Born 1884 in Mississippi, Charles Wesley Burton received a BS from Talladega College before graduating from Yale Divinity School in 1913. He later received a JD from John Marshall Law School. He was one of the students responsible for reactivating Zeta Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity on campus. His Yale thesis was entitled “Living Conditions Among Negroes in the Ninth Ward, New Haven.”
In 1913, Burton married Emma May Walker of Atlanta; they had at least four children. After graduating from Yale, Burton served as a pastor in Macon, Georgia, and was part of the leadership of the American Missionary Association. Burton lived most of his life in Chicago, where he became a prominent leader in the city’s labor and civil rights movements. From 1918 to 1927, he served as pastor of the Lincoln Memorial Congregational United Church of Christ. In 1929, he passed the Illinois bar and began his career as a lawyer, employed by the Cook County Juvenile Court. He served as president of the Chicago Council of the National Negro Congress, president of the Chicago chapter of the March on Washington Movement, and chairman of the Citizens’ Committee of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, and was active in the NAACP and other civil rights and church organizations.
In the 1930s and 1940s, Burton helped lead well-publicized fights against discrimination in jobs, housing, education, and economic policy; spoke out against lynching and racial violence; and built national movements for racial justice. He was a friend and frequent correspondent of the labor and civil rights leader A. Philip Randolph, and they collaborated on events in Chicago, St. Louis, and elsewhere related to the March on Washington Movement. Burton was instrumental in organizing a 1942 meeting of the March on Washington committee in Chicago, which drew a crowd of 12,000. Scholar Merl E. Reed noted that Burton’s remarks at the event attracted the attention of J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI, particularly his announcement that Randolph was in fact planning a march on the nation's capital to draw attention to Jim Crow. In the mid-1940s, Burton worked to bring the ideas and practices of nonviolence to Chicago. He brought in experts to teach the principles of nonviolence and civil disobedience, influenced by the independence movement in India and the example of Mohandas Gandhi — practices that were later foundational to the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s. Burton died in 1957.
Image citation: Yale Divinity School class composite photographs, Yale Divinity School