Home / Full timeline / Chevene Bowers “C. B.” King, the first Black person to run for governor of Georgia since the Reconstruction era, dies of cancer in San Diego, California, at age sixty-four.
Chevene Bowers “C. B.” King, the first Black person to run for governor of Georgia since the Reconstruction era, dies of cancer in San Diego, California, at age sixty-four.
1988 (Mar 15)
Chevene Bowers "C. B." King, the first Black person to run for governor of Georgia since the Reconstruction era, died of cancer in San Diego, California, at age sixty-four. King, who was also an attorney and civil rights activist, represented Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph David Abernathy, and other civil rights leaders as well as student sit-in demonstrators during the tumultuous civil rights movement in Albany, Georgia, in 1962. He was beaten on the steps of the Dougherty County courthouse (of which Albany is the county seat) during the demonstrations. Prior to running for governor in 1970, King had also ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 1964. In the governor's race, he received 70,424 votes (8.82 percent) in the Democratic primary. The victorious candidate for governor was Democrat Jimmy Carter, who was later elected president of the United States. Reacting bitterly to his defeat, King blamed it on "little Black political puppets who have exploited politics for their own selfish ends" and on Blacks who still had "social and psychological hangups" about voting for a candidate of their own race.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.