Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Black Cabinet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
African American advisors to President Franklin D. Roosevelt
Roosevelt's black advisors in 1938[a]

TheBlack Cabinet was an organized but unofficial group ofAfrican-American advisors to PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt. African-American federal employees in the executive branch formed what they called the Federal Council of Negro Affairs to work to influence federal policy. In his years as president (1933-1945), Roosevelt, like all presidents before him, did not nominate African Americans to be secretary nor undersecretary in his official presidential cabinet,[b] but by mid-1935, there were 45 African Americans working in executive roles infederal departments andNew Deal agencies, and as presidential advisers. Roosevelt gave no formal recognition to thead hoc council, although he used members as advisers and First LadyEleanor Roosevelt encouraged the council. Although many have ascribed the term "Black Cabinet" toMary McLeod Bethune, who, during the Roosevelt administration, was the first Black person to lead a federal agency, African American newspapers had earlier used it to describe some informal Black advisors to earlier presidents.[2]

History

[edit]

Although the council was concerned with civil rights, Franklin D. Roosevelt believed there were larger problems to be addressed than racial inequality during the wartime years; he was also struggling to maintain the support of the Southern white Congressional Democrats. Roosevelt declined to support legislation banning the use of thepoll tax in the South and did not support legislation to makelynching a federal offense.[3][4][5]

The Black Cabinet, with Eleanor Roosevelt's support, worked to ensure that African Americans received 10 percent of welfare funds. The Council argued that black citizens were underrepresented among recipients of aid under the New Deal, in large part because Southern Democrats had influenced the structure and implementation of programs to aid their white constituents. For instance, theAgricultural Adjustment Administration helped farmers but did not help farmworkers; farm owners were given the incentive to cut farm production, reducing the need for labor. Programs such as theWorks Projects Administration (WPA), and theNational Youth Administration (NYA) attempted to direct 10 percent of funds to African Americans (as their proportion of the US population). These agencies set up separate all-black units with the same pay and conditions as those in white units, to which black voters responded favorably.

Mary McLeod Bethune served as an informal organizer of the council, as well as the Director of Negro Affairs in theNational Youth Administration.[6]Rayford Wittingham Logan drafted Roosevelt's executive order prohibiting the exclusion of African Americans from the military in World War II. Other leaders includedWilliam H. Hastie andRobert C. Weaver. The leaders associated with the Black Cabinet are often credited with laying part of the foundation of theCivil Rights Movement that developed in strength in the postwar years.

The Council tried to create jobs and other opportunities for unemployed African Americans; concentrated in rural areas of the South, African Americans made up about twenty percent of the poor in the Depression Era. They were often the first to be let go from industrial jobs. Most African Americans did not benefit from some of the New Deal Acts.

The WPA created agencies that employed creative people in a variety of jobs, such as writers, artists, and photographers. WPA murals were painted and WPA sculptures were commissioned for numerous federal buildings that were constructed during this period. Photographers documented families across the South and in northern cities. TheFederal Writers' Project paid its workers $20 a week, and they wrote histories of every state in the Union, covering major cities in addition.[7]

UnderRoscoe E. Lewis, the Virginia Writers' Project sent out an all-black unit of writers to interview formerly enslaved African Americans. Such accounts were also solicited in interviews in other states. TheSlave Narrative Collection of the Federal Writers' Project stands as one of the most enduring and noteworthy achievements of the WPA.[8]

Members of the group worked officially and unofficially in their agencies to provide insight into the needs of African Americans. In the past, there had never been so many African Americans chosen at one time to work in the federal government together for the express benefit of African Americans. The 45 primarily comprised an advisory group to the administration.[9] Eleanor Roosevelt was said to encourage the formation of the Black Cabinet to help shapeNew Deal programs.[10]

Members

[edit]

Most members were not politicians but rather community leaders, scholars, and activists. Prominent members included Dr.Robert C. Weaver, a young economist fromHarvard University and a race relations adviser. He worked with the White House to provide more opportunities for African Americans. In 1966 he became the first African American cabinet member, appointed byLyndon B. Johnson as Secretary of the newly created Department ofHousing and Urban Development.[11] During the 1970s, Weaver served as the national director of theMunicipal Assistance Corporation, which was formed duringNew York City's financial crisis. Another prominent member of Roosevelt's Black Cabinet wasEugene K. Jones, the Executive Secretary of theNational Urban League, a major civil rights organization.

One of the most well-known members, and the only woman, wasMary McLeod Bethune. Bethune's political affinity to the Roosevelts was so strong that she changed her party allegiance.[12] Bethune was very closely tied to the community and believed she knew what African Americans really wanted. She was looked upon very highly by other members of the cabinet, and the younger men called her "Ma Bethune". Bethune was a personal friend of Eleanor Roosevelt and, uniquely among the cabinet, had access to theWhite House. Their friendship began during a luncheon when Eleanor Roosevelt sat Bethune to the right of the president, considered theseat of honor. Franklin Roosevelt was so impressed by one of Bethune's speeches that he appointed her to the Division of Negro Affairs in the newly createdNational Youth Administration.

Members of this group in 1938 included the following:

At various times, others included:

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Front row, left to right: Dr. Ambrose Caliver, Dr. Roscoe C. Brown, Dr. Robert C. Weaver, Joseph H. Evans, Dr. Frank Horne, Mary McLeod Bethune, Lt. Lawrence A. Oxley, Dr. William J. Thompkins, Charles E. Hall, William I. Houston, Ralph E. Mizelle.
    Back row, left to right: Dewey R. Jones, Edgar Brown, J. Parker Prescott, Edward H. Lawson, Jr., Arthur Weisiger, Alfred Edgar Smith, Henry A. Hunt, John W. Whitten, Joseph R. Houchins.[1]
  2. ^Secretary of Housing and Urban DevolvementRobert C. Weaver became the first principal in the cabinet but not until 1966;J. Ernest Wilkins Sr. was also appointed after Roosevelt, as understectrary of labor in 1954.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Scurlock Studio, "President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Black Cabinet" taken in March 1938"online at Smithsonian Institution
  2. ^New Deal (Roosevelt)Archived 2014-06-06 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^"Eleanor Roosevelt's Battle to End Lynching". 12 February 2016.
  4. ^"Why FDR Didn't Support Eleanor Roosevelt's Anti‑Lynching Campaign". 31 January 2019.
  5. ^"NAACP | NAACP History: Costigan Wagner Bill". Archived fromthe original on 1 November 2019.
  6. ^Civil Rights Leader | NCNW | Mary McLeod BethuneArchived 2008-01-24 at theWayback Machine
  7. ^About the WPA Life Histories Collection
  8. ^Slave Narratives: An Introduction to the WPA Slave Narratives
  9. ^Google Books Invisible Politics (page 263)
  10. ^"African American History"Archived March 28, 2008, at theWayback Machine,Encyclopedia Encarta, accessed 31 October 2009
  11. ^Barron, James (19 July 1997)."Robert C. Weaver, 89, First Black Cabinet Member, Dies".The New York Times. The New York Times. Retrieved22 March 2015.
  12. ^Nancy Joan Weiss,Farewell to the Party of Lincoln: Black politics in the age of FDR, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983, p. 142
  13. ^Guzman, Jessie Parkhurst; Foster, Vera Chandler; Hughes, William Hardin (1947).Negro year book : a review of events affecting Negro life, 1941-1946. Prelinger Library. Tuskegee, Al. : Dept. of Records and Research, Tuskegee Institute.

Bibliography

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Daniel, Walter.Ambrose Caliver: Adult Educator and Civil Servant, Syracuse, NY: Syracuse Univ Printing, 1966
  • Poole, Bernice Anderson (1994).Mary Mcleod Bethune: educator.ISBN 0-87067-783-7.
  • Wilkins, Theresa B., "Ambrose Caliver: Distinguished Civil Servant",Journal of Negro Education, 1962

External links

[edit]
Presidency
(timeline)
Presidential
foreign policy
Presidential
speeches
Other events
Elections
Life and homes
Legacy
Family
(Roosevelt
 • Delano)
United Nations
First Lady of
the United States
Other events
Life and homes
Legacy
Related
Roosevelt family
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Black_Cabinet&oldid=1303376948"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp