Martin
Luther King Jr.’s Family
Home to Open to the Public
G'day folks,
This famous property was recently
purchased by the National Park Foundation.
During
the three years leading up to his assassination, Martin Luther King Jr. lived
with his family in a modest brick house in Atlanta’s Vine City neighborhood.
His wife, Coretta Scott King, continued to live there until 2004, at which
point it was used by the King family as an office, according to Shelia M. Poole
and Ernie Suggs of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Now, the home is due
to open to the public for the first time, following its acquisition by the
National Park Foundation.
The foundation, which is the official
charity of the National Park Service, announced last month that it had purchased the house
from the estate of Coretta Scott King, subsequently transferring the property
to the park service.
The four-bedroom house will be part of
the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Park (formerly a National Historic
Site), which encompasses several buildings
and sites in Atlanta,
“With greater access to Dr. King’s life
and legacy, we can learn more about this country’s past and how his work
continues to echo through time,” Will Shafroth, president of the National Park
Foundation, said in a statement.
This marks the second time in recent
weeks that the foundation has acquired a property connected to King. In
December of last year, it bought the two-story house where the civil rights
icon was born, and where he lived for 12 years with his parents and
grandparents. That home had been owned by the Martin Luther King Jr.
Center for Nonviolent Social Change. Because the property was
included among the buildings that made up what was then the Martin Luther King
Jr. National Historic Site, according to Mihir Zaveri of the New York Times, the park service had been able to
offer tours in the house since 1984.
The King family home in Vine City, by
contrast, was not accessible to the public, and it will open to tours for the
first time, though it could take more than a year to get the house ready for
visitors, Will Shafroth, CEO of the National Park Foundation, tells Poole and
Suggs.
King, his wife and four children moved
into the house in 1965, and purchased the property one year later. It was at
this site, located at 234 Sunset Avenue, that mourners flocked to comfort
King’s family in the wake of his assassination in 1968. Robert Kennedy, Jesse
Jackson and Richard Nixon were among those who stopped by to pay their
respects, according to the Washington Post’s Michael E. Ruane. Jackie Kennedy,
whose own husband had been assassinated only a few years earlier, embraced
Coretta Scott King in her bedroom, Rebecca Burns writes in Burial for a King.
Though King didn’t live in the house for
long, his daughter Bernice King tells Poole and Suggs that their time there was
like that of any other “normal family.” They played basketball in the backyard
and ate meals together in the dining room. Sometimes, she would jump off the
kitchen refrigerator, with her dad waiting to catch her below. The other
recently acquired property is known as King’s “birth home”; but this site on
Sunset Avenue, Bernice King says, was the family’s “life home.”
Clancy's comment: It looks like a charming house, but it's a sad story about the previous owner. By the way, the font I use for this post is called Georgia.
I'm ...
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