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| By Joe
Azbell | Published Date: January 31, 1956 |
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BLAST ROCKS RESIDENCE OF BUS BOYCOTT LEADER - None Injured
After Bombing Of Kings Home
A bomb tossed on the porch of the home of the Rev. M. L. King,
Negro boycott leader, 309 S. Jackson St. about 9:15 last night shattered
windows, ripped a hole in the porch and cracked a porch column.
No one was injured
Neighbors reported that a light colored automobile was seen at the
time of the explosion. It was believed to have stopped in front
of the home as a man got out and placed or tossed the bomb on the
porch.
Coretta King, wife of the Baptist minister, said she was sitting
in the front room of the six-room white frame dwelling a half block
from the Ben Moore Hotel when she heard footsteps and a thud "like
a brick hitting on the porch."
She said she was talking with the wife of Roscoe Williams, Montgomery
electrician, and that they feared the thud" might be "something
dangerous." The two women ducked through a side door to the
middle bedroom and went to a third room in the rear. As they reached
the third room, they said that they heard the explosion.
In the rear room also was the King's seven and a half weeks old
baby, Yolanda Denise.
Vann Pruitt, assistant state toxicologist, said he believed the
bomb to be either a hand grenade or a half stick of dynamite.
HOLE IN CONCRETE
The bomb hit on the south side of the porch about two feet from
the concrete steps. It ripped a slight hole about a half inch deep,
four inches long and two inches wide in the tile-like porch covering.
The bomb explosion shattered the four windows on the front of the
house, sending glass flying inside the living room on the north
side and den and music room on the south side. The house is the
parsonage of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church.
The house is about 15-feet from the sidewalk and about 30 feet
from the street.
A neighbor, Ernest Walters, 301 S. Jackson, said he saw a light
colored car stop in front of the King house and then move away in
a "terrific hurry." Walters said he was walking up his
sidewalk when he saw the car and immediately after heard the explosion.
He said he saw one man driving the car.
The Williams woman told essentially the same story as the wife
of King. She said she was "shocked by the explosion."
PLEA FOR PEACE
As a crowd of about 300 Negroes gathered outside the house, the
27-year-old Rev. King, in a dramatic scene, addressed them. He began
by asking the group to be "peaceful."
"We believe in law and order. Don't get panicky. Don't do
anything panicky at all. Don't get your weapons. He who lives by
the sword will perish by the sword. Remember that is what God said.
We are not advocating violence. We want to love our enemies. I want
you to love our enemies. Be good to them. Love them and let them
know you love them. I did not start this boycott. I was asked by
you to serve as your spokesman. I want it to be known the length
and breadth of this land that if I am stopped this movement will
not stop. If I am stopped our work will not stop. For what we are
doing is right. What we are doing is just. And God is with us."
As he finished his talk, the crowd of Negroes cheered him, shouting
"Amen," and "God bless you, Brother King."
Then Police Commissioner Clyde C. Sellers addressed the group.
A few minutes before, he had told the King couple inside their house
that he did not condone "such acts of violence as this and
I will certainly do everything in my power to bring the guilty parties
to court and put them in prison." He told King that "I
do not agree with you in your beliefs, but I will do everything
within my power to defend you against such acts as this."
POLICE PROTECTION
He told the crowd the same and added that he was providing "police
protection for the King family."
Mayor W. A. Gayle, also on the scene, told the group that "I
am for law and order and the entire white community is for law and
order and none of us condones or believes in these sorts of acts
in any way. I am going to work with my last breath if necessary
to find and convict the guilty parties."
A short distance away, Sheriff Mac Sim Butler was aiding in the
investigation. He said that he was "opposed to such acts of
violence and would furnish men and equipment and anything else in
his power to help find the guilty parties."
The Rev. King addressed the group again saying "go home and
sleep calm. Go home and don't worry. Be calm as I and my family
are. We are not hurt and remember that if anything happens to me,
there will be others to take my place."
King, dressed in an overcoat and suit, arrived home about 15 minutes
after the bombing. He said that he had just returned from a Negro
mass meeting at the First Baptist Church at Ripley and Jefferson
where some 2,000 Negroes met.
"BE CALM AND QUITE"
He said he had addressed that group to "be calm and quit.
Don't do anything that will not be for justice, for God is with
us."
5-MINUTES SPEECH
As he walked up on the porch, he calmly asked what happened, looked
at the windows and went inside where he met his wife. They discussed
the bombing in a rear room and then he returned to the porch to
address the crowd. Standing there before the group surrounded by
four policemen, Police Chief G. J. Ruppenthal, Fire Chief R. L.
Lampley, Sellers and Gayle, he spoke for about five minutes.
The line of traffic moving up and down the street caused a huge
jam and police were stationed at Adams street and High street to
keep traffic off the street.
An Advertiser reported questioned people in homes on both sides
of Jackson street, and only one Negro besides Walters said he saw
an automobile. The man said he thought the car was al taxi cab but
he would not give his name and disappeared in the crowd. Police
were attempting to locate the Negro for further details last night.
Sellers said that he was leaving a patrol car on duty throughout
the night and that he would "continue to provide police protection
for King."
The Rev. King, pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, has
been the main spokesman for the boycotters since the movement began
Dec. 5 in protest to the segregated seating facilities on city buses.
The Negro minister was fined $10 in police court Saturday on a
speeding charge. He denied going 30 miles an hour in a 25-mile zone
and said his arrest was the result of his activities in the boycott.
NO FURTHER EFFORTS
His arrest followed an announcement by Mayor W. A. Gayle who said
the three member City Commission was through "with pussyfooting"
around with the boycotters. The mayor said the commission would
make no further efforts to reach a compromise.
Boycott leader, many of them ministers, have demanded that seats
on city buses be made available on a "first come, first serve"
basis. They have suggested that Negroes continue to sit from the
rear toward the front but would not be required to stand if any
seats are vacant.
But officials of the Montgomery City Lines and the City Commission
have contended that such a plan would still violate state and city
segregation laws that separate facilities be maintained for whites
and Negroes.
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