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16th Street Baptist Church
The Sixteenth Street Baptist Church is a large,
predominantly African American Baptist church in
Birmingham in the U.S. state of Alabama. In
September 1963, it was the target of the racially
motivated 16th Street Baptist Church bombing that
killed four girls in the midst of the American Civil
Rights Movement. The church is still in operation
and is a central landmark in the Birmingham Civil
Rights District. It was designated as a National
Historic Landmark in 2006.
The Sixteenth Street Baptist Church was organized
as the First Colored Baptist Church of Birmingham in
1873. It was the first black church to organize in
Birmingham, which was founded just two years before.
The first meetings were held in a small building at
12th Street and Fourth Avenue North. A site was soon
acquired on 3rd Avenue North between 19th and 20th
Street for a dedicated building. In 1880, the church
sold that property and built a new church on the
present site on 16th Street and 6th Avenue North.
The new brick building was completed in 1884, but in
1908 the city condemned the structure and ordered it
to be demolished.
The present building, a "modified
Romanesque and Byzantine design" by the prominent
black architect Wallace Rayfield, was constructed in
1911 by the local black contractor T.C. Windham. The
cost of construction was $26,000. In addition to the
main sanctuary, the building houses a basement
auditorium, used for meetings and lectures, and
several ancillary rooms used for Sunday school and
smaller groups. As one of the primary institutions
in the black community, Sixteenth Street Baptist has
hosted prominent visitors throughout its history. W.
E. B. Du Bois, Mary McLeod Bethune, Paul Robeson and
Ralph Bunche all spoke at the church during the
first part of the 20th century.
During the civil rights movement of the 1960s,
Sixteenth Street Baptist Church served as an
organizational headquarters, site of mass meetings
and rallying point for blacks protesting widespread
institutionalized racism in Birmingham, Alabama and
the South. The reverends Fred Shuttlesworth, who was
the chief local organizer, James Bevel, SCLC leader
who initiated the Children's Crusade and taught the
students nonviolence, and Martin Luther King, Jr.
were frequent speakers at the church and led the
movement.
On Sunday, September 15, 1963, Thomas
Blanton, Bobby Frank Cherry and Robert Edward
Chambliss, members of the Ku Klux Klan, planted 19
sticks of dynamite outside the basement of the
church. At 10:22 a.m., they exploded, killing four
young girls–Addie Mae Collins, Carole Robertson,
Cynthia Wesley and Denise McNair–and injuring 22
others. They were there preparing for the church's
"Youth Day". A funeral for three of the four victims
was attended by more than 8,000 mourners, white and
black, but no city officials.
This was one of a string of more than 45
bombings that for more than a decade had terrorized
progressive agitators as well as citizens who did
nothing more than buy a house in a new neighborhood.
(Dynamite Hill, a neighborhood in transition, was
the area of numerous house bombings.) The taking of
indisputably innocent lives shocked the city, the
nation and the world. The bombing is credited with
increasing Federal involvement and helping the
passage of civil rights legislation. President
Johnson secured passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act
the following year.
Following the bombing, more than
$300,000 in unsolicited gifts were received by the
church and repairs were begun immediately. The
church reopened on June 7, 1964. A stained glass
window depicting an black Christ, designed by John
Petts, was donated by the citizens of Wales and
installed in the front window, facing south.
In 1980, Sixteenth Street Baptist Church
was added to the National Register of Historic
Places. In 1993, a team of surveyors for the
Historic American Buildings Survey executed measured
drawings of the church for archival in the Library
of Congress. Because of its historic value in the
moral crusade of civil rights, on February 20, 2006,
the church was officially designated as a National
Historic Landmark by the United States Department of
the Interior.
As part of the Birmingham Civil Rights District,
Sixteenth Street Baptist Church receives more than
200,000 visitors annually. Though the current
membership is only around 200, it has an average
weekly attendance of nearly 2,000. The church also
operates a large drug counseling program. The
current pastor is Reverend Arthur Price. Across from
the church at Kelly Ingram Park is the Birmingham
Civil Rights Institute, which plans events that
teach and promote the history of human rights.
Sixteenth Street Baptist Church is engaged in a
$3 million restoration of the building. It has had
persistent water damage problems and faces failure
of the brick exterior. As of February 2007, the
first phase of restoration, mainly below-grade
waterproofing, had been completed, and work on the
exterior masonry was begun. Additional funds are
being sought to handle unexpected problems uncovered
during the work and to provide for ongoing physical
maintenance.
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