
Honoring The Legacy Of The 16th Street Baptist Church Bombing And Its Surviving Hero, Sarah Collins-Rudolph
(Left) Young women cheering outside the 16th Street Baptist Church, headquarters of the Birmingham Campaign in Birmingham, Alabama, May 1963. The movement, which called for the integration of African Americans in schools, was organized by Martin Luther King Jr. and Fred Shuttlesworth amongst others. The church was bombed by white supremacists in September that same year, killing four young girls. Photo by Frank Rockstroh/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images; (Far Right) Denise McNair, one of the victims of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing poses in the front yard with her dog Whitey in 1962 in Birmingham, Alabama. (Photo by Chris McNair/Getty Images)
Sept.15, 2025, marked the 62nd anniversary of one of the darkest moments in American history — the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. The violent act, carried out by members of the Ku Klux Klan, killed four young Black girls and severely injured another. The attack shocked the nation, galvanized the civil rights movement, and left a survivor still fighting for justice decades later.
A Morning of Innocence Turned to Horror.
On the morning of Sept. 15, 1963, five young girls gathered at the 16th Street Baptist Church for what began as a joyful Sunday. They were preparing for the church’s youth day program after attending their regular Sunday school classes.
A view of police activity outside the bomb damaged 16th Street Baptist Church on September 15, 1963 in Birmingham, Alabama. This is the only photo Chris McNair shot after the bombing of the Church. His only child, Denise McNair was killed in the bombing. Source: Chris McNair / Getty
“We were having so much fun. We were throwing around Janie’s little purse. She had a purse shaped like a football. We were throwing it and we laughed all the way,” Sarah Collins-Rudolph, the sole survivor from the attack, recalled of her morning walk to church with her sister, Addie Mae Collins, and friend Janie, in an account shared on her personal website.
Collins-Rudolph attended church with her sister, along with friends Carole Robertson, Cynthia Wesley, and Carol Denise McNair. Addie Mae, Carole, and Cynthia were 14 years old; Carol Denise was just 11. But what started as a normal day ended in tragedy when a dynamite bomb, planted by white supremacists in the church’s basement, tore through the building in a matter of seconds, killing the four girls instantly.
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Mourners at a funeral for victims of 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, Birmingham, Alabama, late September, 1963. Source: Burton McNeely / Getty
The blast left Collins-Rudolph, then 12, with 26 pieces of glass embedded in her face. She lost her right eye and has lived with the physical and emotional scars ever since.
“I remember every day because the scars on my face remind me of everything,” she told The Guardian in a 2015 interview. “You know, they had to remove my right eye, and I got a prosthetic eye. So it’s something that I just think of every day.”
The last moment Collins-Rudolph remembers before the blast is seared into her memory.
“Denise asked Addie to tie the sash on her dress,” she said in a recent interview with WDAM published Monday. “And that’s when the bomb went off.”
Sarah Collins Rudolph was 12 when a bomb planted by Ku Klux Klan members exploded at her Birmingham church, killing her sister and three other girls. Now she’s asking Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey for restitution. Michael A. Schwarz/For the Washington Post/Getty Images
That tragic moment was later honored with the installation of the Four Spirits statue in Kelly Ingram Park, located just across the street from the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama.
The explosion not only robbed Collins-Rudolph of her sister but also plunged her into years of medical treatments and financial hardship. According to her interview with The Guardian, she bore the cost of her medical expenses without assistance or acknowledgment from the state for decades.
A Crime That Shook a Nation.
The bombing targeted a church that had become a key organizing site for civil rights activists. At a time of intense racial segregation and tension across the South, the 16th Street Baptist Church stood as a symbol of Black resilience. In May of that year, Martin Luther King had famously used the church as the starting point for the Children’s Crusade, a campaign where more than a thousand Black students marched to peacefully protest against segregation.
A view of the ‘Four Spirits’ statue and the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. The statues memorialize the four victims of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in 1963. Democratic candidate for Senate Doug Jones prosecuted the remaining two Ku Klux Klan perpetrators when he was a U.S. attorney in the late 1990s. Source: The Washington Post / Getty
Although the crime shocked the conscience of the nation and helped spur the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, justice was slow and elusive. By 1965, the FBI had identified four primary suspects: Robert E. Chambliss, Bobby Frank Cherry, Herman Frank Cash, and Thomas E. Blanton, Jr., all members of the Ku Klux Klan. However, as the FBI website notes, “witnesses were reluctant to talk and physical evidence was lacking.” As a result, no federal charges were filed at the time.
Yet, years later, in 1970, Alabama Attorney General Robert Baxley reopened the case. Seven years after that, a jury found Klansman Robert Chambliss guilty of the 1963 bombing and sentenced him to life in prison for the murder of McNair. In 1995, the FBI launched its own investigation, which ultimately led to the convictions of Thomas Blanton in 2001 and Frank Bobby Cherry in 2002, according to NPR.
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