Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Monument | 
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       Main Tour First 
        Church (The Meeting House)  | 
      
 Courtesy of The Sculpture Center  | 
  
 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Monument, East Vine StreetThe Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. made several visits to Oberlin 
        during the Civil Rights Movement. King's first official visit to Oberlin, 
        in February of 1957, was just a couple months after he and the Montgomery 
        Improvement Association successfully ended their 381-day bus boycott. 
        It was during this historic boycott that King began to make a name for 
        himself as a leader in the movement. Oberlin was fortunate to have Dr. 
        King speak not once, but three times, during his visit. Speaking on the 
        topics "Justice Without Violence" and "The New Negro in 
        the South" at the First Church of Oberlin and on "The Montgomery 
        Story" during a noon assembly at Finney Chapel, Dr. King enlightened 
        the college and town communities as to the nature of the growing Civil 
        Rights Movement. Dr. King's constant activism was proving to be quite 
        a surprise to his Dexter Avenue Baptist Church congregation in Montgomery, 
        who had appointed him in hopes that he would be less radical than their 
        former pastor, Oberlin graduate Vernon Johns. "The time is always right to do what's right," King told Oberlin 
        students. Voting for Barry Goldwater was not among King's list of right-minded 
        actions, especially since Goldwater's recent vote against the Civil Rights 
        Bill. The bill passed in spite of GOP resistance, but King was obviously 
        concerned about the upcoming election. In what was a bloody year in American 
        history, with riots in at least six American cities and the murder of 
        three civil rights worders in Mississippi, King's words were painfully 
        significant: "It is true that behavior cannot be legislated, and 
        legislation cannot make you love me, but legislation can restrain you 
        from lynching me, and I think that is kind of important." The monument was designed by Paul Arnold, late professor of art at Oberlin College, in collaboration with Burrell Scott, who did the masonry. It was completed in 1987.  | 
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