Home / Full timeline / Reverend Clennon King, a Black Georgia minister, interrupted service at the church where President Jimmy Carter and his mother were worshipers in an effort to agitate the president on the question of desegregation of churches.
Reverend Clennon King, a Black Georgia minister, interrupted service at the church where President Jimmy Carter and his mother were worshipers in an effort to agitate the president on the question of desegregation of churches.
1978 (Aug 20)
The Reverend Clennon King, a Black Albany, Georgia, minister, interrupted worship services at the Americus Fellowship Baptist Church, where President Jimmy Carter and his eighty-year-old mother Lillian were among the worshipers. The outburst was a continuation of King's efforts to agitate the president on the question of desegregation of churches. He had previously tried to join the all-white Plains Baptist Church, where the president and his mother previously attended services. Mrs. Carter had withdrawn from that church after its deacons reaffirmed a decision to continue prohibiting Black membership. In his outburst, King accused the president of preventing him from building a new church across from the all-white, Plains Maranatha Baptist Church that "was formed by a group which split from Plains Baptist." He asserted that he loved "the president and he loves me, but he is listening to the wrong Negroes." Although Secret Service agents surrounded King, he was not removed from the church. Of the incident, President Carter said "I hope he gets his church.... I didn't know anything about it."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.