Career
In
1951 Abernathy became pastor of the First Baptist Church in Montgomery,
Alabama. A few years later, he met Martin Luther King, Jr. In 1955–56,
the two men worked together to oppose laws that kept blacks and whites
separated. They first organized a boycott of the Montgomery bus system.
Before that, blacks and whites were forced to travel in separate parts
of the bus on the basis of their color. During the boycott, blacks
refused to ride the buses at all. Because of the boycott the system was
changed so that blacks had the same rights as whites on the buses. This
nonviolent boycott marked the beginning of the civil rights movement.
Over the next 20 years, the movement led to many more changes.
In
1957 King and Abernathy founded the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference (SCLC) to organize a nonviolent struggle against segregation
throughout the South. In 1961 Abernathy moved to Atlanta. In 1968,
after King was assassinated, Abernathy became president of the SCLC.
Retirement
In
1977 Ralph Abernathy resigned from the post of president of the SCLC.
He then resumed his work as the pastor of a Baptist church in Atlanta.
In 1989 his autobiography And the Walls Came Tumbling Down was published. Ralph David Abernathy died on April 17, 1990, in Atlanta.