'A good name': Civil rights leader Rev. C.T. Vivian remembered as great man
ATLANTA - The family of the Rev. C.T. Vivian, an early and key adviser to the Rev. Martin Luther King, paid their respects and said goodbye to the civil rights veteran Thursday.
Vivian, 95, died at home in Atlanta of natural causes July 17, the same day that fellow civil rights leader U.S. Rep. John Lewis died.
The funeral took place at Atlanta's Providence Missionary Baptist Church, in a private ceremony open only to the family due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Among those who spoke were close family friends and his sons, who shared heartfelt stories of their father, and members of the family.
SEE ALSO: Civil rights veteran Rev. C.T. Vivian dead at 95
Vivian was honored Wednesday as his body lay in state at the Georgia Capitol's rotunda. The casket was then taken in a horse-drawn carriage in front of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) National Office and his friend Martin Luther King Jr.'s tomb.
Vivian's civil rights work stretched back more than six decades, to his first sit-in demonstrations in the 1940s in Peoria, Ill. He met King soon after the budding civil rights leader’s victory in the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott. Vivian became an active member of what would become the SCLC.
“He has always been one of the people who had the most insight, wisdom, integrity, and dedication,” said Andrew Young, who also worked alongside King.
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Vivian was honored by former President Barack Obama with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.
Vivian “was always one of the first in the action — a Freedom Rider, a marcher in Selma, beaten, jailed, almost killed, absorbing blows in hopes that fewer of us would have to,” Obama said in a statement shortly after his death.
The reverend is survived by his six children, nine grandchildren, 10 great-grandchildren, 28 great-great-grandchildren, and two great-great-great-grandchildren.
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The Associated Press contributed to this report.