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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened | ||||||
3 | to learn of the death of Timuel Dixon Black Jr. of Chicago, who | ||||||
4 | passed away on October 13, 2021; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black was born to Mattie and Timuel Black | ||||||
6 | in Birmingham, Alabama on December 7, 1918; his family moved | ||||||
7 | to Chicago in August 1919; he grew up in Bronzeville during the | ||||||
8 | first wave of the Great Migration; he attended Burke | ||||||
9 | Elementary School; he graduated from DuSable High School in | ||||||
10 | 1935; he served in the 308th Quartermaster Railhead Company of | ||||||
11 | the U.S. Army during World War II, and he earned four Battle | ||||||
12 | Stars and the French Croix de Guerre for his service; he | ||||||
13 | married Norisea Cummings in 1946, and they had two children, | ||||||
14 | Ermetra Black-Thomas and Timuel Kerrigan Black, before | ||||||
15 | divorcing; he obtained his bachelor's degree in Sociology from | ||||||
16 | Roosevelt University in 1952; he earned his master's degree in | ||||||
17 | Sociology and History from the University of Chicago in 1954; | ||||||
18 | he married his third wife Zenobia Johnson-Black in 1981; and
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19 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black was a revered activist, educator, | ||||||
20 | and historian; his first experience with labor organizing | ||||||
21 | occurred when he and his coworkers sought better wages by | ||||||
22 | forming a chapter of the Retail Clerks Union; he walked his | ||||||
23 | first picket line in 1931; he helped establish the Congress of |
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1 | Racial Equality (CORE) in 1942 and the United Packinghouse | ||||||
2 | Workers of America (UPWA) in 1943; he was among a group from | ||||||
3 | Hyde Park's First Unitarian Church to invite Dr. Martin Luther | ||||||
4 | King Jr. to his first major Chicago speech at the Rockefeller | ||||||
5 | Memorial Chapel of the University of Chicago in 1956, where he | ||||||
6 | worked closely with Dr. King and became a trusted adviser | ||||||
7 | during the Civil Rights Movement; he helped organize the | ||||||
8 | Rainbow Beach "wade-ins" in 1960 that succeeded in integrating | ||||||
9 | that public beach a year later; he served as president of the | ||||||
10 | Chicago chapter of the Negro American Labor Council and | ||||||
11 | spearheaded Chicagoans' participation in the Southern | ||||||
12 | Christian Leadership Council's '63 March on Washington for | ||||||
13 | Jobs and Freedom, leading two "Freedom Trains" of 3,000 | ||||||
14 | Chicagoans to D.C.; he was heavily involved in the Chicago | ||||||
15 | Freedom Movement; he was influential in the historic one-day | ||||||
16 | Chicago Public Schools boycott by approximately 250,000 | ||||||
17 | students to call attention to segregation in Chicago schools | ||||||
18 | on October 22, 1963; and
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19 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black gained national attention for | ||||||
20 | coining the phrase "plantation politics" while confronting | ||||||
21 | Mayor Richard J. Daley's political machine when he | ||||||
22 | unsuccessfully ran for Fourth Ward alderman in 1963; he | ||||||
23 | co-chaired the People's Movement for Voter Registration and | ||||||
24 | Education in 1982, resulting in the registration of more than | ||||||
25 | 250,000 voters to get Harold Washington to run against Jane |
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1 | Byrne for Chicago mayor; he served as an adviser in the | ||||||
2 | campaigns of many of Chicago's Black elected officials, | ||||||
3 | including Carol Moseley Braun, who was elected as the first | ||||||
4 | African American woman to serve in the U.S. Senate in 1992; he | ||||||
5 | later served as counsel to then-Senator Barack Obama when he | ||||||
6 | ran for president in 2008, having become friends when Obama | ||||||
7 | was a young community organizer in the early 1980s; and
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8 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black worked as a social worker and a | ||||||
9 | history teacher at several high schools in Gary, Indiana and | ||||||
10 | Chicago, including DuSable, Farragut, and Hyde Park, where he | ||||||
11 | fought segregation and discrimination within the school | ||||||
12 | system; he helped establish the Teachers Committee for Quality | ||||||
13 | Education; he served as a professor of Sociology and | ||||||
14 | Anthropology at the City Colleges of Chicago, becoming dean of | ||||||
15 | Wright College in 1969; he was promoted to vice president of | ||||||
16 | Academic Affairs at Olive Harvey College in 1972; he served as | ||||||
17 | head of Communications system wide from 1973 to 1979; he then | ||||||
18 | taught Cultural Anthropology at Loop College until his | ||||||
19 | retirement in 1989; and
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20 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black became lead plaintiff in the ACLU's | ||||||
21 | Black vs. McGuffage lawsuit, which accused Illinois' voting | ||||||
22 | system of discriminating against minorities, in the wake of | ||||||
23 | the 2000 presidential election; his lawsuit led to the ban of | ||||||
24 | punch card ballots and a uniform voting system in Illinois; |
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1 | and
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2 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black donated a collection of more than | ||||||
3 | 250 boxes of personal photographs, correspondence, | ||||||
4 | manuscripts, speeches, audiovisuals, clippings, programs, and | ||||||
5 | other memorabilia to the Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection | ||||||
6 | of Afro-American History and Literature at the Carter G. | ||||||
7 | Woodson Regional Library in Chicago; his collection was | ||||||
8 | unveiled as the Timuel D. Black Jr. Archive in 2012; and
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9 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black was a prolific author; he wrote two | ||||||
10 | seminal volumes of oral histories on the subject, which were | ||||||
11 | Bridges of Memory: Chicago's First Wave of Great Migration, | ||||||
12 | published in 2003, and Bridges of Memory: Chicago's Second | ||||||
13 | Generation of Black Migration, published in 2007; his memoir | ||||||
14 | Sacred Ground: The Chicago Streets of Timuel Black was | ||||||
15 | released on January 15, 2019; and
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16 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black remained active in progressive | ||||||
17 | politics and also conducted tours of Bronzeville for the | ||||||
18 | University of Chicago well into his late 90s; he joined the | ||||||
19 | Community Advisory Board led by the University, working to | ||||||
20 | bring the Barack Obama Presidential Library to Jackson Park; | ||||||
21 | he made the Chicago Sun-Times' list of the 200 most prominent | ||||||
22 | Illinoisans in the State's 200-year history in 2018; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Timuel Black left his mark on the City of | ||||||
2 | Chicago, on his friends who knew him, and on those who knew of | ||||||
3 | him; his legacy will inspire others to make this world a better | ||||||
4 | place just as he strove to do; therefore, be it
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5 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL | ||||||
6 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of | ||||||
7 | Timuel Dixon Black Jr. and extend our sincere condolences to | ||||||
8 | his family, friends, and all who knew and loved him; and be it | ||||||
9 | further
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10 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
11 | presented to the family of Timuel Black as an expression of our | ||||||
12 | deepest sympathy.
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