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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of | ||||||
3 | Representatives are saddened to learn of the death of Dr. John | ||||||
4 | Hope Franklin of Duke University; Dr. Franklin was a scholar of | ||||||
5 | African-American History; he passed away on March 25, 2009; and
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6 | WHEREAS, He was a prolific scholar of African-American | ||||||
7 | history who profoundly influenced thinking about slavery and | ||||||
8 | Reconstruction while helping to further the civil rights | ||||||
9 | struggle; during a career of scholarship, teaching, and | ||||||
10 | advocacy that spanned more than 70 years, Dr. Franklin was | ||||||
11 | deeply involved in the painful debates that helped reshape | ||||||
12 | America's racial identity, working with the Reverend Dr. Martin | ||||||
13 | Luther King Jr., W. E. B. Du Bois, Thurgood Marshall, and other | ||||||
14 | major civil rights figures of the 20th century; and
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15 | WHEREAS, Dr. Franklin combined idealism with rigorous | ||||||
16 | research, producing such classic works as "From Slavery to | ||||||
17 | Freedom: A History of African-Americans," first published in | ||||||
18 | 1947; the work was considered one of the definitive historical | ||||||
19 | surveys of the American black experience, has sold more than | ||||||
20 | three million copies, and has been translated into Japanese, | ||||||
21 | German, French, Chinese, and other languages;
Dr. Franklin also | ||||||
22 | taught at some of the nation's leading institutions, including | ||||||
23 | Harvard and the University of Chicago, in addition to Duke, and |
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1 | as a scholar he personally broke several racial barriers; and
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2 | WHEREAS, He often argued that historians have an important | ||||||
3 | role in shaping policy, a position he put into practice when he | ||||||
4 | worked with Thurgood Marshall's team of lawyers in their effort | ||||||
5 | to strike down segregation in the
landmark 1954 case Brown v. | ||||||
6 | Board of Education, which outlawed the doctrine of "separate | ||||||
7 | but equal" in the nation's public schools;
Dr. Franklin also | ||||||
8 | participated in the 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery, | ||||||
9 | Alabama, with Dr. King; and
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10 | WHEREAS, Dr. Franklin's prestige led President Clinton to | ||||||
11 | select him in 1997 to head the Advisory Board to the | ||||||
12 | President's Initiative on Race, which was formed to promote | ||||||
13 | dialogue about the country's race problems; he was the first | ||||||
14 | African-American president of the American Historical | ||||||
15 | Association; the first black department chairman at a | ||||||
16 | predominantly white institution, Brooklyn
College; the first | ||||||
17 | black professor to hold an endowed chair at Duke; the first | ||||||
18 | black chairman of the University of Chicago's history | ||||||
19 | department; and the first African-American to present a paper | ||||||
20 | at the segregated Southern Historical Association, one of many | ||||||
21 | groups that later elected him its president; and
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22 | WHEREAS, John Hope Franklin was born on January 2, 1915, in | ||||||
23 | Rentiesville, Oklahoma, the son of Buck Colbert Franklin, a |
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1 | lawyer, and Molly Parker Franklin, an elementary school | ||||||
2 | teacher; his parents had moved to Rentiesville, an all-black | ||||||
3 | town, after his father was not allowed to practice law in | ||||||
4 | Louisiana; in the 1920s, the family moved to Tulsa, and at age | ||||||
5 | 11 he was taken to hear the great civil rights leader W. E. B. | ||||||
6 | Du Bois, with whom Dr. Franklin later became friends; and
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7 | WHEREAS, His youth was marked by frequent brushes with | ||||||
8 | racism; he was forced off an all-white train and made to sit in | ||||||
9 | a segregated section of the Tulsa opera house; he watched black | ||||||
10 | neighborhoods of Tulsa, including the one where his father had | ||||||
11 | his office, being burned during the infamous 1921 race riot, | ||||||
12 | and he was barred from admission to the University of Oklahoma; | ||||||
13 | Dr. Franklin attended historically black Fisk University in | ||||||
14 | Nashville, receiving his B.A. in 1935; there he met Aurelia E. | ||||||
15 | Whittington, who would become his wife, and sometime editor, of | ||||||
16 | almost 60 years; they had one son, John Whittington Franklin, | ||||||
17 | who survives him; and
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18 | WHEREAS, Before graduating from Fisk, Dr. Franklin | ||||||
19 | considered following his father into law but was persuaded by a | ||||||
20 | white professor, Ted Currier, to make history his field; | ||||||
21 | Professor Currier was said to have borrowed $500 to help Dr. | ||||||
22 | Franklin pursue graduate studies at Harvard; there, Dr. | ||||||
23 | Franklin later recalled, he felt the isolation of being one of | ||||||
24 | only a handful of blacks on campus; he received his master's |
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1 | degree in 1936 and his Ph.D. in 1941; two years later he | ||||||
2 | published his first book, "The Free Negro in North Carolina, | ||||||
3 | 1790-1860," which explored slaveholders' hatred and fear of
the | ||||||
4 | quarter-million free blacks in the antebellum South; almost 20 | ||||||
5 | other books followed, either written or edited by Dr. Franklin; | ||||||
6 | and
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7 | WHEREAS, John Hope Franklin was a member of Alpha Phi Alpha | ||||||
8 | Fraternity, Inc., the first intercollegiate Greek-letter | ||||||
9 | Fraternity established for African Americans; he was initiated | ||||||
10 | in the Alpha Chi Chapter at Fisk university in 1932, and was an | ||||||
11 | active member for the next 77 years; he was an early | ||||||
12 | beneficiary of the Fraternity's Foundation Publishers, which | ||||||
13 | provides financial support and fellowship for writers | ||||||
14 | addressing African-American issues; and | ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, Despite his acute awareness of the South's | ||||||
16 | troubled racial history, Dr. Franklin was often angrier about | ||||||
17 | Northern racism and frequently defended his adopted home state, | ||||||
18 | North Carolina; his major biographical project was a 1985 study | ||||||
19 | of George Washington Williams, a self-educated black Civil War | ||||||
20 | veteran and author of a 1,000-page 1882 history of blacks in | ||||||
21 | America from 1619 to 1880; he said he spent nearly 40 years of | ||||||
22 | intermittent research on the project, calling Williams "one of | ||||||
23 | the small heroes of the world;"; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Dr. Franklin's first passion was teaching, and he | ||||||
2 | continued to log classroom time despite his increasing | ||||||
3 | prominence; his teaching career began at Fisk in 1936 and | ||||||
4 | continued over the next 20 years at St. Augustine's College in | ||||||
5 | Raleigh, North Carolina, North Carolina College in Durham, and | ||||||
6 | Howard University in Washington; as his first books drew | ||||||
7 | national notice, Dr. Franklin left the world of historically | ||||||
8 | black colleges and went to Brooklyn College, where from 1956 to | ||||||
9 | 1964 he served as chairman of what had been an all-white | ||||||
10 | department;
Dr. Franklin later taught at the University of | ||||||
11 | Chicago before returning to North Carolina in 1982 to teach at | ||||||
12 | Duke and at the Duke Law School; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Dr. Franklin was also a Fulbright professor in | ||||||
14 | Australia and had teaching stints in China and Zimbabwe; he | ||||||
15 | taught at Cambridge University in England, Harvard, Cornell, | ||||||
16 | the University of Wisconsin, the University of Hawaii, the | ||||||
17 | University of California, Berkeley, and other institutions; | ||||||
18 | since 1992, he had been James B. Duke professor emeritus of | ||||||
19 | history at Duke; and
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20 | WHEREAS, A John Hope Franklin Research Center was | ||||||
21 | established in his honor at Duke; at his home in Durham, Dr. | ||||||
22 | Franklin continued a lifelong hobby of cultivating hundreds of | ||||||
23 | orchids; one species was named for him, the Phalaenopsis John | ||||||
24 | Hope Franklin; his honors, awards, and professional and civic |
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1 | affiliations were so numerous as to fill several single-spaced | ||||||
2 | pages of a long curriculum vitae; he received more than 100 | ||||||
3 | honorary degrees; and in 2006, he received the John W. Kluge | ||||||
4 | Prize for the Study of Humanities in a ceremony at the Library | ||||||
5 | of Congress; therefore, be it
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6 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
7 | NINETY-SIXTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we | ||||||
8 | mourn, along with his family, friends, students, and fellow | ||||||
9 | scholars, the passing of Dr. John Hope Franklin; and be it | ||||||
10 | further
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11 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
12 | presented to the family of Dr. John Hope Franklin as a symbol | ||||||
13 | of our sincere sympathy.
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