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Cecil B. Moore

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American lawyer and civil rights activist (1915–1979)
This article is about the Philadelphia lawyer and civil rights activist. For the neighborhood in Philadelphia, seeCecil B. Moore, Philadelphia. For the Broad Street Line SEPTA station, seeCecil B. Moore station.
Cecil B. Moore
Member of thePhiladelphia City Council from the 5th District
In office
January 5, 1976 – February 13, 1979
Preceded byEthel D. Allen
Succeeded byJohn Street
Personal details
Born(1915-04-02)April 2, 1915
West Virginia, U.S.
DiedFebruary 15, 1979(1979-02-15) (aged 63)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Alma materBluefield State University
Temple University
Military service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch/serviceMarine Corps
Battles/warsWorld War II

Cecil Bassett Moore (April 2, 1915 – February 13, 1979) was an American lawyer, politician andcivil rights activist who served as president of the PhiladelphiaNAACP chapter and as a member of Philadelphia's city council.[1] He led protests to desegregateGirard College.

Early life and education

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Moore was born in 1915 inWest Virginia. He attended High School in Kentucky but returned to West Virginia to study atBluefield State College. He worked as a traveling insurance salesman and served in theU.S. Marine Corps duringWorld War II. In 1947, after his discharge atFort Mifflin, he moved to Philadelphia and studied law atTemple University and received his law degree in 1953. Moore attended school at night and financed his studies with a job as a liquor wholesaler.[2]

Career

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Moore cultivated ties with the bar owners to whom he sold his wares and they became an important basis for his political constituency later in his career. He earned a reputation as a no-nonsense lawyer who fought on behalf of his mostly poor, African-American clients concentrated inNorth Philadelphia. His cases often concerned police brutality, which brought him into conflict with police commander and later police chief,Frank Rizzo. From 1963 to 1967, he served as president of the Philadelphia chapter of the NAACP. He also served on the PhiladelphiaCity Council.[3]

An advocate of militant protest, Moore organized demonstrations against workplace discrimination at construction sites in Philadelphia in 1963 and 1964,[4] and is best remembered for leading a picket againstGirard College in 1964, which hastened thedesegregation of that school.[5] He was a champion of a wide range of causes central to the Civil Rights Movement, including integration of schools andtrade unions,police brutality, and increased political and economic representation for poor African Americans. He attempted to restore order after the unsettling vandalism and violence of theColumbia Avenue riot of 1964.

Moore's aggressive manner and confrontational tactics alienated many leaders, black and white, including many within the NAACP who preferred negotiation "behind closed doors" over direct action. He was a fierce critic of established civil rights leaders in Philadelphia, including lawyersA. Leon Higginbotham andRaymond Pace Alexander, and led a successful insurgency to take over the NAACP branch in 1963.[6] Moore recruited NAACP members in working-class neighborhoods, but his harsh criticism of the black bourgeoisie and of white philanthropists led to a decline in their support for the branch under his leadership.[7] The rifts brought friction with the national NAACP which undercut Moore's power by splitting the Philadelphia chapter into three sub-branches.[2]

Moore also gravitated toward black power in the mid-1960s. He acknowledged how his military service shaped his grassroots activism: "I was determined when I got back [from World War II combat] that what rights I didn't have I was going to take, using every weapon in the arsenal of democracy. After nine years in the Marine Corps, I don't intend to take another order from any son of a bitch that walks."[citation needed] Moore actively discouragedMartin Luther King Jr. from visiting Philadelphia[8] and he was one of the first civil rights leaders to have welcomedMalcolm X's growing role in the national movement.[9]

Moore's fiery rhetoric and confrontational style helped him cultivate a working-class constituency which enabled him to run independent black political campaigns outside the white establishment and traditionalmiddle-class black networks.[10] In 1967, he ran an unsuccessful campaign for mayor and in 1975, Moore sought the Fifth District seat on thePhiladelphia City Council, after incumbent CouncilwomanEthel D. Allen announced she would vacate the seat, and seek re-election to an at-large seat. Moore would go on to win the election. As Moore was nearing the end of his first term, attorneyJohn Street announced his intention to challenge Moore for his seat in the 1979 election. While Moore was, by that time, in failing health, he initially vowed to see-off the challenge from Street. However, he died of a heart attack in 1979[2] before the May primary. Street went on to win the election, and quelled some of the tensions over his original challenge to Moore by sponsoring a bill to rename the formerColumbia Avenue in Moore's honor.[11]

Over time, appreciation for Moore has grown beyond theworking poor with whom he long enjoyed popularity, and he is cited as a pivotal figure in the fields of social justice and race relations.[12]

In popular culture

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Moore is portrayed by Peter Jay Fernandez in the 2019Martin Scorsese filmThe Irishman.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Branch History".The Free Library of Philadelphia. Archived fromthe original on October 1, 2010. RetrievedNovember 23, 2010.
  2. ^abcBorden, Sara A."Moore, Cecil B."www.northerncity.library.temple.edu. Temple University Libraries. Retrieved21 January 2023.
  3. ^Willis, Arthur C.,Cecil's City: A History of Blacks in Philadelphia, 1638–1979, Carlton Press, 1990.
  4. ^Countryman, Matthew,Up South: Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005.
  5. ^The Desegregation of Girard College,[1], Civil Rights in a Northern City, Temple University Libraries.
  6. ^Sugrue, Thomas J., The 'Goddamned Boss: Cecil B. Moore, Philadelphia, and the Reshaping of Black Urban Politics, in Arsenault, Raymond and Orville Vernon Burton,Dixie Redux: Essays in Honor of Sheldon Hackney, New South Press, 2013.
  7. ^Countryman, Matthew,Up South: Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005.
  8. ^Garrow, David,Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Open Road Media, 2015
  9. ^Clayborne Carson,Malcolm X: The FBI File Skyhorse Publishing, 2013, p. 37.
  10. ^Countryman, Matthew,Up South: Civil Rights and Black Power in Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005.
  11. ^Goss, Scott."City".News and Opinion. Philadelphia Weekly. Archived fromthe original on January 31, 2013. RetrievedFebruary 14, 2012.
  12. ^Early, Gerald,This is Where I Came In: Black America in the 1960s, University of Nebraska Press, 2003

External links

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