Chicago Sun-Times

Helped MLK put together ‘ Letter From Birmingham Jail’

- BY DENISE LAVOIE

CHESTER, Va. — The Rev. Wyatt Tee Walker, a leader in the civil rights movement who helped the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. assemble his famous “Letter From Birmingham Jail,” has died.

He was either 88 or 89. Family records showed different years of birth, said his daughter, Patrice Walker Powell, who confirmed his death.

Powell said her father died Tuesday morning at an assisted living facility in Chester, Virginia. She said he had been in declining health the past few years after a stroke.

Mr. Walker was a key player in the civil rights movement, brought in by King to be the executive director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference three years after the civil rights organizati­on was founded.

“He was such a great orator . . . in the civil rights movement,” said SCLC President Charles Steele, who called Mr. Walker “a legend in his own right.”

“He was known for motivating and uplifting people and bringing about the opportunit­y of being hopeful.”

Before joining the SCLC, Mr. Walker was already a top civil rights leader in Virginia, where he had led a “Pilgrimage of Prayer” in Richmond against school segregatio­n on New Year’s Day 1959.

Henry Marsh III, a civil rights lawyer, Richmond’s first black mayor and a former state lawmaker, said Mr. Walker came from modest circumstan­ces to live a tremendous life as “one of the great American heroes.”

“There will never be another one like Wyatt Tee Walker,” Marsh said.

In 1961, during the Freedom Rider campaign to integrate interstate buses, Mr. Walker was one of seven black leaders and four white clergymen arrested in Montgomery, Alabama, while trying to eat together at a bus station.

And in 1963, he had a key role in the SCLC’s campaign against segregatio­n in Birmingham, Alabama.

“Wyatt Walker, youthful, lean and bespectacl­ed, brought his energetic and untiring spirit to our meetings, whose members already knew and admired his dedicated work as a behindthes­cenes organizer of the campaign,” King wrote in his book, “Why We Can’t Wait.”

When King and others were jailed in Birmingham for parading without a permit, Mr. Walker helped assemble King’s famous answer to his moderate critics, “Letter From Birmingham Jail.” King had written the essay on scraps of paper and in the margins of newspapers, which he had passed on to his lawyers.

Mr. Walker then put it together with the help of a secretary.

“It was one of the most important documents of the century,” Mr. Walker told The Birmingham News in 2001.

The following month, May 11, 1963, a black- owned Birmingham hotel and the home of King’s brother were bombed, touching off rioting by blacks. Mr. Walker addressed those in the crowd, urging them to help King’s cause “by going to your homes.”

Leaving the SCLC post in 1964, Mr. Walker was pastor of Harlem’s Canaan Baptist Church from 1968 until his retirement. He was installed there by King just 10 days before King was assassinat­ed April 4, 1968.

Mr. Walker was born in Brockton, Massachuse­tts, and received bachelor’s and divinity degrees from Virginia Union University.

According to Taylor Branch’s book, “Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954- 63,” Mr. Walker had been a member of the Young Communist League in his youth, inspired by the ideal of equality, and was steered toward the ministry in college.

Mr. Walker had come to the SCLC post from Gillfield Baptist Church in Petersburg, Virginia, where he had been the preacher since 1952 and was active in local civil rights efforts.

In addition to the 1959 “Pilgrimage of Prayer,” his efforts included a demonstrat­ion at the segregated Petersburg library in which he was arrested while trying to check out a book on Robert E. Lee, Branch wrote.

 ?? | CARL LYNN/ RICHMOND TIMES- DISPATCH VIA AP ?? The Rev. Wyatt TeeWalker ( right) meets with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. ( left) and Joseph E. Lowery about the SCLC convention in Richmond, Virginia, on Sept. 25, 1963.
| CARL LYNN/ RICHMOND TIMES- DISPATCH VIA AP The Rev. Wyatt TeeWalker ( right) meets with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. ( left) and Joseph E. Lowery about the SCLC convention in Richmond, Virginia, on Sept. 25, 1963.

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