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"Count On Me":
Reverend M. L. Price of Texas, a Case
Study in Civil Rights Leadership
BRIAN D. BEHNKEN
SCHOLARS STUDYING BLACK leaders
prominent during the civil rights movement generally have focused on activists
like Martin Luther King, Jr., Ralph Abernathy, or Fred Shuttlesworth,
and to a lesser degree on conservatives like Joseph H. Jackson or J. L.
Ware. They have portrayed the activists as nonviolent warriors who battled
not only the forces of white supremacy, but also the conservative black
leaders who opposed the struggle. For example, in his fine history of
the movement in Birmingham, Alabama, historian Glenn Eskew chronicled
the tensions arising in the early 1960s after Rev. J. L. Ware refused
to support protests begun by Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth and instead offered
Birmingham's white leaders an accommodationist alternative to the radical
preacher. Likewise, Taylor Branch described Dr. King's longstanding conflicts
with the conservative Rev. J. H. Jackson, head of the National Baptist
Convention (NBC), who refused to aid the civil rights movement. King hoped
to use the NBC to mobilize "the power of the Negro church to break the
hegemony of white segregationist voters," but Jackson rejected his efforts
and later denounced the March on Washington as dangerous and unwarranted.
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