America Has Gotten Coretta Scott King Wrong
<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/04/coretta-scott-king-wrong/682305/>

Her ghostwritten autobiography diminishes her, and I found out why.

By Jeanne Theoharis

A year after Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassination, the publishing company
Holt, Rinehart and Winston released Coretta Scott King’s *My Life With
Martin Luther King, Jr*. A senior editor at HRW, Charlotte Mayerson, a
white woman, had contracted the writer Alden Hatch, also white, for the
sizable sum of $15,000 to ghostwrite the book, based on interviews Mayerson
had recently completed with Scott King. All of this was “totally
confidential,” as the agreement between Hatch and the publisher spelled
out, and the book, like the memoirs of many famous people then and now, was
presented simply as her autobiography.

I had learned about Hatch in the process of researching Coretta Scott and
Martin Luther King Jr.’s life and political partnership for my own book, *King
of the North*: *Martin Luther King Jr.’s Life of Struggle Outside the South*,
and was excited to find that some of the transcripts and audio recordings
of those interviews had survived in papers Hatch had donated to the
University of Florida. As I listened to one of the recordings, something
started to bother me. Scott King didn’t sound the way she did in *My Life
With Martin Luther King, Jr*. The surviving transcripts of the interviews
were a chaotic, incomplete mess—but even so, they were quite revealing: The
details of Scott King’s ideas were different and more substantive, her
perspectives fiercer and more contemplative, than what was portrayed in the
book.

And then I found something that explained why—a folder that contained
letters between Hatch and Mayerson. When Mayerson sent Hatch the interviews
for him to begin ghostwriting the autobiography, she explicitly instructed
Hatch that although Scott King talked a “vast amount” about herself and her
family background, “it is urgent that the focus of the book be on Martin,
not on Coretta.” Despite choosing a white male ghostwriter who did not know
Scott King, Mayerson wanted a “very female, personal, and sentimental
story” in a “tone that is more like the Reader’s Digest.” Mayerson’s racial
blinders shone through—telling Hatch that Scott King had a “certain cold
bloodedness in her attitude toward whites.” When Mayerson questioned her
about the death of Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, two white Freedom
Summer volunteers killed in Mississippi in 1964, she said she was “sad that
they died,” but “felt that it was an important event because it made the
white community more aware of the problems than any number of Negro deaths
would have done.” As I listened to the few recordings and read through the
surviving interview transcripts, I noticed how Mayerson interrupted Scott
King frequently during the interviews, her incredulity at some of Scott
King’s answers coming through clearly.

Months later, as Hatch started to show Scott King draft chapters of the
book, both Coretta and her older sister Edythe raised objections to the
book’s tone and lack of attention to their family’s work. Hatch was
dismissive, telling Mayerson, “I deliberately wrote it with very simple
language that I believe would have a special appeal for the critics.” He
instructed Mayerson to call in the “big reserves” to intimidate Coretta to
acquiesce.

“I am made to sound like an attachment to a vacuum cleaner,” Scott King had
observed about the ways she was often represented in public discourse: “the
wife of Martin, then the widow of Martin, all of which I was proud to be.”
This had even been true in her own “autobiography.” “I didn’t learn my
commitment from Martin, we just converged at a certain time.” Although a
number of biographers since then have taken note of her politics *before* she
met Martin, she largely disappears as a political actor throughout his life
and leadership, until she moves to carry on his legacy after the
assassination.

Scott King saw the deficit partly as a result of *who* was doing the
telling. At one of the first conferences of King scholars, in 1986, she
said to those gathered, “The next time we have a conference on him, I want
to see more women scholars. He allowed me to be myself, and that meant that
I always expressed my views.”

Theirs was a political and intellectual partnership from the beginning.
King married a feminist intellectual freedom fighter with unflinching
determination, and he could not have been the leader he was without her.
Scott King’s activism—her understanding of the evils of racism, poverty,
and militarism—started before her marriage, complemented and influenced her
husband’s work, and extended well beyond his assassination, in 1968. She
was the family leader on issues of peace, war, and the economy. Although
their relationship hewed to certain gender conventions of the time,
particularly because of King’s belief that she be the one to stay home and
raise the children, it challenged other dominant social mores. Both refused
to “stay in their lane” despite immense pressure; they prioritized a life
of struggle over a safe or materially secure family life, she spoke her
mind both privately and publicly, and he relied on her thoughts and on her
unwavering commitment to keep going.

Coretta was more politically active than Martin when they met. She had
grown up in a proud farming family in Alabama who owned their own land. The
family was harassed and threatened repeatedly. When her father started
transporting lumber, a business reserved for white people, whites torched
their house to the ground. And when her father refused to sell his business
to a white man, whites burned the business too. Those experiences and the
pride that her parents instilled in her helped prepare Coretta for what she
would encounter as an adult. Growing up, “I was tough,” and liked to fight,
she told Mayerson in 1968—something that didn’t make it into the book.

Her mother was determined that her daughters would get a good education,
and sent them to the Lincoln Normal School, in Marion, Alabama. Coretta and
Edythe then became the first Black students in decades to attend Antioch
College, in Ohio. Coretta majored in music and education and got involved
in numerous civil-rights and anti–Cold War efforts. She was introduced to
the Progressive Party, which was created to challenge both the Democrats
and Republicans on U.S. segregation and Cold War militarism. In 1948, she
supported Henry Wallace for president, and attended the Progressive Party
Convention in Philadelphia as a student delegate (one of about 150 African
Americans at the convention). Through her Progressive Party activities, she
met both the singer Paul Robeson and the activist Bayard Rustin, and heard
the playwright and activist Shirley Graham (who would marry W. E. B. Du
Bois three years later) give a powerful speech.

Seeking to pursue a music career, Coretta moved to Boston to attend the New
England Conservatory of Music. There, through a friend, she met Martin, who
was getting his doctorate at Boston University, in January 1952. They
talked about racism and capitalism on their first date. Martin was smitten;
he’d never met a woman like her. At the end of that date, he told her she
had “all the qualities he wanted in a wife—beauty, personality, character,
and intelligence.” She was incredulous, telling him, “You don’t even know
me.” But she agreed to another date. She was impressed with his vision and
determination to change the country. And Martin was a good listener; he
didn’t judge. Their romance blossomed. Still, she worried that becoming a
minister’s wife would make her life small. It took her many months to
decide whether to marry him. When they did wed, in June 1953, she refused
to wear white and made her imposing father-in-law take “obey” out of their
vows, because it made her feel “like an indentured servant.” She would keep
Scott as her middle name, which she then always used, becoming Coretta
Scott King for the rest of her life, unlike many women of her generation.
Many journalists and public officials would refuse to recognize that,
referring to her only as “Mrs. Martin Luther King.”

Coretta’s steadfastness came out early. Seven weeks into the Montgomery bus
boycott, on January 30, 1956, the Kings’ home was bombed. Both Coretta and
their two-month-old baby, Yolanda, were home. Hearing a thump, she moved
fast, succeeding in getting them out unscathed. Furious and terrified by
the news, both Martin’s and Coretta’s fathers came to Montgomery to tell
them to leave immediately—or, at the very least, to get Coretta and Yolanda
out of there. The pressure was immense. “I knew I wasn’t going anywhere,”
Coretta recalled in a 1966 interview with *New Lady* magazine. The next
morning at breakfast, Martin was grateful: “You were the only one who stood
with me.” Had she flinched in that moment, as I wrote for this magazine in
2018
<https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/02/coretta-scott-king/552557/>,
the trajectory of the bus boycott and Martin’s emerging leadership could
have been very different.

>From that night on, they lived with the understanding that if they
continued in the struggle, she too might be killed. Martin had to reckon
with the possibility of Coretta’s death, just as she had to reckon with
his. When he grew frightened, she would remind him that the movement was
bigger than they were. In key ways, the Kings were forging a way of family
life and leadership different from that of many of their generation and
their parents, by rejecting the “promise of protection” that good men were
supposed to provide and prioritizing a life of freedom fighting instead.

Martin came to rely on Coretta’s unflinching steeliness. The one time she
broke down terrified him. In 1960, King was arrested at an Atlanta sit-in;
when the others were released, the state dredged up an old traffic charge
to keep him, transferring him hundreds of miles in the middle of the night,
his hands shackled to the police-car floor. He thought he was going to be
killed. Then, when the judge sentenced him to four months’ hard labor,
Coretta, frightened, exhausted, and six months pregnant, started crying.
Martin was shaken: “Corrie, I’ve never seen you like this; you have to
stand up for me.” In many ways, he relied on her strength.

In her own activism, Scott King came to zero in on global peace and
anti-colonialism. In 1962, when their third son, Dexter, was not even 2
years old, she joined a Women Strike for Peace delegation for a multination
disarmament conference in Geneva, Switzerland, to pressure the United
States and the Soviet Union to sign a nuclear-test-ban treaty. As Scott
King told the press, “The rights that we had achieved were meaningless
unless there was a world to exercise those rights.” The punishing climate
of the Cold War—in which people were slandered for their political beliefs,
called “un-American,” and in some cases even fired from their job—led many
people, both Black and white, including many activists the Kings knew, to
stay away from such global politics. But Scott King pushed forward, the
Geneva trip deepening her global commitments. In 1963, she led a march to
the United Nations carrying a sign saying Let’s Make Our Earth a Nuclear-Free
Zone, where a delegation met with UN Secretary-General U Thant. Scott King
then left New York City for another Women Strike for Peace action in
Washington, D.C., telling the press she was proud to be identified with the
peace movement. “I can never be free until every black man from
Johannesburg, South Africa, to Jackson, Mississippi, is free.”

After King won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, she saw a heightened
responsibility for both of them to the global community, as *My Life With
Martin Luther King, Jr.* notes. She spoke out against U.S. involvement in
Vietnam and became “the family spokesperson on the peace issues,” though
the book gives this part of her life very scant treatment. One reporter
pushed King on how he had found such a political companion; had he trained
her in this direction? King laughed and then responded, “It may have been
the other way around. When I met her, she was very concerned with all the
things we are trying to do now … I wish I could say to satisfy my masculine
ego that I led her down this path but I must say we went down together.”

Scott King tried unsuccessfully to persuade the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference in 1965 to take a stand on Vietnam. At an SCLC
retreat in early 1965, she explained how the war drains “resources from
education, housing, health, and other badly needed programs,” making clear
to those gathered, “why do you think *we* got the Nobel Prize? … Peace and
justice are indivisible.” She understood that *they* had gotten the award,
and thus the responsibilities demanded of them around racism, poverty, and
militarism.

To be a peace activist in 1965 was to be seen as un-American, but Scott
King was “beyond steel,” as a fellow activist noted. In May 1965, bucking
Cold War pressure, she addressed the Women’s International League for Peace
and Freedom conference on the topic of “Peace, Jobs, and Freedom,” and then
in June she spoke before a crowd of 18,000 at the Emergency Rally on
Vietnam, in Madison Square Garden. For this work, in March 1966, the FBI
put her
<https://vault.fbi.gov/Coretta%20Scott%20King/Coretta%20Scott%20King%20Part%2001/view>
in
a category of “subversives.”

In September 1965, after a meeting at the UN, King denounced the U.S.
bombing of North Vietnam. President Lyndon B. Johnson was furious.
Congressmen questioned King’s patriotism, and newspapers editorialized
against him. Feeling the pressure, in November, he backed out of an address
to a D.C. peace rally, but Scott King kept her commitment and spoke.
Addressing the 25,000 gathered, she underlined that “unless America learns
to respect the right to freedom and justice for all, then the very things
which we hold dear in this country will wither away in the hypocritical
ritual of the preservation of national self-interest.” Following her
appearance, a reporter asked King if he had educated his wife on these
issues. “She educated me,” he replied. In fall 1966, Scott King joined the
steering committee of what became the National Mobilization Committee to
End the War in Vietnam. She was leading not just her husband on this issue,
but the nation. King would make his historic anti-war speech
<https://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/mlkatimetobreaksilence.htm> from
Riverside Church on April 4, 1967.

In the last six months of his life, King turned to building the Poor
People’s Campaign. Although many in the SCLC balked, Scott King was already
on board. The idea for the PPC was that a multiracial army of people from
across the nation, drawing from local groups across the country, would
descend on D.C. and stay there to force Congress to “see the poor” and act.
Just weeks after King was assassinated, Scott King continued that work,
kicking off the PPC from the Memphis balcony where he had been killed. At a
Mother’s Day march of welfare recipients in D.C. the following week, she
highlighted the violence of U.S. political priorities. “Neglecting
schoolchildren is violence. Punishing a mother and her family is violence …
Ignoring medical needs is violence. Contempt for poverty is violence. Even
the lack of willpower to help humanity is a sick and sinister form of
violence.”

Scott King’s story is a reminder that many of the histories we tell, even
of one of the most well-known Black families in history, are deeply
inadequate. “I keep seeing these books that come out, and there are so many
inaccuracies,” Scott King herself observed in a 2004 interview
<https://www.huffpost.com/entry/qa-with-the-late-coretta_b_94899>. “And
that becomes history if you don’t correct it.” America needs the true story
of its history, and part of that story was the bold, brilliant advocacy of
Coretta Scott King.
About the Author
Jeanne Theoharis <https://www.theatlantic.com/author/jeanne-theoharis/>
Jeanne Theoharis <https://www.theatlantic.com/author/jeanne-theoharis/> is
a political-science professor at Brooklyn College and the author of *The
Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks*
<https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/221039/the-rebellious-life-of-mrs-rosa-parks-by-jeanne-theoharis/>
 and *A More Beautiful and Terrible History: The Uses and Misuses of Civil
Rights History
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0807075876/theatla05-20/>.*


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