Moneta Sleet, Jr. and Coretta Scott King On this date in 1969, Moneta Sleet, Jr. won the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography for this image of a mourning Coretta Scott King, with daughter Bernice, at the funeral of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., making him the first African-American photographer to win the highest honor for journalism. For 13 years, as a photographer for Ebony magazine, Sleet chronicled pivotal moments in Dr. King’s life. He was there in 1955 when King organized the Montgomery bus boycott; in 1964 when King won the Nobel Peace Prize; and was there on April 9, 1968, when King was mourned at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church. When Coretta Scott King discovered that the press pool covering her husband’s funeral included no black photographers, she alerted everyone that if Moneta Sleet was not allowed into the church and given a choice vantage point, there would be no photographers at all. The iconic photograph Sleet took of Mrs. King and her daughter was such a powerful image that it was transmitted nationwide by the Associated Press. According to The Newseum, “Sleet’s black-and-white image of widow Coretta Scott King solemnly clutching daughter Bernice at Martin Luther King Jr.’s funeral in 1968 made him the first black man to win the Pulitzer Prize (poet Gwendolyn Brooks was the first African American to win the award in 1950), and the first African American to win the prize for journalism.” A fine print of this photograph, signed and dated by Sleet, will appear in Swann’s June 10, 2014 auction of African-American Fine Art. Share Facebook Twitter May 5, 2014Author: Swann CommunicationsCategory: African American Art Tags: African-American Fine Art Coretta Scott King Jr. Martin Luther King Jr. Moneta Sleet photography photojournalism Pulitzer Prize The Newseum Previous Where He Crosses Over: Edward Gorey Posters & Postcards Next Marco Tomaschett: Snippets of History Recommended Posts From Abstract Expressionists to Color Field Painters—African-American Fine Art African American Art August 26, 2019 William Johnson’s Jitterbugs African American Art March 30, 2018 2010-19: The Decade in Review Swann January 13, 2020