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C. T. Vivian

American minister, writer, and civil rights activist

Cordy Tindell Vivian (July 30, 1924:– July 17, 2020) was an American minister, author, and close friend and lieutenant of Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights movement. Vivian resided in Atlanta, Georgia, and founded the C. T. Vivian Leadership Ins*ute, Inc. He was a member of the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.

Senator Barack Obama, speaking at Selma's Brown Chapel on the March 2007, anniversary of the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches, referred to Vivian in his opening remarks in the words of Martin L. King Jr. as "the greatest preacher to ever live."

Contents

  • 1 Early life
  • 2 Career
  • 3 Later life
  • 4 Works
  • 5 See also
  • 6 References
  • 7 Further reading
  • 8 External links

Early life

Vivian was born in Boonville, Missouri. As a small boy he migrated with his mother to Macomb, Illinois, where he attended Lincoln Grade School and Edison Junior High School. Vivian graduated from Macomb High School in 1942 and attended Western Illinois University in Macomb, where he worked as the sports editor for the school newspaper. His first professional job was recreation director for the Carver Community Center in Peoria, Illinois. There, Vivian participated in his first sit-in demonstrations, which successfully integrated Barton's Cafeteria in 1947.

Career

Studying for the ministry at American Baptist Theological Seminary (now called American Baptist College) in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1959, Vivian met James Lawson, who was teaching Mohandas Gandhi's nonviolent direct action strategy to the Nashville Student Movement. Soon Lawson's students, including Diane Nash, Bernard Lafayette, James Bevel, John Lewis and others from American Baptist, Fisk University and Tennessee State University, organized a systematic nonviolent sit-in campaign at local lunch counters. On April 19, 1960, 4,000 demonstrators peacefully walked to Nashville's City Hall, where Vivian and Diane Nash discussed the situation with Nashville Mayor Ben West. As a result, Mayor West publicly agreed that racial discrimination was morally wrong. Many of the students who participated in the Nashville Student Movement soon took on major leadership roles in both the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

Vivian helped found the Nashville Christian Leadership Conference, and helped organize the first sit-ins in Nashville in 1960 and the first civil rights march in 1961. In 1961, Vivian participated in Freedom Rides. He worked alongside Martin Luther King Jr. as the national director of affiliates for the SCLC. During the summer following the Selma Voting Rights Movement, Vivian conceived and directed an educational program, Vision, and put 702 Alabama students in college with scholarships (this program later became Upward Bound). His 1970 Black Power and the American Myth was the first book on the Civil Rights Movement by a member of Martin Luther King's staff.

In the 1970s Vivian moved to Atlanta, and in 1977 founded the Black Action Strategies and Information Center (BASIC), a consultancy on multiculturalism and race relations in the workplace and other contexts. In 1979 he co-founded, with Anne Braden, the Center for Democratic Renewal (initially as the National Anti-Klan Network), an organization where blacks and whites worked together in response to white supremacist activity. In 1984 he served in Jesse Jackson's presidential campaign, as the national deputy director for clergy. In 1994 he helped to establish, and served on the board of Capitol City Bank and Trust Co., a black-owned Atlanta bank. He also served on the board of Every Church a Peace Church.

Vivian continued to speak publicly and offer workshops, and did so at many conferences around the country and the world, including with the United Nations. He was featured as an activist and an *yst in the civil rights do*entary Eyes on the Prize, and was featured in a PBS special, The Healing Ministry of Dr. C. T. Vivian. He made numerous appearances on Oprah as well as the Montel Williams Show and Donahue. He was the focus of the biography Challenge and Change: The Story of Civil Rights Activist C.T. Vivian by Lydia Walker.

In 2008, Vivian founded and incorporated the C. T. Vivian Leadership Ins*ute, Inc. (CTVLI) to "Create a Model Leadership Culture in Atlanta" Georgia. The C. T. Vivian Leadership Ins*ute conceived, developed and implemented the "Yes, We Care" campaign on December 18, 2008 (four days after the City of Atlanta turned the water off at Morris Brown College (MBC)) and, over a period of two and a half months, mobilized the Atlanta community to donate in excess of $500,000 directly to Morris Brown as "bridge funding." That effort saved the Historically Black College or University (HBCU) and allowed the college to negotiate with the city which ultimately restored the water services to the college.

In 2018, Vivian donated his collection of 6,000 volumes of books largely about the black experience and written by black authors to the National Monuments Foundation for inclusion in the Peace Column, the centerpiece of the upcoming Rodney Cook Sr. Park in Vine City. The C.T. Vivian Library will be housed within the base of the 110-foot column.

Later life

Vivian receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom

On August 8, 2013, President Barack Obama named Vivian as a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The citation in the press release reads as follows:

C. T. Vivian is a distinguished minister, author, and organizer. A leader in the Civil Rights Movement and friend to Martin Luther King, Jr., he participated in Freedom Rides and sit-ins across our country. Vivian also helped found numerous civil rights organizations, including Vision, the National Anti-Klan Network, and the Center for Democratic Renewal. In 2012, he returned to serve as interim President of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

Vivian died from natural causes in Atlanta on July 17, 2020, two weeks before his 96th birthday, and on the same day when his friend and fellow activist, John Lewis, died. He was the first Black, non-elected man to lie in state at the Georgia State Capitol. He was buried at Westview Cemetery in Atlanta.

Works

  • Black Power and the American Myth (1970)

See also

  • List of civil rights leaders
  • James Parks Morton Interfaith Award

References

    Further reading

    How to use archival material
    • Pam Adams,"Changing the Nation". Archived from the original on October 14, 2007. Retrieved September 8, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) The Legacy Project, Peoria Journal Star, October 24, 1999 – an interview, two articles, and a timeline of his life.
    • C. T. Vivian, The Transformation of America Project. Includes five-minute video interview with Vivian.
    • "Vivian, C. T. (1924–) - Minister, civil rights activist, Becomes an Active Participant for Equality and Justice", the Online Encyclopedia.

    External links

    • C.T. Vivian's oral history video excerpts at The National Visionary Leadership Project
    • Appearances on C-SPAN
    • Stuart A. Rose M*cript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University: C.T. and Octavia Vivian papers, circa 1923–2013
    • C.T. and Octavia Vivian papers
    Activist
    groups
    • Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights
    • Atlanta Student Movement
    • Black Panther Party
    • Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
    • Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
    • Committee for Freedom Now
    • Committee on Appeal for Human Rights
    • Council for United Civil Rights Leadership
    • Council of Federated Organizations
    • Dallas County Voters League
    • Deacons for Defense and Justice
    • Georgia Council on Human Relations
    • Highlander Folk School
    • Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
    • Lowndes County Freedom Organization
    • Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party
    • Montgomery Improvement *ociation
    • NAACP
      • Youth Council
    • Nashville Student Movement
    • Nation of Islam
    • Northern Student Movement
    • National Council of Negro Women
    • National Urban League
    • Operation Breadbasket
    • Regional Council of Negro Leadership
    • Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
    • Southern Regional Council
    • Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
    • The Freedom Singers
    • United Auto Workers (UAW)
    • Wednesdays in Mississippi
    • Women's Political Council
    Activists
    • Ralph Abernathy
    • Victoria Gray Adams
    • Zev Aelony
    • Mathew Ahmann
    • Muhammad Ali
    • William G. Anderson
    • Gwendolyn Armstrong
    • Arnold Aronson
    • Ella Baker
    • James Baldwin
    • Marion Barry
    • Daisy Bates
    • Harry Belafonte
    • James Bevel
    • Claude Black
    • Gloria Blackwell
    • Randolph Blackwell
    • Unita Blackwell
    • Ezell Blair Jr.
    • Joanne Bland
    • Julian Bond
    • Joseph E. Boone
    • William Holmes Borders
    • Amelia Boynton
    • Bruce Boynton
    • Raylawni Branch
    • Stanley Branche
    • Ruby Bridges
    • Aurelia Browder
    • H. Rap Brown
    • Ralph Bunche
    • Guy Carawan
    • Stokely Carmichael
    • Johnnie Carr
    • James Chaney
    • J. L. Chestnut
    • Shirley Chisholm
    • Colia Lafayette Clark
    • Ramsey Clark
    • Septima Clark
    • Xernona Clayton
    • Eldridge Cleaver
    • Kathleen Cleaver
    • Charles E. Cobb Jr.
    • Annie Lee Cooper
    • Dorothy Cotton
    • Claudette Colvin
    • Vernon Dahmer
    • Jonathan Daniels
    • Angela Davis
    • Joseph DeLaine
    • Dave Dennis
    • Annie Devine
    • Patricia Stephens Due
    • Joseph Ellwanger
    • Charles Evers
    • Medgar Evers
    • Myrlie Evers-Williams
    • Chuck *er
    • James Farmer
    • Walter Fauntroy
    • James Forman
    • Marie Foster
    • Golden Frinks
    • Andrew Goodman
    • Robert Graetz
    • Fred Gray
    • Jack Greenberg
    • Dick Gregory
    • Lawrence Guyot
    • Prathia Hall
    • Fannie Lou Hamer
    • Fred Hampton
    • William E. Harbour
    • Vincent Harding
    • Dorothy Height
    • Lola Hendricks
    • Aaron Henry
    • Oliver Hill
    • Donald L. Hollowell
    • James Hood
    • Myles Horton
    • Zilphia Horton
    • T. R. M. Howard
    • Ruby Hurley
    • Jesse Jackson
    • Jimmie Lee Jackson
    • Richie Jean Jackson
    • T. J. Jemison
    • Esau Jenkins
    • Barbara Rose Johns
    • Vernon Johns
    • Frank Minis Johnson
    • Clarence Jones
    • J. Charles Jones
    • Matthew Jones
    • Vernon Jordan
    • Tom Kahn
    • Clyde Kennard
    • A. D. King
    • C.B. King
    • Coretta Scott King
    • Martin Luther King Jr.
    • Martin Luther King Sr.
    • Bernard Lafayette
    • James Lawson
    • Bernard Lee
    • Sanford R. Leigh
    • Jim Letherer
    • Stanley Levison
    • John Lewis
    • Viola Liuzzo
    • Z. Alexander Looby
    • Joseph Lowery
    • Clara Luper
    • Danny Lyon
    • Malcolm X
    • Mae Mallory
    • Vivian Malone
    • Bob Mants
    • Thurgood Marshall
    • Benjamin Mays
    • Franklin McCain
    • Charles McDew
    • Ralph McGill
    • Floyd McKissick
    • Joseph McNeil
    • James Meredith
    • William Ming
    • Jack Minnis
    • Amzie Moore
    • Cecil B. Moore
    • Douglas E. Moore
    • Harriette Moore
    • Harry T. Moore
    • Queen Mother Moore
    • William Lewis Moore
    • Irene Morgan
    • Bob Moses
    • William Moyer
    • Elijah Muhammad
    • Diane Nash
    • Charles Neblett
    • Huey P. Newton
    • Edgar Nixon
    • Jack O'Dell
    • James Orange
    • Rosa Parks
    • James Peck
    • Charles Person
    • Homer Plessy
    • Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
    • Fay Bellamy Powell
    • Rodney N. Powell
    • Al Raby
    • Lincoln Ragsdale
    • A. Philip Randolph
    • George Raymond
    • George Raymond Jr.
    • Bernice Johnson Reagon
    • Cordell Reagon
    • James Reeb
    • Frederick D. Reese
    • Walter Reuther
    • Gloria Richardson
    • David Richmond
    • Bernice Robinson
    • Jo Ann Robinson
    • Angela Russell
    • Bayard Rustin
    • Bernie Sanders
    • Michael Schwerner
    • Bobby Seale
    • Cleveland Sellers
    • Charles Sherrod
    • Alexander D. Shimkin
    • Fred Shuttlesworth
    • Modjeska Monteith Simkins
    • Glenn E. Smiley
    • A. Maceo Smith
    • Kelly Miller Smith
    • Mary Louise Smith
    • Maxine Smith
    • Ruby Doris Smith-Robinson
    • Charles Kenzie Steele
    • Hank Thomas
    • Dorothy Tillman
    • A. P. Tureaud
    • Hartman Turnbow
    • Albert Turner
    • C. T. Vivian
    • Wyatt Tee Walker
    • Hollis Watkins
    • Walter Francis White
    • Roy Wilkins
    • Hosea Williams
    • Kale Williams
    • Robert F. Williams
    • Andrew Young
    • Whitney Young
    • Sammy Younge Jr.
    • Bob Zellner
    • James Zwerg
    Influences
    • Nonviolence
      • Padayatra
    • Sermon on the Mount
    • Mahatma Gandhi
      • Ahimsa
      • Satyagraha
    • The Kingdom of God Is Within You
    • Frederick Dougl*
    • W. E. B. Du Bois
    • Mary McLeod Bethune
    Related
    • Jim Crow laws
    • Lynching in the United States
    • Plessy v. Ferguson
      • Separate but equal
    • Buchanan v. Warley
    • Hocutt v. Wilson
    • Sweatt v. Painter
    • Hernandez v. Texas
    • Loving v. Virginia
    • African-American women in the movement
    • Fifth Circuit Four
    • 16th Street Baptist Church
    • Kelly Ingram Park
    • A.G. Gaston Motel
    • Brown Chapel
    • Dexter Avenue Baptist Church
    • Holt Street Baptist Church
    • Edmund Pettus Bridge
    • March on Washington Movement
    • African-American churches attacked
    • List of lynching victims in the United States
    • Freedom songs
      • "*baya"
      • "Keep Your Eyes on the Prize"
      • "Oh, Freedom"
      • "This Little Light of Mine"
      • "We Shall Not Be Moved"
      • "We Shall Overcome"
    • Spring Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam
      • "Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence"
    • Watts riots
    • Voter Education Project
    • 1960s counterculture
    • Eyes on the Prize
    Honoring
    • In popular culture
    • Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
      • other King memorials
    • Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument
    • Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument
    • Freedom Rides Museum
    • Freedom Riders National Monument
    • Civil Rights Memorial
    • National Civil Rights Museum
    • National Voting Rights Museum
    • St. Augustine Foot Soldiers Monument
    • Civil Rights Movement Archive
    • King Center for Nonviolent Social Change
    Noted
    historians
    • Taylor Branch
    • Clayborne Carson
    • John Dittmer
    • Michael Eric Dyson
    • Chuck *er
    • Adam Fairclough
    • David Garrow
    • David Halberstam
    • Vincent Harding
    • Steven F. Lawson
    • Doug McAdam
    • Diane McWhorter
    • Charles M. Payne
    • Timothy Tyson
    • Akinyele Umoja
    • Movement photographers
    :Civil rights movement portal