Though the Scott family was very prosperous due to their abundance of farmland, with segregation being a huge issue, life for Scott and her siblings was still arduous. After walking 6 long miles everyday to get to and from a primary school that did provide her all the essentials needed to be successful, King enrolled in to Lincoln High school where she graduated valedictorian and decided she wanted to pursuit a career in music. With a scholarship from Antioch College, Coretta Scott King was the first African American at the college to major in Elementary School Education. Being at Antioch, she faced obstacles when she wasn't allowed to teach for her internship, for blacks were not allowed to teach at the Antioch School. Although King encountered that misfortune, she used that struggle to help feed her need to end discrimination against African Americans and joined the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and other related committees. Soon after, Coretta Scott King moved to Boston, Massechutess and enrolled in the New England Conservatory where she earned her bachelor's degree in music and met the love of her …show more content…
and Mrs. Martin Luther King Jr on June 18, 1953, Coretta Scott King ended her music career, and the couple moved to Montgomery, Alabama where they settled and started a family. Being in Alabama was tough for the King family. Because Martin Luther King Jr. was the leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, many threats were sent the families way. Despite the danger being sent their way, they still participated non-violent protest to achieve their goal, the passing of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Coretta Scott King participated in Montgomery bus boycott, and many similar protest alongside her husband as well as organised Freedom Concerts. Not long after they achieved many successes, James Earl Ray stood near a window and shot Martin Luther King Jr. to his death in 1968. From then on, Coretta Scott King took the spotlight, fought for change and established