The Reverend Wyatt Tee Walker, pastor and civil rights leader, was born August 16,
1929 to John Wise and Maude Pinn Walker in Brockton, Massachusetts. After attending
primary and secondary schools in Merchantville, New Jersey, he attended Virginia
Union University (VUU), where he received his bachelor's degree in 1950.
Upon graduation, he entered the school's seminary, where as president of the student
body he met and made a lasting friendship with another seminarian and student body
president, Martin Luther King, Jr., at a meeting of the Inter-Seminary Movement. He
received the Master of Divinity degree from VUU in 1953, and that year became
minister of the Gillfield Baptist Church in Petersburg, Virginia, embarking on a
career that would make him one of the central figures in the civil rights struggles
of the late 1950s and 1960s.
As pastor of Gillfield Baptist, Walker was one of a number of generally younger, more
activist ministers--the most famous of whom was King in Montgomery, Alabama, but
also including men like Fred Shuttlesworth in Birmingham and T. J. Jemison in Baton
Rouge--who would become the stalwarts of the modern civil rights movement. Replacing
an older, more conservative clergy, they led congregations that had become larger
and relatively more able to withstand the intimidation and violence brought to bear
on them by defenders of the Southern status quo. Like his clerical peers in other
cities, Walker assumed a leadership role in a number of organizations; in addition
to his ministerial duties, Walker was president of the local chapter of the NAACP,
state director of the Congress for Racial Equality, and founder of the Petersburg
Improvement Association, a group patterned after the organization King had led to
victory in the Montgomery bus boycott of 1955-1956.
King choose Walker to be a member of the board of his newly-created Southern
Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 1958, and in the two years that followed,
Walker and activist clergy from across Virginia inaugurated a “massive
organizing effort” that led to the establishment of the SCLC's
organizational structure in that state (Aldon D. Morris, The
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement, [New York: The Free Press, 1984],
p. 183). In 1959 he participated in meetings at the Institute on Nonviolent
Resistance to Segregation at Spelman College along with Ella Baker, Bayard Rustin,
James Lawson, and Glenn Smiley.
The next year, King asked Walker to become Executive Director of the SCLC, overseeing
the organization's internal operations which were in some disarray. Walker accepted
and during his tenure from 1960 to 1964 he was able to impose a greater degree of
order over the SCLC's farflung and usually chaotic activities, while also helping
systematize its fundraising efforts. Walker, however, was more than simply an office
manager. According to historian Taylor Branch, Walker preached “dazzling
sermons” in support of the student sit-ins that sparked the second phase
of civil rights organizing after 1960. His “finest hour” with
the SCLC came in the Birmingham campaign. Walker's “Project C”
(for Confrontation) was a blueprint for the movement's success in that city in 1963,
envisioning, Branch has written, “a precisely organized march into
history by an organization that had taken four years to find a mimeograph
machine.” (Taylor Branch, Parting the Waters:
America in the King Years, [New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988], pp. 300,
689) In Birmingham, both Walker and his wife, Theresa Edwards Walker, were assaulted
by law enforcement officers.
In 1964, Walker left the SCLC to become marketing specialist for the Negro Heritage
Library, and in 1966 he became president of that organization, which sought to
convince school boards to include in their curricula “the role of black
people in the American experience and in world affairs.” During this
period, Walker also served for a short time as pulpit minister at Adam Clayton
Powell, Jr.'s Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York City, and he began a more
lasting relationship with Nelson Rockefeller as the New York state governor's
Special Assistant on Urban Affairs. It was in this latter capacity that Walker was
able to plan and help secure the construction of the state's new office building
(named for Powell) in Harlem.
In 1967 Walker became chief minister of Canaan Baptist Church of Christ in Harlem, a
position he continues to hold in 1991. In addition to his pastoral duties, Walker
was able to complete his doctoral dissertation, receiving his Ph.D. from Colgate
Rochester Divinity School in 1975, and to publish several works on the relation of
music to social change and the black religious tradition, including Somebody's Calling My Name and The
Soul of Black Worship. He also made an unsuccessful run for the New York
State Assembly. In 1978, Walker organized the International Freedom Mobilization to
publicize the victims of apartheid in South Africa. Under his leadership, Canaan
Baptist has been involved in the sponsorship of senior citizen's, housing, and drug
rehabilitation programs.
The following items were removed from:
Name of Collection/Papers The Reverend Wyatt Tee Walker
Accession Number SCM 87-6
Donor: Wyatt Tee Walker
Date received: January 30, 1987
Date transferred: April 15, 1988
The item(s) listed below have been sent to the division indicated, either to be
retained or disposed of there. Any items that should receive special disposition are
clearly marked.
Schomburg Library:
Walker, Wyatt Tee
The Black Church Looks at the Bicentennial (1976)
The Soul of Black Worship (1984)
Overcoming Stress (1986)
Common Thieves (1986)
Accessioned by: D.Lachatanere
Date: April 15, 1988