Avery Caesar Alexander (29 June 1910 – 5 March 1999) was a Louisiana civil rights leader and politician. He graduated from Union Baptist Theological Seminary and was ordained into the Baptist ministry in 1944. He was elected to the Louisiana House of Representatives as a Democrat in 1975 and served in that office until his death.
He participated in voter registration drives in Louisiana prior to passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. He helped organize boycotts against businesses in New Orleans which did not hire blacks, including a successful boycott to force the monopoly utility and transit company to hire black bus drivers.
Alexander participated in several marches with Martin Luther King, Jr., and in sit-ins to integrate lunch counters. In a well-publicized and videotaped incident in the basement cafeteria at City Hall in 1963, he was arrested and dragged upstairs by the heels. In a similar incident in 1993, police used a chokehold to subdue Alexander when he participated in a protest against David Duke at the Battle of Liberty Place Monument ceremony in New Orleans after Alexander repeatedly crossed police lines separating protesters and celebrants.
After becoming an ordained Baptist minister of the Union Baptist Theological Seminary. Alexander joined the NAACP to become an activist within the civil rights movement. Throughout his duration as an activist, Alexander performed many political stances upon segregation and racial discrimination in New Orleans.For instance leading bus boycotts against racial discrimination of African American employees. As well as his "lunch-counter sit-in", in 1963, aimed to integrate public cafeterias. Continually Alexander was even known to throw out wooden barriers used to racially separate whites from blacks in street cars.