Rev. Wyatt T. Walker, MLK’s Right Hand, Dead at 88

Civil Rights leaders Joseph Lowery, left, and Wyatt Tee Walker, right, take to the podium during a rally at the National Press Club in Washington, Tuesday, July 2, 2008, to present a retrospective of where the nation has come in the 45 years since Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Civil Rights leaders Joseph Lowery, left, and Wyatt Tee Walker, right, take to the podium during a rally at the National Press Club in Washington, Tuesday, July 2, 2008, to present a retrospective of where the nation has come in the 45 years since Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech.                 (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Civil Rights leaders Joseph Lowery, left, and Wyatt Tee Walker, right, take to the podium during a rally at the National Press Club in Washington, Tuesday, July 2, 2008, to present a retrospective of where the nation has come in the 45 years since Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Rev. Wyatt T. Walker, MLK’s Right Hand, Dead at 88

By Angela Helm

The Rev. Dr. Wyatt Tee Walker, a fierce Civil Rights advocate and strategist over many generations, died on Tuesday at his home in Chester, Va. He was 88-years-old.

His death was announced by the Rev. Al Sharpton of the National Action Network on Twitter; Walker was the 27-year-old organization’s first board chairman.

Like many unsung heroes of the Civil Rights Movement, Walker’s name may not be as familiar as some others, but his works were long.

As an ordained Baptist minister, the good reverend had his hand in everything from the desegregation tactics of King’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference; to fighting housing discrimination in New York City. The New York Times reports that Walker also helped to supervise South Africa’s first fully representative elections in 1994, after the apartheid regime fell there.

Dr. Walker helped circulate one of King’s most deeply felt and inspiring works, “Letter From Birmingham Jail,” one of the most important blueprints of the civil rights movement and helped to organize the 1963 March on Washington, which culminated with Dr. King’s historic “I Have a Dream” speech.

King was said to have described Walker as ”one of the keenest minds of the nonviolent revolution.”

It seems as if Walker was destined to fight the good fight no matter who it was against. At one point, the Times reports, infamous drug kingpin Frank Lucas put a hit on him, but he said because he had been involved in the struggle in the Deep South, he “was accustomed to dangerous situations.”

Wyatt Tee Walker was born on Aug. 16, 1929, in Brockton, Mass., the 10th of 11 children, and a grandson of slaves. He received education at the HBCU Virginia Union University, earning a bachelor’s degree with honors in both physics and chemistry at age 19. He pledged the Gamma chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., and met Dr. King (also an Alpha) while in college. He also obtained his Bachelor of Divinity degree from Virginia Union’s Graduate School of Religion. In 1950, he married Theresa Edwards, with whom he eventually had four children: Wyatt Jr., Robert, Earl, and Ann.

Walker began his civil rights work in Virginia, and served as president for five years of the Petersburg branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and as state director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), which he co-founded in 1958.

He joined the SCLC in 1961—personally recruited by King—and eventually moved to Atlanta, to serve as its first full-time executive director. In 1965, Walker moved to Harlem, N.Y., where he initially was a minister at the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church. Two years later, he became the pastor and chief executive of the Canaan Baptist Church of Christ, a post he held until 2004.

During the 1970s, Walker served as Urban Affairs Specialist to Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, helping advise in on racial relations and integration. In 1975 he completed his doctorate at Colgate Rochester Divinity School.

Of his myriad civil rights works, the Times reports that as pastor of Canaan, Dr. Walker oversaw extensive development of church-sponsored affordable housing, housing for the elderly and what the church calls the oldest senior services center in Harlem. He also established Harlem’s first charter school, the Sisulu-Walker Charter School (named for Dr. Walker and the South African anti-apartheid leader Walter Sisulu).

In addition to the National Action Network, Dr. Walker had been chairman of the Freedom National Bank. After retiring from Canaan after a series of strokes, he moved to Virginia in 2004, where he remained until his death.

Harlem’s Schomburg Center collected his papers from the period of 1963–1982. They include both personal and official correspondence, papers and lectures on a wide variety of topics, and are available for research.

About Carma Henry 24363 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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