Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, Montgomery, Alabama (1883- )

January 06, 2009 
/ Contributed By: Elizabeth Erbach

Dexter Avenue Baptist Church

Dexter Avenue Baptist Church

Courtesy Quintard Taylor Collection

The Dexter Avenue Baptist Church was built in 1883 on the corner of Dexter Avenue and Decatur Street in Montgomery, Alabama.  The church served as a meeting place and planning hub for some of the most influential actions of the Civil Rights movement throughout the first half of the twentieth century.

The Dexter Avenue Church was built on a lot facing the Alabama State Capitol, on the site of a former slave trading pen. The choice of location, and the church’s refusal to move despite consistent threats from the white community, marked a tacit defiance of Jim Crow segregation and an early bend towards activism.

The church sponsored an annual lecture series throughout the early decades of the twentieth century that featured prominent African American leaders. Sunday school focused on Bible study, literature and music to the youth of the community. A vibrant missionary society in the early 1900s that fostered education, community welfare, and a joint anti-lynching campaign with the NAACP in 1920 led to a break with strictly accommodationists practices.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who became the church’s minister in 1954, helped bring the congregation into the midst of the fight for Civil Rights. The Montgomery Improvement Association, which was formed in the early 1950s, met in the church basement for the planning for the MIA’s Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955. Ten years later in 1965, upon arrival in Montgomery after the historic Selma marches, King delivered his speech in front of the Alabama capitol, facing Dexter Avenue Baptist Church.

From the early days of Jim Crow resistance, through the anti-lynching campaign in 1920 and the Bus Boycott in 1955, the Dexter Avenue congregation was important in the struggle for Civil Rights. As a planning site, and as a force of community change, Dexter Avenue Baptist Church was integral to the Civil Rights movement in Alabama, and the nation as a whole.

About the Author

Author Profile

Elizabeth Erbach is a Sophomore at Berea College, majoring in History. She works for the Berea College Information Systems and Services department, maintaining the school’s website, and is active in the Berea Gay-Straight Alliance. Before attending Berea, Elizabeth spent several years doing humanitarian work in Ethiopia, and working with at-risk youth in inner city areas of the United States. After graduation, she plans to earn an MA in counseling and continue working with youth.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Erbach, E. (2009, January 06). Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, Montgomery, Alabama (1883- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/dexter-avenue-baptist-church-montgomery-alabama/

Source of the Author's Information:

Samuel C. Hyde Jr., ed., Sunbelt Revolution: The Historical Progression
of the Civil Rights Struggle in the Gulf South, 1866-2000
(Gainesville:
University Press of Florida, 2003); Charles E. Fager, Selma, 1965: The
March that Changed the South
(Boston: Beacon Press, 1974); Adam
Fairclough, Better Day Coming: Blacks and Equality 1890-2000 (New York:
Viking, 2001); Irwin T. Sanders and Rhoda Lois Blumberg, eds., Social
Movements Past and Present: Civil Rights: The 1960s Freedom Struggle

(Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1984)

Further Reading