Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Bayard Rustin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Bayard Rustin (March 17, 1912 – August 24, 1987) was an American civil rights activist, important largely behind the scenes in the civil rights movement of the 1960s and earlier ...

  • Bayard Rustin

    Bayard Rustin and the Rise and Decline of the Black Protest Movement Stephen Steinberg [from New Politics, vol. 6, no. 3 (new series), whole no. 23, Summer 1997]

  • Bayard Rustin

    Bayard Rustin was born in West Chester on 17th March, 1910. For the first ten years of his life he thought that Janifer Rustin and Julia Rustin were his parents.

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Also on Encarta

Bayard Rustin

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It

Bayard Rustin (1910-1987), American civil rights activist. Born in Westchester, Pennsylvania, Rustin was active in civil rights and pacifism movements in the early 1940s. He worked for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), a civil rights organization, and the Fellowship of Reconciliation, a pacifist group. In 1953 he became executive secretary of another pacifist organization, the War Resisters’ League.

Rustin worked as an assistant to Martin Luther King, Jr., from 1955 to 1960 during the civil rights movement. He was also a close associate of A. Philip Randolph, a black labor leader. Rustin was a chief organizer of the March on Washington in 1963. He was one of the first people to declare publicly that blacks needed to work toward economic equality as well as civil equality. In 1965 Rustin founded the A. Philip Randolph Institute to promote educational, labor, and civil rights reforms. He continued this work until his death in 1987.



Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It


More from Encarta


© 2009 Microsoft