In 1957, Abernathy and King started the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The two best friends traveled the South, leading efforts to undo American apartheid. Through the years, they shared hotel rooms, jokes, lecterns and jail cells as they fought to dismantle Jim Crow laws, especially insidious voter disenfranchisement of African Americans.

It was at the Abernathys’ kitchen table, often following a meal prepared by Juanita Abernathy, that the early strategies of the civil rights movement — in particular the Montgomery bus boycott — were hatched.

"When I started off in '55 in Montgomery, recognition and honor was nowhere in my mind," Juanita Abernathy told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 2013, when she was being honored by the Atlanta City Council. "I started when there were no cameras and no newspapers writing nice things about you, instead they were writing all sorts of ugly things. But we kept going. It wasn't about us. It wasn't about me. It has always been about right and righteousness. Justice and equality. Not just for me and my family, but for all of God's children."

Ralph David Abernathy died of a heart attack in 1990 at age 64.

080330 ATLANTA: Juanity Abernathy in a portrait session at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution photo studio in honor of the commemoration of the 40th Anniversary of Dr. King’s assassination. Sunday, March 30, 2008. Pouya Dianat / AJC

Juanita Abernathy, 89, continued working after the height of the movement and the deaths of many of its leaders, including serving on boards such as MARTA’s and the Fulton County Development Authority.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution will be writing a fuller account of her life and influence.