Chevene Bowers King


Chevene Bowers "C. B." King was a pioneering African-American attorney, civil rights leader in Georgia during the Civil Rights Movement, and political candidate.

Early years

Born in Albany, Georgia, King was one of eight children of Clennon Washington King Sr. and Margaret King, both of whom graduated from Tuskegee Institute. Among his six brothers were Slater King and the much younger Preston King. After he graduated from a segregated high school in Albany, he served in the US Navy.

Education

King received a B.A. degree from Fisk University, a historically black university in Nashville, Tennessee in 1949 and a law degree from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio in 1952. In law school, he married Carol Roumain Johnson. Although other promising opportunities were available to him, he decided to return to Albany. He became the only black attorney practicing in his community and one of only three practicing in Georgia outside Atlanta.

National figure

As an attorney, civil rights leader, and pioneering political candidate, King spent the rest of his life contributing to the causes of justice, opportunity, and dignity for all Americans. Although he remained based in Albany throughout his career, which limited his activities primarily to the areas of southwestern Georgia, where he was raised, he became known nationally.
In the early 1960s, he was a leader of the Albany Movement, which demonstrated for civil rights such as desegregation of buses and public facilities and for the employment of blacks in businesses that they patronized. He led boycotts of places to achieve those goals. King was severely beaten by police and faced many threats to his life during a campaign that was described by national leader Martin Luther King Jr. of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference as one of the crucial battles of the civil rights struggle.
King ran as a candidate for President, Congress, and the first black gubernatorial candidate in Georgia since Reconstruction to gain a forum for the causes that he represented.
He devoted much of his time to pro bono law work for the poor and to volunteering in community projects for the needy. He was most noted as the lead attorney in a series of landmark lawsuits against longstanding discriminatory practices in the city and the state.

Legal cases

He won cases including Gaines v. Dougherty County Board of Education, Lockett v. Board of Education of Muscogee County, and Harrington v. Colquitt County Board of Education ; Anderson v. City of Albany and Kelly v. Page ; Bell v. Southwell ; Brown v. Culpepper, Foster v. Sparks, Thompson v. Sheppard, Pullum v. Greene, Broadway v. Culpepper, and Rabinowitz v. United States ; and Johnson v. City of Albany.

Honors

King died in 1988 after a lengthy illness. The C. B. King United States Courthouse in Albany, Georgia, was renamed in his honor in 2000, the first federal courthouse in the former Jim Crow South to be named after a black man. King is the fourth African American to serve as a namesake of a federal courthouse; the other three were Martin Luther King Jr., Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, and Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes.

Personal life

King is the uncle of Baroness King of Bow, one of the first black British Members of Parliament.