Friday July 4th, 2025 4:37PM

Coretta Scott King remembered at church where her husband preached

By The Associated Press
<p>Mourners lined up for blocks outside Ebenezer Baptist Church on Monday to pay their respects to the "first lady of the civil rights movement," Coretta Scott King.</p><p>Mary Howard-Hamilton, a college professor from Bloomington, Ind., had driven eight hours and then stood in the rain for five more to be among the first to view King's body at the church.</p><p>"It's almost like the torch was passed when I walked past her," Howard-Hamilton, 51, said. "I felt empowered. I'm gonna step up now. This fight's not over."</p><p>King, who died Jan. 30 at age 78, was lying in honor at the church where her husband, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., shared his dream from the pulpit in the 1960s. By 10 a.m., hundreds of mourners had lined up outside to say goodbye.</p><p>In the silent sanctuary, hundreds of mourners filed slowly past the casket, directly below the pulpit where King's late husband once preached. Some lingered a moment before moving on. A shroud of flowers blanketed the lower half of the casket. An array of wreaths stood on either side of the casket. They featured an abundance of roses, King's favorite flower.</p><p>During the weekend, some 42,000 mourners had filed past King's open casket at the state Capitol, where she became the first woman and the first black person to lie in honor there. It was a striking contrast to the official snub her slain husband was given by then-Gov. Lester Maddox, an outspoken segregationist.</p><p>President Bush and former President Clinton lead the list of dignitaries expected to attend her funeral on Tuesday, to be held at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, a megachurch in Lithonia where the Kings' youngest child, Bernice, is a minister.</p><p>Civil rights leaders also planned to memorialize King during a service later Monday that was expected to include the Rev. Jesse Jackson, the Rev. Al Sharpton, Rep. John Lewis, former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young and the Rev. Joseph Lowery.</p><p>King suffered a stroke and heart attack last year and had been diagnosed with cancer, but she appeared to be making steps toward recovery, her children said Sunday.</p><p>She was to begin treatment at an alternative medical clinic in Mexico the day she died.</p><p>"It came as a tremendous shock to us. We had no idea," eldest daughter Yolanda King said at a news conference. "She was walking with a cane, she was speaking more words ... there was clearly progress happening."</p><p>Yolanda King said family members had thoroughly researched the clinic and "were stunned when we found out there were problems and challenges there." Mexican authorities shut down the clinic days after King's death, saying it had carried out unproven treatments and unauthorized surgeries.</p><p>"We're missing her like crazy, but we're just so thankful that we had her as long as we did," Yolanda King said. "She's been released and we feel so strongly that she has reconnected with our father."</p>
  • Associated Categories: State News
© Copyright 2025 AccessWDUN.com
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.