Read The Dangerous Book of Heroes Online
Authors: Conn Iggulden
Nevertheless, King drove himself to exhaustion. Over eleven years, he wrote five books and countless articles, spoke at more than twenty-five hundred public gatherings, and traveled some six million miles. As well as President Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon, he met heads of state in countries as far away as Ghana and India. He was a visible figurehead of the civil rights movement and also the prime target for those who wanted no change at all.
In 1960, King became involved in nonviolent “sit-in” protests, which involved thousands of black students going to restaurants and department stores where black people were usually refused service. Inspired by King's writing on nonviolent protest, they then sat in silence and refused to respond even if struck. Those protests were extremely successful and ended segregation in restaurants, libraries, and other institutions in more than twenty southern cities. King himself took part in a sit-in and was arrested with fifty-one others and jailed.
The judge who heard his case had met King before. He had in fact
given King a one-year suspended sentence for driving in Georgia with Alabama plates. That period of probation was still running, and although the charges for the sit-in were dropped, the delighted judge sentenced King to four months of hard labor.
When the news became public, presidential candidate John F. Kennedy called Coretta King and offered to help. His brother Senator Robert Kennedy then called both the governor and the judge and secured King's release on bail. King was more than a little relieved to be out of Georgia State Prison. Both he and his father publicly supported the Kennedy bid for the presidency, and on November 8, 1960, Kennedy won by a margin of only 112,000 votesâout of 69 million votes cast.
Between 1960 and 1963, King was highly active in the civil rights struggle. At one point he was trapped inside a church by a white mob and had to be rescued by the National Guard, while his supporters were beaten up, jailed, and even shot as they tried to carry out nonviolent protests. Again and again, white and black moderates told him that he was going too fast, that they should wait a little longer, but he was impatient for real change.
In 1963 he was arrested and jailed again in Birmingham, Alabama, for taking part in a demonstration against segregation in department stores. At that time, Birmingham was a hotbed of Ku Klux Klan activity and there were many incidents of brutality against black residents, including firebombing their homes. Once again, King put himself in danger. In prison, he wrote his famous “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.” It is almost a manifesto for nonviolent protest and a warning to those who chose to ignore the winds of change beginning to sweep the country. More than a million copies were distributed, particularly in the North.
Rather than make King a martyr, on that occasion the judge changed the charge to one of criminal contempt, which meant King left court a free man. He immediately jumped back to the fray. His supporters recruited thousands of black schoolchildren to join the protests, and the media watched in horror as police dogs and fire hoses were turned on the crowds. Not long afterward, President Kennedy
made a promise that the issue of race would have no place in American life or law and prepared a new civil rights bill to be submitted to Congress. In January 1963, King was
Time
magazine's Man of the Year, the first black man to be so honored.
At last, King saw the approach of the sort of federal law he had always wanted. He had long said that it might not have been possible to legislate for integration but that it certainly
was
possible to legislate against segregation. Nonetheless, he would not sit back and wait for it to happen. In August 1963 he organized a march on Washington, D.C., of 250,000 men, women, and children, all in support of the new bill. It was on that hot night, by the Lincoln Memorial, that Martin Luther King gave his most famous speech.
“I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, sons of former slaves and sons of former slaveholders will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.” He spoke with all the power of a southern preacher, building to a stirring climax of words and ideas that moved many of those who heard him to tears as he finished, “And when this happensâ¦black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual: âFree at last. Free at last. Thank God Almighty, we are free at last.'”
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In November 1963, President Kennedy was assassinated and the country mourned.
Though it did not go far enough for King, Kennedy's civil rights bill was passed in 1964 under President Johnson. That same year, King received the Nobel Peace Prize and donated the prize money to the civil rights movement.
Copyright © 2009 by Matt Haley
His work continued, and King broadened his cause to fight against poverty and oppose the Vietnam War. Overall King was arrested around twenty times
and assaulted on at least four occasions. It did not stop him. Then, in April 1968, he went to Tennessee to lead a protest march for equal pay for black sanitation workers. There had been always been threats against his life from white extremistsâeven his plane to Memphis was delayed because of a bomb threat. It was simply part of the landscape in which he had chosen to work.
King was standing on his hotel balcony with friends that night. James Earl Ray, a white man with a string of petty convictions, approached him and shot him once in the head. The killer escaped for a time and was eventually apprehended at Heathrow Airport in London. He would later be sentenced to ninety-nine years in prison, increased to one hundred after an escape attempt.
Martin Luther King didn't live to see the greater part of his work come to fruition. He would never have dared hope that within the lifetime of his supporters, a black man could become president of the United States. Coretta King had died in 2006, but the Reverend Jesse Jackson, who had been with King at that hotel in 1968, wept as the results of the 2008 presidential election were announced.
Recommended
Stride Toward Freedom
by Martin Luther King Jr.
A Call to Conscience: The Landmark Speeches of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
edited by Claybourne Carson
Martin Luther King Jr
. by Vincent P. Franklin
W
hen someone rows across the Atlantic, conquers Everest, or runs seven marathons in seven days, he is admired across the world. Our lives are gladdened by the achievement, and we feel that person has done something great. Such people are heroes because they inspire the rest of us, even if it's just for a moment.
Yet there is a second definition of
hero:
one who accomplishes something noble, risking it all in the process. Horatio Nelson may be the best example, as he lost his life defending against a tyranny that would have overrun the world. Most people can see the difference between Nelson and a baseball team winning the World Series.
At no point do those definitions suggest that a hero must be likable. The heroism is in the life, in the achievement across just a short span of years, not in the men or women themselves, and whether they were a good friend, father, or mother. Good men sometimes do bad things, and it is even possible that many great achievements come about because an individual is attempting to atone for some sin, real or imagined, in the past.
When the word is overused, it does reduce its impact, but that is not necessarily a bad thing. We cannot all stand against tyranny, though perhaps more of us should when we encounter its cold hands on a daily basis. Yet if a man is described as a hero for saving a child on a frozen lake, most of us can see that we could be that man. It is heroism within the bounds of possibility.
Being aware that courage is still admired is not a danger to societyâfar from it. A “have-a-go hero” is a popular phrase for one who risks life and limb to stop a mugging or burglary, or even to have a word with a few kids causing trouble. It is an obvious truth to say there may be risk involved in such an action, but if every good man or woman
turned away with eyes downcast, well, that would scorn the memories of Edith Cavell, Robert Scott, and Helen Keller, who would have waded in, eyesight or not.
However we abuse the word, heroism will never be common or easy. The peculiar truth about humanity is that we deal with fear on a daily basis and that it often conquers us. That does not matter as long as we recognize that there are times when we must not “step off the curb” to let someone pass or something terrible happen.
It is true that only a coward can be brave, as a man who feels no fear has conquered nothing. It is also true that when one person speaks up to stop some wrong, others often join in, desperately relieved that, at last, someone said something. It is not easy to be the one to speak up or to step in. If it was, we would not value and admire those who do. One final truth remains beyond the petty irritations of life in which we lose ourselves: all that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.
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The men and women in this book were sometimes possessed of incredible self-confidence and personal belief. Others doubted their every action to the point where they could hardly act at all. For some, their heroism is contained in a single moment, while others seem to have lived a life that stands out like a thread of gold. It may not be possible to live like Nelson, but we can be inspired by his life and others like it. We can know that in our history is the blood of greatness, and in our culture, for all its flaws and dark misdeeds, there can also be light.
Note: Entries in this index, carried over verbatim from the print edition of this title, are unlikely to correspond to the pagination of any given e-book reader. However, entries in this index, and other terms, may be easily located by using the search feature of your e-book reader.
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Note:
Bold page locators
indicate chapter entries.
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Adams, John, 21, 327, 332, 339, 340
Adventure,
111â14, 116, 117
Afghanistan, 36, 252, 268â69
Agamemnon,
276â77, 279
Alamo, siege of,
193â207
Albemarle,
275, 417
Alcock, John “Jackie,”
368â82
Aldrin, Edwin “Buzz,” 344, 346â48 Alfred (the Great), 170
Allenby, Edmund, 229â32
American Airlines: Flight 11, 247â48; Flight 77, 248â50
American War of Independence, 142, 172, 274; and Boone, 49â52; and Washington, 12â20, 22
Amundsen, Roald, 418â22, 425, 428
Antarctica: and Cook, 105, 112â16; and Scott, 411â33
Apollo 11,
346â48
Armstrong, Neil, 344, 346â48
Atkinson, Edward Leicester, 429â32
aviation, 57â73, 246â52, 306â14, 366â82
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Bader, Douglas, 72, 441
Ball, Albert, 308, 310, 311
Banks, Joseph, 325, 333, 339, 340
Barne, Michael, 414, 417, 418
Baseden, Yvonne,
187
battle of Britain,
57â73,
262â63
Beaverbrook, Lord (Max Aitken), 61â62, 64, 73
Beck, Martin, 402, 404â5
Behn, Aphra, 138
Bell, Alexander Graham, 94â95, 98â99
Bell, Gertrude, 226, 232
Bernacchi, Louis, 412, 413
Bishop, Billy,
306â14
Blake, William, 175â76
Bletchley Park,
315â24
Bligh, William, 117â20, 284,
325â41
Bloch, Denise,
186
Boer War, 257â60
Bonaparte.
See
Napoléon Bonaparte
Boone, Daniel,
44â56
Bounty,
123,
325â41
Bourdillon, Tom, 127, 128
Bowers, Henry “Birdie,” 423â33
Bowie, Jim, 196â200, 203â4, 206
Braddock, Edward, 6â8, 46
Bradley, John, 300, 303â5
Bradley, Joseph, 216â17
Bridgman, Laura, 94, 95, 97
Brown, Arthur “Teddy,”
368â82
Brueys, François, 280â82
Bryan, Daniel, 55
Burgoyne, John, 15
Burnett, Thomas, 248, 249
Burton, Edward, 34â36
Burton, Isabel Arundell, 41, 42â43
Burton, Richard Francis,
34â43,
234
Buxton, Thomas, 145, 146
Byron, George Gordon, 42â43, 55
Â
Cavell, Edith,
165â69
, 446
Chamberlain, Neville, 261â62
Charles I, 84â85, 87â89
Charles II, 89â92, 209â10, 223
Cherry-Garrard, Apsley, 421, 429â30, 432, 433
Christian, Fletcher, 325â29, 332â33, 335â41
Churchill, Winston, 82, 182, 232,
253â65,
315â16, 438; and battle of Britain, 61, 67â68, 70, 72, 73
Clarkson, Thomas, 140â47, 360
Clerke, Charles, 117, 123
Clinton, Henry, 16, 18
Cody, William “Buffalo Bill,” 160â61
Colditz prisoners,
434â42
Collingwood, Cuthbert, 277â78, 287â88, 290, 292
Collins, Michael (astronaut), 344, 346
Collins, Michael (Irish leader), 261
computers, first,
315â24
Constitution, U.S., 20â21, 81
Cook, James, 19,
103â24,
274, 329, 330, 423
Cooper, James Fenimore, 50, 55
Cornwallis, Charles, 15, 16, 18
Crockett, Davy, 47, 197, 199â206
Cromwell, Oliver,
83â92,
208â9
Crook, George, 154â56
Culloden,
277, 278, 281
Custer, George, 153â54, 157â60
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Dahl, Jason, 246, 248
Dalrymple, Alexander, 106, 111, 114
De Valera, Eamon, 261, 262
Dickens, Charles, 94
Dickinson, Susanna, 199, 200, 203â6
Dinwiddie, Robert, 3â4
Discovery,
117â19, 121, 123, 411â13, 416â17, 424
Dowding, Hugh, 60â69, 72, 73
Drake, Francis, 117, 381,
383â96
Â
Eleanor of Aquitaine, 75
Elizabeth I, 383, 385â90, 392â94
Elizabeth II, 82, 130, 264
Endeavour,
106â11, 116
Enigma, 315â19
Evans, Charles, 127, 128
Evans, Edgar “Taff,” 416, 419, 424â27, 429, 433
Everest, George, 125â26
Â
Faisal of Saudi Arabia, 226â28, 230â32
Fasson, Francis Anthony Blair, 318â19
Fiennes, Ranulph,
26â33
Filson, John, 52
Findley, John, 48
Flight 93,
246â52
Flint, Timothy, 55
Flowers, Tommy, 321â22
Forbes, John, 8â9
Ford, Henry, 61
Fox, Charles, 142â44
Fram,
418â19, 428
Franklin, Benjamin, 6â7, 13, 15â16, 19, 45, 172
Fraser, George MacDonald, 34
French and Indian War, 4â11, 14, 46
Fryer, John, 326â28, 331â32, 334â35
Furneaux, Tobias, 111, 112â13
Â
Gagarin, Yury, 343â45
Gagnon, Rene, 300, 303â5
Gallipoli, 58, 268
Gandhi, Mahatma, 455, 458
Genet, Edmond, 22â23
George III, 47, 116, 159, 275, 325
George V, 444, 448
George, David Lloyd, 260, 261
Gerof, Demetri, 421, 429â30, 432
Gilbert, Humphrey, 384, 389
Glenn, John, 344
Golden Hind,
387â88
Gore, John, 117, 123
Göring, Hermann, 59, 60, 62, 65, 66â69, 71â72
Gran, Tryggve, 419â21, 431, 433
Grieve, Kenneth “Mac,” 367â72
Gronlund, Linda, 249â50
Gurkhas, the,
266â72
Â
Haig, Douglas, 443, 447
Hall, Virginia,
189â90
Hallett, John, 332, 337â38
Hallowes, Odette,
187â89
Hamilton, Alexander, 22
Hardy, Thomas, 286, 289â91
Hawker, Harry, 367â72
Hawkins, John, 386â87, 389
Hayes, Ira, 300, 303â5
Hayward, Thomas, 326â27, 332, 337â38
Henderson, Richard, 49
Herbert, Sidney, 238, 240, 241, 244â45
Heywood, Peter, 326â29, 332, 335â41
Hill, Biggin, 65, 66, 68
Hillary, Edmund, 27,
125â31
Houdini, Harry,
397â410
Houston, Sam, 195, 196â98, 200, 205â6
Howe, William, 14â16
Huggan, Thomas, 325, 327
Hunt, John, 126, 129
Â
Inskip, Thomas, 60â61
Iwo Jima, battle of,
294â305
Â
James I, 83, 84, 394
Jay, John, 23â24
Jefferson, Thomas, 21, 22
Jervis, John, 277â79
John, King, and the Magna Carta,
74â82
Johns, W. E., 232â33
Jones, Gareth, 28â29
Â
Keaton, Buster, 400, 407
Keller, Helen,
93â102
Kennedy, John F., 82, 343â45, 460â61
Khan, Noor-un-nisa Inayat,
180â83
King, Martin Luther, Jr.,
453â62
Kitchener, Herbert, 256, 257
Knox, Dillwyn, 319
Knox, Henry, 22
Kuribayashi, Tadamichi, 296, 301â4
Â
Langton, Stephen, 77
Lashly, Bill, 416, 424
Lawrence, T. E. (Lawrence of Arabia),
225â34
Lebogue, Lawrence, 328, 332, 334, 338
Ledward, Thomas, 325, 332, 334, 336
Leigh-Mallory, Trafford, 62â64, 69â71
Lister, Joseph, 235
Little Bighorn, battle of, 157â59
Livingstone, David, 133, 147
Locke, John, 20, 138, 171
L'Orient,
281â82, 292
Lowe, George, 127â28, 130
Lynch, Thomas, 220â23
Â
McCoy, William, 327â28, 332, 339
Macy, Anne Sullivan, 95â102
Magna Carta,
74â82,
178
Mallory, George, 125, 126, 129
Marks, Leo, 184, 187
Matra, James, 19
Meares, Cecil, 421, 422, 429â30
Mecca, 41, 226â27
Modyford, Thomas, 210â12, 215, 220â22
Morgan, C. W. Fairfax “Fax,” 368, 372
Morgan, Edward, 210â12
Morgan, Henry,
208â24
Morrison, James, 327â29, 332, 336â40
Mount Everest, 27, 32, 125â31
Mount Vernon, 3, 6, 9â11, 20, 22, 24â25
Â
Nansen, Fridtjof, 412, 413, 418â20, 428
Napier, Charles, 38â39, 235
Napoléon Bonaparte, 54, 177; and Nelson, 276, 280â83, 285, 286; and Wellington, 354â55, 359â65
NASA, 342â48
Nearne, Eileen,
187
Neill, James C., 196â98
Nelson, David, 326, 330, 332â36
Nelson, Horatio,
273â93,
354
Newman, Max, 320â23
Nightingale, Florence, 166,
235â45
Nimitz, Chester, 295, 304
9/11 terrorist attacks,
246â52
Nixon, Richard, 348, 459
North Pole, 32, 411, 412â14, 418, 420â22
Â
Oates, Lawrence “Titus,” 424, 427â33
Â
Paine, Thomas, 12, 14, 137,
170â79
Park, Keith, 60, 62â64, 67, 69â73
Parker, Hyde, 283â84
Parks, Rosa, 456â57
Peckover, William, 326, 330, 332, 338
Peña, José de la, 202â5
Pitt, William, 141â43, 146
Pontiac, Chief, 10, 46â47
Pope, Alexander, 138
Priestley, Joseph, 137, 176
Purcell, William, 326, 328, 330â32, 334, 336
Â
Railton, David, 443â44, 447, 449
Ralegh, Walter,
383â96
Randolph, Edmund, 22
Raynham, Freddie, 368, 370â73
Reid, Pat, 436, 437, 439, 441â42
Reno, Marcus Albert, 157â58
Resolution,
111â21, 123
Richard I (“the Lion-Hearted”), 74â75
Rights of Man
(Paine), 174â78
Rolfe, Lilian,
185â86
Roosevelt, Theodore, 55
Rosenthal, Joe, 299â300
Ross, James Clark, 411, 412
Royal Air Force (RAF), 181, 191, 232â33, 266â67, 319, 381; and battle of Britain,
57â73
Royal Sovereign,
287â90
Â
Santa Anna, Antonio López de, 193â203, 205â6
Santissima Trinidad,
277, 287â89
Schmidt, Harry, 297, 300, 302â3
Scott, Jack, 307, 309
Scott, Robert Falcon, 31, 165,
411â33
Shackleton, Ernest, 413â18, 420â24, 426
Sharp, Granville, 138â40, 142, 144, 145, 147
Shepard, Alan, 344
Sitting Bull (Tatanka Iyotake),
149â64
slavery (slave trade), 3, 10, 11, 16, 19, 21, 132â34, 172, 177, 194, 360, 453; abolition of, in the British Empire,
132â48
Slim, William, 266, 269â70, 295
Sloane, Hans, 136, 137
Smith, Adam, 139, 140, 145
Soult, Jean-de-Dieu, 356, 358
South Pole, 31, 411, 413â16, 418â20, 425â26, 428â29
Special Operations Executive (SOE), women of,
180â92
Speke, John, 42
Spenser, Edmund, 389, 392
Sputnik,
342, 343
Stewart, George, 329, 332, 335, 337
Storrs, Ronald, 227, 232, 234
Suckling, Maurice, 273, 274
Szabó, Violette,
183â85
Â
Tennyson, Alfred, 242, 433
Tenzing Norgay,
125â31
Thomson, Polly, 100, 101
Tiltman, John, 316, 320
Tipu Sultan, 181, 351â52
Travis, William, 197â202, 204, 205
Turing, Alan, 317, 320â21, 323â24
Twain, Mark, 101, 253
Â
United Airlines Flight 93,
246â52
Unknown Warrior,
443â52
Â
Van Braam, Jacob, 3, 5, 6
Vickers, Ltd., 368â82
Victoria, Queen, 34, 42, 241â44
Victory,
273, 276â78, 285â93
Villeneuve, Pierre-Charles, 286â87, 289
Â
Wake, Nancy,
190â91
Walpole, Horace, 5
Wardle, Hank, 439, 441, 442
Washington, George,
1â25,
46
Waterloo, battle of, 361â64
Wellesley, Arthur, Duke of Wellington,
349â65
Wesley, John, 138, 142
Wilberforce, William, 140â48
Wilson, Edward, 414â16, 421, 424â28, 430â33
Wolfe, James, 8, 105
World Trade Center attacks, 246â50
World War I, 260â61, 407, 435; and Bishop, 306â14; and Cavell, 166â68; and Lawrence of Arabia, 226â32; Unknown Warrior, 443â52
World War II: battle of Britain, 57â73; and Bletchley Park, 315â24; and Churchill, 253, 262â63; Colditz prisoners, 434â42; and the Gurkhas, 268, 269â70; Iwo Jima, 294â305; SOE, 180â92
Wounded Knee, battle of, 162â63