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Birmingham’s revolutionary
Birmingham’s Revolutionaries

Fred Shuttlesworth and the Alabama
Christian Movement for Human Rights

Marjorie L. White and Andrew M. Manis, editors

Birmingham's Sixteenth Street Baptist Church had a preeminent role in the story of the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama, in part because of the bombing there that took the lives of four young girls. However, other African American churches in Birmingham played a much larger role in the Civil Rights Movement. In particular, the Bethel Baptist Church, pastored from 1953 to 1961 by Fred Shuttlesworth, was the mother church of agitation against segregation in the city known as "Bombingham."

In 1998 the Birmingham Historical Society sponsored the Birmingham Revolutionaries Symposium to present a case for the national significance of Fred Shuttlesworth, his Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, and the sixty African American churches in which they met. Bringing together both historical and sociological analysis by scholars and personal reflections of participants, this volume includes six essays from the Symposium and makes a compelling case for recognizing Bethel Baptist Church, in addition to the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, as a National Historic Landmark and for placing the other fifty-nine civil rights churches on the National Register of Historic Places. Contributors include scholars Wilson Fallin Jr., Aldon Morris, Glenn T. Eskew, and Andrew M. Manis, along with reminiscences by movement leaders Wyatt T. Walker and Fred Shuttlesworth. These essays call attention to some of the Civil Rights Movement's most unsung heroes. Anyone interested in the history of race relations or in the Civil Rights Movement will find these essays rewarding reading.

Marjorie L. White is director of the Birmingham Historical Society and editor of A Walk to Freedom. She was the convener of the 1998 Birmingham Revolutionaries Symposium.

Andrew M. Manis is editor of Religious and Southern Studies, Mercer University Press, and author of A Fire You Can't Put Out: The Civil Rights Life of Birmingham's Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth.

Walking Integrity: Benjamin Elijah Mayes, Mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr.

The Southern Albatross: Race and Ethnicity in the American South

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Retail $22.00, hardback

History / Southern Studies

ISBN 978-0-86554-709-4

MUP/H530

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