My musings on American, African American, Southern, Civil War, Reconstruction, and Public History topics and books.
Friday, May 8, 2009
Personality Spotlight: Whitney Young
"Every man is our brother, and every man’s burden is our own. Where poverty exists, all are poorer. Where hate flourishes, all are corrupted. Where injustice reins, all are unequal." Whitney M. Young
I did not realize until yesterday, that one of the primary personalities of the Civil Rights Movement was from right here in Kentucky. Whitney M. Young was born in Lincoln Ridge, Kentucky (near Shelbyville) in 1921. Young's father was the President at Lincoln Institute, and his mother was the first African American postmaster in Kentucky. Young was educated at Kentucky State University in Frankfort, and later earned his master's degree from the University of Minnesota in social work. Young worked on a road crew for the military during World War II where he proved his leadership skills early and was promoted to first sergeant.
After the war and after earning his master's degree, Young started working for the National Urban Leauge (NUL). He became the president of the Omaha, Nebraska chapter in 1950. In 1961 Young became the Executive Director of the NUL, a position he held until his death in 1971. Young developed numerous strategies that changed the NUL from a relatively benign organization to one that became dynamic and outspoken during the Civil Rights Movement. Young partnered with the others of the "Big Four:" Martin Luther King, Jr. of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC); Roy Wilkins of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); and James Farmer of the Congress On Racial Equality (CORE) to make drastic changes to the social and political environment of the United States. What they help accomplish by pushing for voting rights, racial equality, and equal opportunity for all Americans (black and white) is beyond comparison.
Young was an important adviser to Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon. Nixon even tried to convince Young to take a cabinet position, but Young refused feeling that he would be of more service with the NUL. Young was presented with the highest civilian award given; the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Johnson in 1969.
Tragically Young drowned while swimming with some friends in Lagos, Nigeria while attending a conference. President Nixon had his body flown back to the United States and delivered the eulogy at Young's funeral. In the eulogy Nixon praised Young's work, "What monument do we build to him? He leaves his own monument, not one, but thousands, thousands of men and women in his own race who have a chance, an equal chance, that they otherwise might never have had except for what he did; and thousands of others not of his own race who have an understanding in their hearts which they would not have had except for what he taught."
Whitney M. Young...a Kentuckian, and a great American.
No comments:
Post a Comment