: 


While historians call the overall change pivotal, Battle, a member of an AME Zion church, prefers to consider it providential.

“I just see it as God moving everybody into place,” she said.

 

 

Donate



sight plus logo

Sight+ is a new benefits program we’ve launched to reward people who have supported us with annual donations of $26 or more. To find out more about Sight+ and how you can support the work of Sight, head to our Sight+ page.

Musings

TAKE PART IN THE SIGHT READER SURVEY!

We’re interested to find out more about you, our readers, as we improve and expand our coverage and so we’re asking all of our readers to take this survey (it’ll only take a couple of minutes).

To take part in the survey, simply follow this link…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.