The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

$4 million grant to renovate historic West Hunter Street Baptist Church

- By Shelia Poole shelia.poole@ajc.com

Historic West Hunter Street Baptist Church is getting a second chance to impact the community.

A $4 million Community Project Funding Grant has been awarded to help restore the landmark church, which is at 775 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive SW.

The church was led for decades by the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy Sr. and was one of the spiritual homes of the civil rights movement, where people gathered to worship and strategize.

Abernathy, who died in 1990, was a civil rights leader, co-founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and a close confidant of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

The Rev. Gerald Durley, pastor emeritus of Providence Missionary Baptist Church in Atlanta, remembers going to the church for strategy meetings as a young student at Tennessee State University in Nashville during the 1960s.

“We would meet there, sit and talk” with others during the movement, he said. “We would get inspired, and it gave us the confidence. We found strength in each other.”

Although it is no longer used as a functionin­g church, U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams, D-Atlanta, said it is “still a sacred place — the house of Reverend Abernathy’s legacy. And as I so often say of the giants of the civil rights movement who preceded me: I have an obligation to build on their legacy.”

Williams said the funds will be used to restore the sanctuary and Abernathy’s office as it was when he served as the church’s 16th pastor from 1961 to 1990.

Last week, U.S. Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock of Georgia introduced bipartisan legislatio­n to recognize the church as a National Historic Site.

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