16.10.2014 Views

Cecil A. Partee Memoir - University of Illinois Springfield

Cecil A. Partee Memoir - University of Illinois Springfield

Cecil A. Partee Memoir - University of Illinois Springfield

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Norris L. Brookens Library<br />

Archives/Special Collections<br />

<strong>Cecil</strong> A. <strong>Partee</strong> <strong>Memoir</strong><br />

P257. <strong>Partee</strong>, <strong>Cecil</strong> A. (1921-1994)<br />

Interview and memoir<br />

14 tapes, 1050 mins., 2 vols., 244 pp., plus index<br />

ILLINOIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM<br />

<strong>Partee</strong>, Democratic member <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> House <strong>of</strong> Representatives 1957-67 and <strong>Illinois</strong><br />

Senate 1967-77, discusses his years in the General Assembly: work with issues such<br />

as civil rights, consumer rights, and crime and correction legislation; legislative,<br />

judicial, and fiscal reform; public aid, health, welfare, and safety legislation; and<br />

work as senate president. Also discusses his years before the General Assembly:<br />

family, employment, higher education, law school and practice, and early politics.<br />

Also recalls his work after the General Assembly as a commissioner in the Chicago<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Human Services and as Chicago City Treasurer.<br />

Interview by Horace Q. Waggoner, 1979-81<br />

OPEN<br />

See collateral file<br />

Archives/Special Collections LIB 144<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

One <strong>University</strong> Plaza, MS BRK 140<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong> IL 62703-5407<br />

© 1979-81, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees


ILLINOIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM<br />

CECIL A. PARTEE<br />

MEMOIR VOLUME I<br />

PREPARED FOR THE ILLINOIS LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL BY THE ORAL HISTORY OFFICE,<br />

LEGISLATIVE STUDIES CENTER OF SANGAMON STATE UNIVERSITY<br />

1982


ILLINOIS LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL<br />

107 Stratton Building, <strong>Springfield</strong>, lllinois 62706<br />

Representative Jacob John Wolf, Chicago, Chairman<br />

Senator William F* Mahar, Homewood, Vice Chairman<br />

Representative Samuel M. McGrew, Galesburg, Secretary<br />

Senators<br />

John A. D'Arco, Chicago<br />

Terry L. Bruce, Olney<br />

William F. Mahar, Homewood<br />

William A. Marovitz, Chicago<br />

Dawn Clark Netsch, Chicago<br />

Frank M. Ozinga, Evergreen Park<br />

George E. Sangmeister, Mokena<br />

Jack Schaffer, Crystal Lake<br />

Ex Officio<br />

Philip J. Rock, Oak Park<br />

President <strong>of</strong> the Senate<br />

James "Pate" Philip, Lombard<br />

Senate Minority Leader<br />

Representatives<br />

J. Robert Barr, Evanston<br />

Phillip Bianco, Chicago<br />

Glen 1. Bower, Effingham<br />

Peg McDonnell Breslin, Ottawa<br />

Ted E. Leverent, Maywood<br />

Samuel M. McGrew, Galesburg<br />

Everett G. Steele, Glen Carbon<br />

Jacob John Wolf, Chicaco<br />

Ex Officio<br />

George H. Ryan, Kankakee<br />

Speaker <strong>of</strong> the House<br />

Michael J. Madigan, Chicago<br />

House Minority Leader<br />

ILLINOIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM<br />

ADVISORY COMMITTEE<br />

Cullom Davis, Vice President <strong>of</strong> Academic<br />

Affairs, Sangamon State <strong>University</strong><br />

William L. Day, Former Director, <strong>Illinois</strong> Legislative<br />

Council; Editor Emeritus, lllinois Issues<br />

David Everson, Director, Legislative Studies Center;<br />

Associate Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Political Studies,<br />

Sangamon State <strong>University</strong><br />

Gerald L. Gherardini, Associate Director,<br />

lllinois Legislative Council<br />

Samuel K. Gove, Director, Institute <strong>of</strong> Government<br />

and Public Affairs, <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> lllinois<br />

H. William Hey, Director <strong>of</strong> Research,<br />

lllinois Legislative Council<br />

Dan Holt, Field Serv. Supervisor, State Historical<br />

Library; Adjunct Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> History,<br />

Sangamon State <strong>University</strong><br />

Robert P. Howard, Former State House Reporter<br />

for Chicago Tribune; Author, <strong>Illinois</strong>: A<br />

History <strong>of</strong> the Prairie State<br />

Margaret Munn, Hearing Supervisor,<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Mental Health<br />

Jack Van Der Slik, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Political Studies<br />

and Senior Scholar, Legislative Studies Center,<br />

Sangamon State <strong>University</strong><br />

J. Glenn Schneider, State Representative,<br />

41st Legislative District<br />

Printed by the authority <strong>of</strong> the State <strong>of</strong> lllinois<br />

Legislative Council Service Unit Order 820532<br />

July 1982 - 450 copies


ILLINOIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY<br />

ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM<br />

PREVIOUS TITLES IN SERIES<br />

Martin B. Lohmann <strong>Memoir</strong>, 1 Vol. (1980)<br />

Bernice T. Van Der Vries <strong>Memoir</strong>, 3 Vols. (1980)<br />

Walter J. Reum <strong>Memoir</strong>, 2 Vols. (1980)<br />

Thomas A. McGloon <strong>Memoir</strong>, 2 Vols. (1981)<br />

John W. Fribley <strong>Memoir</strong>, 2 Vols. (1981)<br />

Charles W. Clabaugh <strong>Memoir</strong>, 2 Vols, (1982)


CECIL A. PARTEE<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong> House <strong>of</strong> Representatives. 1957-1 967<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong> Senate, 1967-1 977


Preface<br />

This oral history <strong>of</strong> <strong>Cecil</strong> A. <strong>Partee</strong>'s service in the <strong>Illinois</strong> General<br />

Assembly is a product <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Illinois</strong> Legislative Council's General<br />

Assembly Oral History Program. The oral history technique adds a<br />

distinctive new dimension to the council's statutory responsibility<br />

for performing research and collecting information concerning the government<br />

<strong>of</strong> 'the state.<br />

<strong>Cecil</strong> A. <strong>Partee</strong> was born in Blytheville, Arkansas, in 1921. The story<br />

<strong>of</strong> his youth is typical <strong>of</strong> black middle class life in Blytheville during<br />

the 1920's and 1930's. After completing his undergraduate work at<br />

Tennessee State <strong>University</strong>, he was denied entry to law school at the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas. Instead the state <strong>of</strong> Arkansas paid his tuition<br />

at Northwestern <strong>University</strong> where he attained his law degree.<br />

Upon admission to the <strong>Illinois</strong> bar, Mr. <strong>Partee</strong> started practice in<br />

Chicago. With the idea <strong>of</strong> widening contacts for his practice, he<br />

requested committeeman William L. Dawson to assign him a precinct. This<br />

precinct captain assignment started his long-term association with the<br />

regular Democratic organization in Chicago. He was soon <strong>of</strong>fered, and<br />

accepted, a position as an assistant state's attorney.<br />

In 1955, two significant events occurred. First, he married Paris<br />

Angelina Bradley and, second, reapportionment increased Chicago's<br />

representation in the <strong>Illinois</strong> General Assembly. Mr. <strong>Partee</strong> was asked<br />

if he would run in 1956 for one <strong>of</strong> the new positions in the House <strong>of</strong><br />

Representatives. He did so and continued in the House for five sessions,<br />

then moved on to serve five sessions in the Senate. While in the Senate,<br />

during the 77th and 79th General Assemblies when the Democrats held<br />

majorities, he served as Senate president.<br />

Mr. <strong>Partee</strong>'s major legislative achievements were in the fields <strong>of</strong> civil<br />

rights, consumer rights and crime and corrections. His memoir focuses on<br />

such subjects but also touches on many other fields. Particularly instructive<br />

is his recounting <strong>of</strong> techniques and problems <strong>of</strong> leadership.


Mr. Bartee retired at the end <strong>of</strong> the 79th General Assembly, in 1977, to<br />

run unsuccessfully for attorney general a£ the state. He then accepted<br />

the position <strong>of</strong> commisioner in the Chicago Department <strong>of</strong> Human Services<br />

where he served until elected to his present position as Chicago city<br />

treasurer.<br />

Readers <strong>of</strong> this oral history should bear in mind that it is a transcript<br />

<strong>of</strong> the spoken word. Its informal, conversational style represents a<br />

deliberate attempt to encourage candor and to tap the narrator's memory.<br />

However, persons interested in listening to the tapes should understand<br />

that editorial considerations produced a text that differs somewhat from<br />

the original recordings. Both the recordings and this transcript should<br />

be regarded as a primary historical source, as no effort was made to<br />

correct or challenge the narrator. Neither the Illlnois Legislative<br />

Council nor Sangamon State <strong>University</strong> is responsible far the factual<br />

accuracy <strong>of</strong> the memoir, nor for views expressed therein; these are for the<br />

reader to judge.<br />

The tape recorded interviews were conducted by Horace Waggoner between<br />

the fall <strong>of</strong> 1979 and the spring <strong>of</strong> 1981. Mr. Waggoner was born in 1924<br />

near Waggoner, a small farm-service community in central <strong>Illinois</strong>. At<br />

age 18 he enlisted for military service in World War I1 and, as a U. S.<br />

Air Force commissio~ed <strong>of</strong>ficer, continued to serve until 1973. Upon<br />

leaving service, he resumed his formal education, achieving a masters<br />

degree in history at Sangamon State <strong>University</strong> in 1975. Specializing in<br />

the field <strong>of</strong> oral history, his association with the Sangamon State<br />

<strong>University</strong> Oral History Office dates from 1976.<br />

Florence Hardtn and Ulanda Buckhold transcribed the tapes. After the<br />

transcriptions were edited by Mr. Waggoner and reviewed by Mr. <strong>Partee</strong>,<br />

Mrs. Hardin prepared the typescript and compiled the index entries.<br />

Bernadette Emery and James Skufca developed the programming for the<br />

computerized sorting and typesetting used in finalizing the index.<br />

Dorothy Hopkins and Carol Marshall assisted in the pre-interview research.<br />

The Chicago Tribune provided valuable assistance in the research effort.<br />

Mention needs also to be made <strong>of</strong> Mr. <strong>Partee</strong>'s secretary, Jewel Hodges,<br />

who made the sometimes frustrating task <strong>of</strong> interviewing an extremely<br />

busy man much more pleasant than it might have been.<br />

This oral history may be read, quoted and cited freely. It may not be<br />

reproduced in whole or in part by any means, electronic or mechanical,<br />

without written permission from the <strong>Illinois</strong> Legislative Council, Room 107,<br />

Stratton Building, <strong>Springfield</strong>, <strong>Illinois</strong>, 62706.


Table <strong>of</strong> Contents<br />

Note on page location:<br />

Volume I: pages 1-116<br />

Volume 11: pages 117-244<br />

Preface ............................<br />

TheYearsBefore .......................<br />

Family background - Blytheville, Arkansas - Education -<br />

Job experiences - Tennessee State <strong>University</strong> - Northwestern<br />

<strong>University</strong> - Law practice - Precinct captain -<br />

Assistant state's attorney - Ward president - Ward<br />

committeeman - Marriage<br />

The General Assembly Years ..................<br />

Campaign and election - Getting started - Civil rights<br />

legislation - Insurance legislation - Consumer rights<br />

legislation - Crime and corrections legislation - Industry<br />

and labor relations legislation - Elections<br />

legislation - Legislative reform - Fiscal reform -<br />

Judicial reform - Public aid, health, welfare and<br />

safety legislation - Education legislation - Revenue<br />

legislation - Senate president<br />

The Years After . .......................<br />

Attorney general candidate - Chicago Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Human Services - Chicago city treasurer - Thoughts on<br />

a political career today<br />

Index.. ...........................<br />

Illustrations following pages 33, 88 and 180<br />

vii


Volume I<br />

SESSION 1, TAPE 1, SIDE 1<br />

Q: First <strong>of</strong> a11 we would like to get some background information, sir. Where<br />

were you born, sir?<br />

A: Blytheville, Arkansas.<br />

Q: And when were you born, sir?<br />

A: April 10, 1921.<br />

Q: How long did you live at that location, sir?<br />

A: Until I finished high school. I had just turned seventeen when I finished<br />

high school. Then I went away to college and I spent a couple <strong>of</strong> summers<br />

there since then, but that's about it.<br />

Q: What was your father's name, sir?<br />

A: Charles <strong>Cecil</strong> <strong>Partee</strong>.<br />

Q: And was he born in Blytheville also?<br />

A: No, he was born in Meridian, Mississippi* i<br />

Q: Could you give me scme background information about your father's fadl ?<br />

A: My father was a twin and was one <strong>of</strong> four children. He came to ~rkansasl to<br />

live perhaps sme five or six years prior to my birth. He was a cotton<br />

classer. A cotton classer is one who determines the staple and value <strong>of</strong><br />

cotton, once the seed has been removed, for the purpose <strong>of</strong> evaluating it for<br />

purchase. So cotton classers not only worked with cotton buyers, they would<br />

determine what the value <strong>of</strong> cotton was by the bale, on the basis <strong>of</strong> the quality<br />

<strong>of</strong> the cotton.<br />

f


Q: How did he go about doing this?<br />

A: Pretty much a highly sophisticated kind <strong>of</strong> knowledge that one gained, I<br />

guess, through experience, He was probably one <strong>of</strong> the first, and only black<br />

cotton classer that I knew, in the South. He started working with someone and<br />

learned it and apparently learned very well, because I have seen men come to<br />

our house--two buyers would come to our house with a bet as to the value <strong>of</strong> a<br />

particular piece <strong>of</strong> cotton and on the basis <strong>of</strong> his evaluation and statement<br />

they would pay <strong>of</strong>f their bet. Which indicates to me that he was pretty good.<br />

Q: He learned that in Mississippi?<br />

A: I think probably he started in Mississippi, then he moved up to Arkansas.<br />

Qj<br />

Did you know your grandfather, sir?<br />

A: I did not know my paternal grandfather, no, he died prior to my birth. I<br />

knew my paternal grandmother. She came to Arkansas to visit with us when I<br />

was quite small. I just have a very dim memory <strong>of</strong> her because I was very small,<br />

but I do remember her.<br />

Q: What was your mother's name, sir?<br />

A: My mother's maiden name was Dupree. She was one <strong>of</strong> ten children, she was<br />

the eighth child. Her father was a drayman, which is like a hauler, a mover,<br />

She was the eighth child out <strong>of</strong> ten.<br />

Q: And where was she born, sir?<br />

A: Ripley, Tennessee.<br />

Q: Do you know anything further about her family background?<br />

A: Yes, my mother finished high school at sixteen with a 98.6 average. She<br />

was the onlv person in her class and commenced to teach school immediately<br />

thereafter, as was the custom in those days, and garnered all <strong>of</strong> her college<br />

training in summer schools during the period <strong>of</strong> time that she was teaching.<br />

Finished college a year after I finished college.<br />

Q: Did she start teaching, then, in Tennessee?<br />

A: She started in Tennessee and came over to Arkansas when she was about<br />

twenty and taught in Arkansas until she married and--well, she taught until<br />

she was sixty-five. She taught about forty-nine, fifty years.<br />

Q: Then your mother and father met in Arkansas?<br />

A: They met in Ark~nsas, right.<br />

Q: What year were they married, do you recall?<br />

A: They must have been married about 1918 or something like that.


Q: You say she taught there near Blytheville?<br />

A: Well, yes, she taught near Blytheville, then she taught in Blytheville<br />

the last, probably, thirty years. She was a county supervisor for either one<br />

or two years, county supervisor <strong>of</strong> schools. But she taught in Blytheville<br />

most <strong>of</strong> the time.<br />

4: Are you the oldest in your . . .<br />

A: I'm the only child who survived. My mother and father had a son who was<br />

born probably around 1919 or 1920 who lived to be eighteen months <strong>of</strong> age a d<br />

who expired with pneumonia just prior to my birth.<br />

Q: Oh. So you are an only child, then?<br />

A: That's correct.<br />

Q: kt's see, was your birthplace in Blytheville?<br />

A: Blytheville, in Blytheville, yes.<br />

Q: In the town itself?<br />

A: In the town <strong>of</strong> Blytheville, yes.<br />

Q: What's your earliest remembrance <strong>of</strong> that home there?<br />

A: Well, my earliest remembrance is that we had a house, about a five room<br />

house.in which 1 was born and, at that time, there were no indoor toilets. 1<br />

can remember that because I could remember when I was nine years old we put in<br />

a bathroom and water inside the house. We really didn't have sewers at that<br />

time. We had a septic tank, because there were no sewers in that part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

town at that time. We had a large yard, about a lot and a half, which I mowed<br />

from the time I can remember until the time I left there.<br />

Q: This was with a push mower, I presume.<br />

A: Oh, yes, the push mower. We had a pagoda out there and a lot <strong>of</strong> flowers<br />

and had a garden in the back. Chickens, no hogs, but chickens and--%ode<br />

Island Reds and Yellow Buffs.<br />

Q: Oh, is that right?<br />

A: The finest breeds, yes. They were just beautiful chickens. And we always<br />

had a garden. Some pear trees and some plum trees in the back yard and a<br />

peach tree. Yes.<br />

Q: Did you have charge <strong>of</strong> the garden after awhile?<br />

A: Well, yes. Not really in charge <strong>of</strong> it. My father took an inordinate<br />

interest in it but I was certainly a willing, and sometimes an unwilling,


helper. In that garden, we had all <strong>of</strong> the regular kinds <strong>of</strong> things like white<br />

potatoes and sweet potatoes and bell peppers and hot peppers and beets and<br />

lettuce and beans and all kinds <strong>of</strong> greens, like collards and mustard,<br />

turnips, squash. All the regular vegetables in it; very, you know, inclusive<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> garden.<br />

Q: Your mother was in charge <strong>of</strong> the flowers, I guess, around the place.<br />

A: Yes, more or less. She was favored with the cannas, we used to have a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> beautiful cannas and we had Carolina poplar trees along the front <strong>of</strong> the<br />

yard and hedges, <strong>of</strong> course, as they do down South.<br />

Q: Yes, and you had to trim the hedges, I presume.<br />

A: Oh, yes, trim the hedges and . . .<br />

Q: Did you start to a kindergarten or did you go right into first grade?<br />

A: I went into a summer school. My mother taught at a summer school out in<br />

the rural area one summer and that was my first, beginning that swmner. Then<br />

I went into the first grade in September.<br />

Q: How Ear was the school house from your home?<br />

A: Oh, about a mile.<br />

Q: That far.<br />

A: Just about a mile, yes.<br />

Q: Did your mother teach at that school?<br />

A: She taught at the same school, yes.<br />

Q: Did she teach first grade by any chance?<br />

A: No, she taught fifth grade and she taught junior high school mathematics<br />

and junior high school literature and she was in charge <strong>of</strong> the music program<br />

at the school.<br />

Q: Do you remember your first grade teacher?<br />

A: Yes, her name was Miss Lucille Tillman.<br />

Q: What do you remember about her?<br />

A: That she wrote a very fine Spencerian hand and we were not being taught:<br />

block letters as kids are in the first grade now. We had to try to learn to<br />

write as she wrote, which was a little ridiculous for kids in the first grade.<br />

I also remember my second grade teacher had a handwriting style quite her own.


The third grade teacher taught us the Cramer method <strong>of</strong> writing. The fourth<br />

grade teacher taught us the Palmer system <strong>of</strong> writing. And the fifth grade<br />

teacher taught the Zaner-Blosser system, a system that I've never even heard<br />

<strong>of</strong> since, but it's much like Palmer. So, as a result <strong>of</strong> it, when I got to<br />

the sixth grade, I had an admixture <strong>of</strong> five different kinds <strong>of</strong> handwriting<br />

styles and, although my wrfting is fairly legfble, it's really an amalgam <strong>of</strong><br />

all those systems. Sometimes I'll write a Cramer "R" and a Palmer "R" when<br />

writing a,word like "hurry" or something. It happens.<br />

Q: Wonder why they didn't have it standardized?<br />

A: I don't know. I'm not sure that they standardize it today, I don't know.<br />

Each teacher just taught their own writing system at that time. I don't know.<br />

So, that's the way it went down.<br />

Q: Were there any particular experiences in the first grade that you recall?<br />

A: None really except the writing experience and learning to read. We had a<br />

book called a primer and it was the story <strong>of</strong> a young, little boy called Baby<br />

Ray who had one duck and two chickens and three <strong>of</strong> this and four <strong>of</strong> that and<br />

all. It was a combination <strong>of</strong> learning to read and getting some mathematical<br />

orientation at the same time, with numbers.<br />

Q: Was this an all black school?<br />

A: It was an all black school. Through high school.<br />

Q: When did you start history in school? That would be the fifth grade?<br />

A: I suppose the first history came about the fifth grade. We had a bound<br />

book called Old Europe and Young America. And it was really a kaleidoscopic<br />

overview <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> the world. We went into the Greeks and the Greek<br />

gods, Janus and the gods, the Greek gods and the Egyptians and all <strong>of</strong> the<br />

cultures on which modem history is founded. But it was presented at a fifth<br />

grade level so that we did have an understanding about it. I'm glad you<br />

should ask it because, if I could go very much progressively forward, to tell<br />

you how much that meant to me, I can remember about five years ago being in<br />

Spain and belng interviewed by about five television stations and thirty-five<br />

newspaper reporters. I was there with a group called the <strong>Illinois</strong> Association<br />

<strong>of</strong> Pr<strong>of</strong>essional Engineers. We were there on sort <strong>of</strong> an inspectional visit and<br />

they structured this program.<br />

So I made a speech to them there and before I made the speech, well, these<br />

newspaper people wanted to come in to interview me and they asked a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

political quesfions which I was able to handle. Then they asked me the simplest<br />

question in the world, which under the circumstances was quite difficult,<br />

and that was "What did I see as the future <strong>of</strong> Spain." It happened that<br />

Franco was still alive then and the place was, you know, very volatile and<br />

anythlng you said might create an international incident. So I answered them<br />

thusly, I said, "Well, if you don't mind, I will go back to the time I wasi In<br />

fifth grade and I had this book called Old Europe and Young America." I wid,


"I remember reading about the Greeks and the Phoenicians and all <strong>of</strong> these<br />

people, but the most impressive part, that I think that has some reference to<br />

where we are today, is reading about a young man named Christopher Columbus<br />

who was from a town called Genoa, Italy, who had been all over the world<br />

trying to sell his belief that the world was round and not flat, and he was<br />

rejected wherever he went. Except when he came to Spain and he talked to your<br />

then King, King Ferdinand. And he was about to reject him and then his Queen,<br />

Queen Isabella, came in and said, 'Let's hear this story again!" And he gave<br />

her the story and she believed in it and hocked her jewelry to purchase and<br />

outfit three boats for him, the Nina, the Pinta, the Santa Maria." I said,<br />

"Off he sailed and he discovered the country where I was born." I said, "Now,<br />

that's a long answer," I said, "but the point I would like to make in direct<br />

reference to your question as to what do I see as the future <strong>of</strong> Spain, I can<br />

only tell you that if everybody in the world rejected Columbus' idea and you<br />

had a King and Queen as long ago as 1492 who believed in him, who had that<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> vision and that kind <strong>of</strong> foresight," I said, "I would only think that<br />

your country is destined to have a great future." Thereby obviating the question<br />

as to the political answer they ex~ected at that moment, you see.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: But it is interesting how the backwood parts <strong>of</strong> your life are there. We<br />

have a lot <strong>of</strong> facts, I think, in our minds, and it just sort <strong>of</strong> lanquishes in<br />

the recesses <strong>of</strong> our minds, that we don't think about from time to time until<br />

there is an absolute need for them to explain or to make a point at the current<br />

time. And you sometimes are very surprised what's in the back pf your<br />

mind, what's there, you know.<br />

There's another example <strong>of</strong> that I would share with you. About eight years ago,<br />

maybe six, I went to Arkansas, back to visit, and the then governor, who is<br />

now the United States senator, found I was coming and he had a state policeman<br />

to meet me. He told me the governor canceled my reservation at the hotel<br />

because he, the governor, wanted me to stay at the governor's mansion. And I<br />

thought it was very interesting, you know, going back and having lived there<br />

when it was segregated and all and now I'm the guest <strong>of</strong> the governor. And when<br />

I was standing on the front porch at the governor's mansion waiting to be<br />

admitted, an incident came back to me, which had happened some forty-five,<br />

fifty years before, <strong>of</strong> when I was eight or nine years old and I went to this<br />

lady's house in Ripley, Tennessee, at the request <strong>of</strong> my grandmother to pick up<br />

something. And it was a white woman and she said, "Who are you?" And I said,<br />

"I'm Mrs. Dupree Lee's grandson." And she said, "Well, boy, get your little<br />

butt around to my back door." She said, "No niggers come to my front door."<br />

Now, I had forgotten that until I was standing on the front door <strong>of</strong> the<br />

governor's mansion, forty-five, fifty years later and I remembered the inci--<br />

dent. That was the first time I'd ever remembered it since it happened.<br />

It's just very--kind <strong>of</strong> interesting.<br />

9: Yes, sir. Are there any other incidents from your school life that have<br />

popped up like that in later life?


A: No. None as dramatic as that. Had a normal kind <strong>of</strong> background, a small<br />

town kid. I always had some kind <strong>of</strong> a little job either cleaning up an<br />

insurance <strong>of</strong>fice or working in a hotel or shining shoes or picking cotton<br />

or working in the new ground or whatever was honest and legitimate, I had<br />

some sort <strong>of</strong> job.<br />

I delivered newspapers, both the dailies and the weeklies. I do remember<br />

that when I got the first job as a daily carrier in my hometown, I was the<br />

first black kid who had been given opportunity to deliver them. But they<br />

did a thing to me that was, well, interesting to say the least. There is<br />

another way <strong>of</strong> characterizing it, I prefer to say interesting. All the white<br />

carriers were on commission. The paper was fifteen cents a week and when<br />

they collected fifteen cents they remitted nine cents and kept six cents<br />

for themselves. They did not give me that same opportunity. They suggested<br />

to me that I took out X number <strong>of</strong> papers a week and I paid nine cents for<br />

each paper. What I collected they didn't care, I just had to pay them nine<br />

cents for each weekly paper I took out, which made me an independent contractor<br />

at about ten or eleven years old. So it has not hurt me. I suppose<br />

at that point I was a little upset that I would be treated differently but<br />

actually, it probably helped me because it made me a better kind <strong>of</strong> an entrepreneur<br />

than if I had been on a salary.<br />

Those are the kinds <strong>of</strong> things that you think about sometimes as being just<br />

so wasteful <strong>of</strong> talent, you know. It reminds me <strong>of</strong> so many scholarship<br />

opportunities for people who came along in my age who were not given them who<br />

perhaps could have made a substantial contribution to the growth and development<br />

<strong>of</strong> this country. It seems that there are some other countries, particularly<br />

Russia, that make sure that people who have some mentality get a chance<br />

to use it for the benefit <strong>of</strong> the country, you know. They make sure that they<br />

get to school and that they do some things that they wouldn't do if nobody<br />

gave them a push.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. You mentioned working a new land. What is that?<br />

A: Well., in Arkansas, there were always areas where there were trees and they,<br />

you know, would dynamite the trees and you would clean out the underbrush for<br />

the land to be put into agriculture pursuits. Always a lot <strong>of</strong> new land, they<br />

called it new ground.<br />

Q: Yes, I see. (pause) ~et's see, when would you have first taken civics<br />

in school, sir?<br />

A: I probably took civics, I guess, in the sixth grade. Yes, we had civics<br />

in the sixth grade and then again, about eleventh grade, we took what was<br />

called American Government, Civics was basically, at the grammar school level,<br />

an orientation to the governmental process without any real emphasis on all<br />

the nuances <strong>of</strong> government but an overview <strong>of</strong> what government was about and<br />

how it operates.<br />

Q: Your mother was county supervisor <strong>of</strong> schools. Was that an elective <strong>of</strong>fice?


A: No, it was appointed. At that time, they had a dual school system, a white<br />

school system and a black school system. They had a superintendent for all<br />

schools and they had a supervisor, one for the black schools and one for the<br />

white schools. There were about seventy-five black schools in our county.<br />

We're a large county. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, the county was so large they had<br />

two county seats. Pretty large county.<br />

Q: When did you first become familiar with the government <strong>of</strong> the county there?<br />

A: Well, I'm not so sure that I really had any real familiarity with the<br />

county government. I knew and recognized who the elected <strong>of</strong>ficials were. I<br />

knew the mayor and the chief <strong>of</strong> police and the chief <strong>of</strong> the fire department<br />

and--that was about as far as my knowledge went as to who the people were. My<br />

father was always interested in the mayor's campaign. He would always have a<br />

candidate that he was supporting and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. But 1 was not overly<br />

aware <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Q: Did your father hold <strong>of</strong>fice at any time?<br />

A: Q1, no. No.<br />

Q: Was he a Democrat at that time?<br />

A: He was a Democrat, yes.<br />

Q: Was your mother's interest also in the Democratic party?<br />

A: Urn, I suppose, but whatever her interest was, it was basically kind <strong>of</strong><br />

submerged. There was never any real active participation. She voted but--<br />

not really involved in any kind <strong>of</strong> election, touting any candidates or things<br />

<strong>of</strong> that sort, no.<br />

Q: Could you describe what life was like in Blytheville when you were quite<br />

young ?<br />

A: Well, it was just a small town when I was quite young. By 1930, when I was<br />

nine years old, it was a town <strong>of</strong> six thousand people. It was, in one sense,<br />

progressive. They had the first radio station in Arkansas, even including<br />

Little Rock and all the larger towns. It was segregated and we had a school,<br />

You went to school and you went to church and many <strong>of</strong> your teachers were also<br />

people who taught in the school.<br />

The church <strong>of</strong>fered a lot <strong>of</strong> opportunities to participate in plays or to say<br />

speeches. We had programs on Mother's Day, on Christmas, on Thanksgiving.<br />

Had three or four programs a year at the church where you would have an opportunity<br />

to say a poem or something that was appropriate for that particular<br />

holiday.<br />

I got involved quite young in what has turned out to be public speaking. My<br />

mother belonged to the Arkansas Teachers Association. They used to have what<br />

they called oratorical contests and when I was six years <strong>of</strong> age I was taught


and said, in one <strong>of</strong> the contests, Longfellow's "A Psalm <strong>of</strong> Life," which is<br />

about an eight-stanza poem which I was able to do at six. I can remember<br />

going to Little Rock to the teacherst meeting and they had this oratorical<br />

contest and I said that poem and a girl said a poem called, "Is It Because<br />

I'm Nobody's Child?" The girl was given first place and I was given second<br />

place and two persons contested the judgest decision and, as a consequence,<br />

there was a compromise and they gave goth <strong>of</strong> us first place. One <strong>of</strong> those<br />

two persons was the head <strong>of</strong> the English Department at Dunbar High School, and<br />

the other was a black lawyer.<br />

It was the very first time I had ever met a lawyer who was black. I suppose--<br />

it might have been the first time I ever really met a lawyer, I'm not sure.<br />

It was very interesting to me. He took an interest in me and the next day<br />

he took me down to the area where his <strong>of</strong>fice was and introduced me to various<br />

people at his <strong>of</strong>fice and at his barbershop and places <strong>of</strong> that sort. So, I<br />

guess, really, that was the first time I had seen a lawyer and I guess maybe<br />

in the back <strong>of</strong> my mind that has always stuck out.<br />

Q: What was his name?<br />

A: His name was William A. Booker.<br />

Q: And this was in Little Rock.<br />

A: In Little Rock, yes.<br />

Q: How did you go to Little Rock? By train?<br />

A: Oh, no, we drove in those days. We drove over there.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> car did you have?<br />

A: First car we had was a 1930 Ford, cost $625.00.<br />

Q: My goodness, (laughs)<br />

A: We thought that was all the money in the world. We had to buy it for the<br />

time that my mother became county supervisor because she needed a car to get<br />

to the various schools in the county.<br />

Q: What do you remember about Mr. Booker's <strong>of</strong>fice?<br />

A: It had a lot <strong>of</strong> books in it. That's about as much as I can remember. It<br />

had a lot <strong>of</strong> books and--he had a secretary and she was a very charming lady<br />

and that's about all I remember about the <strong>of</strong>fice. I was only six years old.<br />

Q: Yes. Did he describe anything about being a lawyer to you at that age<br />

that stuck with you?<br />

A: I'm not sure that there was any real description. He introduced me to<br />

another lawyer there whose name was Scipio Jones. I remember meeting Mr.


Jones. I can remember that we went down to the barbershop where Mr. Booker<br />

goes and there was a fellow there, his barber, who would always say--you<br />

would say to him, "How are you?" Be would say, "First rate, first rate,"<br />

you know. So Mr. Booker told me, said, "Now, when you go in and he asks you<br />

'Bow are you,' you say, 'first rate.' You'll really get to him." It was kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> funny. I do remember that.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. Did you travel much in those early days, other than Little Rock?<br />

Do you recall?<br />

A: Well, we would go up to there and we would go in and out <strong>of</strong> Memphis.<br />

Memphis was about sixty-five, seventy miles from my hometown. We would go to<br />

Memphis to see plays or things <strong>of</strong> that sort. I remember particularly seeing<br />

Ben Hur as a movie in Memphis. On occasion, we would come up to St. Louis<br />

which was about two hundred and fifty miles away. My mother had a brother<br />

there. We came up to Toledo, Ohio, one summer when my mother attended the<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Toledo that summer. And we spent some time in Chicago that<br />

summer visiting relatives here.<br />

My mother sent me up on the bus in 1934 to see the World's Fair. I guess I<br />

was thirteen. That was the second year <strong>of</strong> the World's Fair. And 1 remember<br />

she--we had about six or seven dollars and she put it in, see (simulates<br />

putting money in pocket), the right pocket, and then she pinned it in, then<br />

put me on the bus with the side with the money toward the window so nobody<br />

would steal it. (laughter) I spent the summer here visiting a relative and<br />

seeing the World's Fair. I was thirteen.<br />

Q: Was this a relative on your father's side?<br />

A: On my mother's side.<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> the uncles and aunts on your mother's side?<br />

A: Yes, there was Aunt Birda, who was my mother's oldest sister, who too was<br />

a school teacher and I can remember one surmner--she lived about five miles<br />

away from Mrs. Haley, who was Alex Haley's mother, and they were sometimes<br />

competitive for summer school jobs. I can remember one year that Mrs. Haley<br />

and her daughter sought a two-teacher school and my aunt, Aunt Birda, and<br />

her daughter sought that same school and the school board sought to compromise<br />

it by saying, "We'll take one from either family," and neither one <strong>of</strong> them<br />

would go. They said, "No, it's either all or nothing,'' so they got somebody<br />

else even in that situation. That was my mother's oldest sister.<br />

Then there was an Aunt Fanny, who lived in Toledo, Ohio, that we visited that<br />

summer that my mother went to school there. And then there was an Aunt Ruth<br />

who lived over in Arkansas and she was the one that my mother lived with<br />

originally when she came over to Arkansas to teach. There was an Aunt Geneva,<br />

who also was a teacher, whose husband was a teacher and principal <strong>of</strong> a school.<br />

Then there was an Uncle Luther who worked at a shoe store in St. Louis, as I<br />

remember, and who also was involved in some other activities, with a game<br />

called "policy."


I<br />

1<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

i<br />

'1 A: And then I had a--let's see, I don't remember any more <strong>of</strong> her brothers or<br />

sisters--there was one named Howell who died before I was born--but there were<br />

II<br />

ten <strong>of</strong> them. Oh, then there was an Aunt Neppy who taught for a period. She<br />

i lived in Dyersburg, Tennessee. All <strong>of</strong> them, all <strong>of</strong> my mother's sisters<br />

1 learned to play the piano--they actually learned on an organ that they had at<br />

their house. None <strong>of</strong> them had music lessons, they just learned to play and<br />

just handed down to one or other. Later, they all learned to read music but<br />

I they originally didn't.<br />

; Q: Did you learn an instrument at an early age?<br />

A: My mother gave me piano lessons when I was about eight, nine years old. I<br />

showed an abysmal lack <strong>of</strong> talent for it and, ch., within six months or so, that,<br />

was all over. Then a lady had a nephew, for whom she had bought a violin, who<br />

wouldn't practice and the lady brought the violin over to me and said she would<br />

give it to me. So she gave me the violin and I took lessons from the Catholic<br />

sisters there for about a year. When 1 started to learn to play fairly well,<br />

the lady came back and took the violin away and gave it back to her nephew. We<br />

weren't able to purchase another one so that was the end <strong>of</strong> my violin lesaons.<br />

Very interestingly, I went to a man, a white man, there ro take violin lessons<br />

and he refused to give them to me, you see, a black boy, violin lessons. And<br />

that is when I went to the Catholic sisters who gave me the lessons. Catholics,<br />

<strong>of</strong> course, in my hometown, were almost as verboten as blacks, you know,<br />

in those days. Particularly in the South, the other white people weren't<br />

very high on Catholics, but those people were just very wonderful to me aad<br />

gave me the lessons and I enjoyed them.<br />

Q: When you visited in Chicago for the Fair, which relative was it that you<br />

visited there?<br />

A: I stayed with one af my mother's nephews, Aunt Neppy's son, whose name was<br />

Claudius Wills.<br />

Q: What did you think when you arrived in the bus here in Chicago?<br />

A: Well, it was the largest place I had seen-at an age that I could really<br />

appreciate it, because I had been to Chicago before when I was about four or<br />

five. I did remember the house and, when I got to the house, I remembered it.<br />

They had a very lovely home on Champlain Avenue. I enjoyed it, it was a very<br />

fine neighborhood. In that block where he lived, most <strong>of</strong> the people were<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essionals, teachers and social workers and postal employees. There was a<br />

lawyer across the street who had three children, oh, a couple <strong>of</strong> them right<br />

at my age. They had lovely homes and had recreational areas in the basement<br />

with a pool table and stuff <strong>of</strong> that sort. That was just another kind <strong>of</strong><br />

exposure for me. I had never seen black people live as well as those people<br />

were living. So it was very interesting and enlightening.


Q: What part <strong>of</strong> Chicago was that?<br />

A: It was 47th and Champlain, in the 4700 block south on Champlain Avenue.<br />

Q: What did you do at the Fair?<br />

A: Just saw the exhibits and took some <strong>of</strong> the rides and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing,<br />

nothing that I can focus on as being more important than anything else. But<br />

it was something I had never seen. It was a huge kind <strong>of</strong> thing. In my<br />

hometown, all I had seen were, you know, carnivals that came to town or the<br />

circus which came once a year, that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. But to see all <strong>of</strong> this<br />

mass <strong>of</strong> people and all this activity, <strong>of</strong> course, was very interesting.<br />

Q: Did you see anything else in Chicago during that trip?<br />

A: I went to the museums and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. Spent some time at the beach<br />

and swimming and, you know, that kind <strong>of</strong> stuff, just what a kid would do in<br />

the summertime.<br />

Q: How long a trip was it, about two weeks?<br />

A: I guess I was here about two, three weeks, something like that. Yes. I<br />

can remember one thing. It's so funny how you--I remember my cousin's wife<br />

fixed me a lunch. In those days they, they would give you a lunch in a shoe<br />

box. There was chicken and apples and boiled eggs and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing and<br />

my cousin and I forgot the lunch and when we got on the bus to go back home,<br />

we realized that we had left the lunch at home. And that has been--let's<br />

see, thirteen, fifty-eight--that's been forty-five years ago and I still<br />

remember it.<br />

Q: Yes, it's funny how things stick out. (laughter)<br />

A: 1sn't it?<br />

Q: Yes, sir. You mentioned Mrs. Haley, which brings up the "roots" business.<br />

Have you had any desire to go back in that "root" sort <strong>of</strong> thing to find your<br />

ancestry?<br />

A: Well, yes. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, the summer before last, we had a family<br />

reunion down in Dyersburg, Tennessee. Actually, home is Ripley but Dyersburg<br />

was more convenient. It's twenty-five miles from Ripley, but there's a<br />

Holiday Inn there that would accommodate us so we went back there. There were<br />

about fifty people from the family who were there. One <strong>of</strong> my cousins, who is<br />

now a retired teacher and a retired supervisor <strong>of</strong> schools, put together a<br />

booklet called Roots <strong>of</strong> Our Family. One <strong>of</strong> the most interesting things was<br />

that she had gone backto Book 6 in Hayward County, Tennessee, to find a wedding<br />

certificate for my grandmother and grandfather. They were married on<br />

March 13 in 1874. They found the wedding certificate and we were very proud<br />

that they found that, because so many families aren't able to find that kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> thing. I suppose many <strong>of</strong> the families didn't--maybe some didn't get married.<br />

But they were married and had these ten children.


So the whole family relationship and the whole family reunion was very significant<br />

because I got a chance to see a lot <strong>of</strong> the younger people in my<br />

family. One cousin, she would be my second cousin, has a couple <strong>of</strong> kids--they<br />

live in South Carolina, her husband's a dentist--and I just looked at her<br />

little girl, who was nine, about nine, ten years old. How very sophisticated<br />

she was and how much she expected good service in a hotel and, you know, just<br />

things that at my age I would never have had.<br />

I remember she said to the waitress, who happened to be white, she said, "Dear,<br />

my sherbert is melting." She said, "They probably left it out too long in the<br />

back. It isn't your fault." She said, "But could you get me a fresh one,<br />

dear?" And when the white lady said to her, "Yes, ma'am," I said, "My goodness,<br />

things have really changed here," you know. And I asked my mother,<br />

"Would I have had that kind <strong>of</strong> sophistication at that age?" She said, "NO,<br />

we would never have been able to find out because, when you were that age, we<br />

wouldn't have been here with this kind <strong>of</strong> service." It wouldn't have been<br />

possible even to come in the place.<br />

So, it was interesting just watching the growth and development <strong>of</strong> America as<br />

reflected through the youngsters in our family and what their expectations<br />

are in contradistinction to what ours were at the same time. So, it was kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> interesting. So, we had that roots thing and we propose to have another<br />

one next summer.<br />

My mother, incidentally, is the only surviving child <strong>of</strong> the ten, which makes<br />

her the matriarch <strong>of</strong> the family. She lives in St. Louis and she is eigbtyseven<br />

now. The original ten are all gone, but her.<br />

Q: What was the denomination <strong>of</strong> the church that you belonged to there?<br />

A: It was Baptist.<br />

A: You say both your mother and your father were active In the church?<br />

A: Oh, yes.<br />

A: Did either <strong>of</strong> them enter the preaching at all?<br />

A: No, no one was a preacher. My mother played for the choir for a number <strong>of</strong><br />

years. My father was simply a deacon; he was not a minister, no.<br />

Q: Do you remember any particular social activities they had there? Did they<br />

have annual affairs <strong>of</strong> any sort?<br />

A: Oh, yes, they had annual meetings. I spent a lot <strong>of</strong> summers with my<br />

grandmother over in Tennessee and there was always some sort <strong>of</strong> church convention<br />

or something where all the ladies would bring pies and cakes and<br />

chickens and all kinds <strong>of</strong> meats and all kinds <strong>of</strong> things.<br />

My own church, we had a divisionalized Sunday school and I was superintendent


<strong>of</strong> the junior division and then the intermediate division. I never became<br />

superintendent <strong>of</strong> the senior division, but the first two I was. We went to<br />

Sunday school, then eleven o'clock service, and then, in the afternoon, they<br />

had what they called BYPU, which was the Baptist young people's training<br />

union. That was another kind <strong>of</strong> outreach to get kids to church. So I went<br />

to church three times a day on Sundays, yes. Morning service, Sunday school,<br />

and BYPU.<br />

Q: How did you come to be selected as the leader <strong>of</strong> the groups there?<br />

A: Oh, I don't know. The senior superintendent would appoint the people, maybe<br />

I showed some leadership qualities, I suppose, and that's how it happened,<br />

I guess.<br />

SESSION 1, TAPE 1, SIDE 2<br />

Q: Was there any time that you thought about working toward one <strong>of</strong> these<br />

leadership positions?<br />

A: No. No. No, I was not in any way aggressive about that. I just went to<br />

Sunday school and studied my lessons and was able to articulate them well, so<br />

I was just chosen. I didn't seek the spot in any kind <strong>of</strong> way, no.<br />

Q: Were there any other kind <strong>of</strong> organizations besides the church that you<br />

belonged to in your youth?<br />

A: Yes, we had what we called the FPA, which was the Future Farmers <strong>of</strong><br />

America. My hometown, a small town, was very much agriculturally oriented.<br />

Everybody there had farms that were all around and people who lived in the<br />

town also worked on farms, as well as in the industry within the city. In<br />

high school, you took agriculture and we had an excellent organization called<br />

Future Farmers <strong>of</strong> America. I think that's now called New Farmers <strong>of</strong> America,<br />

NFA, but at that time, I think there was a division between black and white<br />

and we were FFA, Future Farmers, and the others were New Farmers--Farmers <strong>of</strong><br />

America, I don't know what it was. But anyway, there was a difference and we<br />

belonged to the black group which was either Future Farmers <strong>of</strong> America or<br />

New Farmers <strong>of</strong> America. We would have meetings throughout the county. That<br />

was probably the one club sort <strong>of</strong> thing I was involved in in high school, at<br />

the high school level. That, and the Audobon Club.<br />

Q: Yes, I belonged to FFA when I was a boy and had a dairy project. Did you<br />

have a project--with the chickens, perhaps?<br />

A: We had a project--ours mostly was garden.<br />

Q: Gardening.<br />

A: Yes, gardening, more or less, because, you see, we lived in this town<br />

rather than on a farm, so we had something that we could do. There was sort <strong>of</strong>


a tie-in between that and what we called manual training. We had a manual<br />

training shop in our high school and you learned to make small household<br />

items. With coping saws and this sort <strong>of</strong> thing, you would make something<br />

like a hall tree or what they called a rack for a newspaper stand, footstools,<br />

and those kinds <strong>of</strong> things, we used to make that. And then, one or two weeks<br />

during the year, they would switch <strong>of</strong>f; the girls would take shop and the boys<br />

would go into the domestic science classes.<br />

Q: Oh'? Did you learn to cook?<br />

A: No, not very well. (laughter)<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> the specific projects in the shop there that you<br />

had made?<br />

A: Yes, I remember making a hall tree and I remember making a foot stool and<br />

I also took a plywood and made a newspaper rack, where you would put your<br />

newspapers and magazines.<br />

Q: Do you enjoy working with that type <strong>of</strong> . . .<br />

A: Not really, no, besides I had little manual talent.<br />

Q: Did you hold leadership in that organization at any time?<br />

A: Yes, I was either president or vice-president, I can't remember. I do<br />

remember I was president <strong>of</strong> my senior high school class. I was salutatorian,<br />

a girl was valedictorian. There was a very narrow margin between us, but<br />

she was valedictorian and I was salutatorian.<br />

Q: How were those positions selected? Was that by election by the student<br />

body ?<br />

A: No, no, by your grade point average.<br />

Q: What courses did you like best in high school?<br />

A: Mathematics and English.<br />

Q: Who was your mathematics teacher?<br />

A: Pr<strong>of</strong>essor M. M. Wilburn. He also was my Latin teacher. I had three years<br />

<strong>of</strong> Latin and the fourth year we took a course called Latin derivatives which<br />

is really a vocabulary building course. We just took Latin words and we took<br />

the stems <strong>of</strong> Latin words and built the English words from them. It was really<br />

a good base for vocabulary. I can remember we used to have fun, you know,<br />

and say--I remember saying to my mother one day, "You should have been downtown<br />

to see the conflagration consume numerous edifices." And, very shortly thereafter,<br />

she said to me one morning, "Arise my son, the nocturnal illuminator<br />

has wended its way into oblivion. That means, 'get up! "'


Q: I see. (laughter)<br />

A: So we just learned words and enjoyed words and enjoyed saying them.<br />

There is one very interesting thing about schooling. When I first took<br />

geography my father said, "You're taking geography." I said, "Yes." He<br />

said, "What are they teaching you?" I said, "Well, they teach us the states<br />

and they teach them by regions like the northeastern states and the north<br />

central states and the south central states and we learn what the products<br />

are and what they do in those states and so forth." "Okay," he said, "what's<br />

the capital <strong>of</strong> Maine?" I said, "The capital <strong>of</strong> Maine? I don' t know, sir ."<br />

He says, "They're not teaching you anything. You mean you don't know the<br />

capital <strong>of</strong> Maine?" He said, "The capital <strong>of</strong> Maine is Augusta and it's on the<br />

Kennebec River." Then he went right through the states giving the capital<br />

and whatever body <strong>of</strong> water it was on and I came to find out that that is how<br />

they taught geography when he was a boy. They taught them the capitals, you<br />

had to know the capitals <strong>of</strong> every state, and whatever water or tributary <strong>of</strong><br />

water it was on. Really, that was geography and actually they may not have<br />

had a great deal <strong>of</strong> knowledge about what they did there or where it was<br />

located in the . . . So anyway, to make sure that I would know that also, he<br />

went out and bought me a jigsaw puzzle <strong>of</strong> the United States and I learned to<br />

put it together. So, you would, <strong>of</strong> course, learn to localize the states and<br />

how they interfaced with the other states. So that was how he supplemented<br />

my geography because he just didn't want me to not know the capitals <strong>of</strong> those<br />

states. I still don't know whether it was Pierre or Bismarck--one <strong>of</strong> them is--<br />

I think Pierre is North Dakota and Bismarck is South Dakota, or vice-versa,<br />

I'm not sure. At least, I know that there is that difference.<br />

Q: Was your father a stern taskmaster?<br />

A: I would say he was not overly, overly but he expected you to learn and<br />

he expected you to do things. I can remember when I finished high school and<br />

he bought me a bow tie, one that you tied yourself. I was just enamored <strong>of</strong><br />

it, it was such a pretty little tie. And then, he said, "Now, I'm going to<br />

teach you how to tie it." And he taught me and he would take it loose and show<br />

me again, take it loose--he did it about three or four times and took it<br />

loose. Then he went in and sat down and got his newspaper and he said, "Now,<br />

you tie it." And I was struggling with it and struggling with it and finally<br />

I said, "Dad, I can't do it." He said, "Well, if you can't wear your tie, you<br />

can't go to the dance tonight." So I learned to tie it and I--now I can tie<br />

them in the dark, I don't need anything else. But to say stern, I don't know.<br />

He was a person who believed in what he believed in and he expected you to<br />

make a contribution, he wasn't for a lot <strong>of</strong> "lollygagging," you know. He<br />

expected you to do something, that was all.<br />

Q: Did he use the strap very <strong>of</strong>ten?<br />

A: I think maybe my father whipped me once, or maybe twice, in his life. My<br />

mother was a great deal more frequent in that area.<br />

Q: Oh, is that right? (chuckles)


A: And my grandmother. My grandmother, when I would spend the summers over<br />

there, gave you the lickings with peach tree switches. The psychology that<br />

they used, particularly my grandmother, was just great. You see, you would<br />

have to go pick a switch. She would send you out to get it. Now, that's<br />

psychological really, you going out to get something that you know you're<br />

going to get a licking with. You also know that you have got to get something<br />

strong enough for her to not reject it, because she is going to send you back,<br />

but if it is strong enough, that means that the licking is going to be more, -<br />

more memorable. But she believed in that kind <strong>of</strong> discipline and I don't think<br />

it hurt me. And my mother the same, I don't think it hurt me at all.<br />

The thing about my mother's whippings, she let them pile up, you know, little<br />

things you would do. I could hear her say, "And you remember the time you did<br />

something,'' and she would just keep telling you <strong>of</strong> the various things you<br />

did. She could remember them all, you know.<br />

Once I went to a carnival and 1 won a buggy whip throwing baseballs at milk<br />

bottles and my mother whipped me with that buggy whip once. Now that, to me,<br />

was just really upsetting because it was my buggy whip and I just didn't<br />

think she ought to lick me with my own buggy whip, but she did. But I<br />

respected her wishes. I didn't get that many, but I got a few.<br />

Q: What other types <strong>of</strong> entertainment did you have in Blytheville?<br />

A: Well, we played normal kid games. We shot marbles, we played with ropes,<br />

we made our own kites and flew them, we made our slingshots and shot: at birds<br />

and played baseball and basketball. One summer, one <strong>of</strong> our teachers went to<br />

Hampton Institute out in Virginia and came back and introduced us to tennis.<br />

We had a vacant lot there and we cleared it <strong>of</strong>f, sort <strong>of</strong> a neighborhood project,<br />

cleared it <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> weeds and put up some chicken wire at either end and<br />

put in a tennis court. We played tennis. Bought a racket from the S. S.<br />

Kress store for fifty cents and we played tennis,<br />

Q: Which sport did you like most, sir?<br />

A: Which sport? I suppose maybe, at that point, baseball was probably the<br />

sport that I liked most; but by high school, I played basketball. I made the<br />

basketball team. I could never make the football team, I wasn't big enough.<br />

I tried, though.<br />

Q: What position did you play in basketball?<br />

A: Forward. Halfback in football. I remember the day that my career ended.<br />

I was practicing and I went <strong>of</strong>f tackle and saw that hole there and when I got<br />

in that hole, two guys hit me from either side, both <strong>of</strong> whom weighed at least<br />

forty pounds more than I did and I was just like that. (presses hands together)<br />

(laughter) And I said, "Well, this is not for me." But I stayed with<br />

the team. I could kick, so they would put me in on fourth d m to kick, but I<br />

couldn't handle the other part <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

Q: Did you have a good basketball team in high school?


A: We had a fairly good basketball team. We went to the state tournament<br />

two or three years. We never won, but we got very close to third place once.<br />

We played for third place once and got beaten. Most <strong>of</strong> the teams that won<br />

were teams that had available to them gymnasiums. We played outdoors.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: In my, I guess maybe, junior or senior year, they permitted us to use the<br />

armory hall there for basketball. Our fortunes improved a great deal after<br />

that because we were getting accustomed, you know, to playing on the floor.<br />

So, I played basketball all the way through high school.<br />

Q: Where did they hold the state tournaments?<br />

A: In Pine Bluff, Arkansas, at the Arkansas State College. It was a black<br />

college. State supported school. It's now a part <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas,<br />

a division now <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas, but at that time it was<br />

strictly an all-black school.<br />

Q: Do you recall anything about the trips over there?<br />

A: Yes, we would always drive and, in those days, you never went very far<br />

without somebody having a flat and putting boots in and the old kind <strong>of</strong><br />

patches. I remember when the hot patch came along, we thought that was<br />

really an improvement. You probably remember that.<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: Yes. But we would normally have a couple <strong>of</strong> cars and we would drive over,<br />

stay at the college in the dormitories.<br />

Q: Was that as much fun as the playing?<br />

A: Oh, yes. Sure. It was a lot <strong>of</strong> fun to get away over to Pine Bluff which<br />

is about, probably, two hundred and twenty-five miles from my hometown.<br />

My hometown is in the extreme northeastern part <strong>of</strong> the state. We're right<br />

under the Missouri boot heel, just six miles from the Missouri line. That,<br />

too, was an experience, living that close to another state because, when I<br />

got to the legislature, T remembered the differential between what various<br />

states had in terms <strong>of</strong> taxation. (takes paper and pen and draws map) Now,<br />

here is the baot heel <strong>of</strong> Missouri and here is Arkansas here, and we were<br />

right up here, six miles from Missouri. So on Sundays, we would drive up to<br />

Missouri to fill our gas tank.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: Yes, because the gas was about five cents a gallm cheaper, because the<br />

taxes were less. Of course, you know it was a matter <strong>of</strong> mathematics whether<br />

you really saved. The tanks only held ten gallons at that time and you would<br />

probably have a few gallons when you went up there and you would buy your gas.


But I think it was more or less a Sunday outing. Everybody after church<br />

would take a little outing on Sunday. So, we would go up there and buy the<br />

gas.<br />

I guess that was my first look at consumer economics, what it means, realizing<br />

that taxes vary. Now, when I went to Tennessee in college, Tennessee is a<br />

state that is about ninety miles wide all the way across and about four hundred<br />

and fifty miles long. Tennessee borders on about seven or eight other states.<br />

So, if you lived in the very center <strong>of</strong> the state, you were only forty-five<br />

miles from another state one way or the other. For a long time, as a result<br />

<strong>of</strong> that, Tennessee did not have a sales tax. Because most <strong>of</strong> the people on the<br />

peripheral edges went across to the next state to buy, If the taxes were less<br />

over there.<br />

I remembered that when we had problems. You'd come in with a particular<br />

program for taxation and a legislator from Danville or from Moline or Rock<br />

Island, who were on the peripheral edges <strong>of</strong> this state, would be very concerned<br />

about hurting the merchants within the state because <strong>of</strong> people's free<br />

accessibility to other states where they had a lesser tax. Well, we have had<br />

that problem with Indiana, for example, with cigarettes. People go over there<br />

to buy them by the cartons because they're so much cheaper in Indiana. We've<br />

even had to pass some laws to prohibit bringing in more than X numbers <strong>of</strong><br />

cartons.<br />

Q: When was your first date?<br />

A: My first date?<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: Oh, I don't know. I guess when I was maybe fourteen or so. I developed<br />

an interest in this little girl who was two years younger than I, and two<br />

years behind me in school. We would go to our what we call a "rally." We<br />

would have a "rally" once a year where all the schools competed in mathematics,<br />

English, history. They had a track meet in connection with it, also. She<br />

was a very good speaker. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, when I left home in 1938, it<br />

was the last time I saw her until last spring.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: She was, I guess, my first date and the puppy love thing. She is now a<br />

Ph.D. and is a dean <strong>of</strong> a college down in Florida and I was invited down there<br />

last year to address that school. That was the first time I had seen her since<br />

I was seventeen. I had not seen her in forty years--I was fifty-seven last<br />

year, so I had not seen her in forty years. It was a very interesting thing to<br />

renew our acquaintance. She has since, <strong>of</strong> course, married, has a family; so<br />

do I. So, that was probably my first date. She was just a very lovely little<br />

girl and we went to the movies and things like that.<br />

9: This "rally," was that just within the Blytheville area?


I<br />

I<br />

I<br />

Q: Was this black and white?<br />

A: No, just black.<br />

Q: Where did they usually hold these?<br />

A: Normally at Oceola which is about eighteen miles south <strong>of</strong> my town, because<br />

it was a little more central. My town is up in one end <strong>of</strong> the county,<br />

Normally at Cteola.<br />

Q: You say they had a track meet also?<br />

A: A track meet was a part <strong>of</strong> it also.<br />

Q: Were you involved in that?<br />

A: I used to run the hurdles. Low hurdles.<br />

Q: Were you any good at it?<br />

A: Pretty good. Pretty good. Won some prizes.<br />

Q: So, this would be a daily affair, I guess. You would go down in the<br />

morning once or twice a year?<br />

A: Go down in the morning and come back late that evening, yes. And they had<br />

some really interesting kinds <strong>of</strong> things like you would have speed calculation.<br />

Put a group <strong>of</strong> figures on the board and the kids would walk up and they would<br />

say, "Go!" and they would have to do them with speed, totaling them up.<br />

Q: &, I see, mathematics, huh?<br />

A: Yes, for mathematics. You would have spelling contests, first grade,<br />

second grade, third grade, right through the whole sphere. Then they would<br />

have what they called either declamation contests, that would be people saying<br />

poems in the lower grades, and then for the high school, it would be oratorical<br />

contests. I remember one <strong>of</strong> the ones I had was a poem called the<br />

"New South." William--oh, what was his name? It's something--William O'Grady,<br />

O'Grady is the last name, who wrote a beautiful kind <strong>of</strong> speech after the Civil<br />

War. You know, what does he find? He finds his house in ruins, his farms<br />

decimated. It's a story <strong>of</strong> what a Southerner found when he came back from the<br />

war after the war was over. I just remember that was one <strong>of</strong> the orations that<br />

we did. It was all on a competitive basis with people judging you on memory,<br />

articulation, the whole thing, you know.<br />

Q: Was there any debate involved in it?<br />

A: Well, we did not have any debates as a part <strong>of</strong> that "rally," but we used to<br />

have debates in our high school and they would give us some subject that,<br />

really, there was no answer to it. For example, I remember once when we had


a debate on , "What is most destructive, fire or water?" Well, <strong>of</strong> course,<br />

there is no real answer but the idea was to inculcate in you the desire to do<br />

research. So you would have to go to the library and look up the various<br />

things that you would then debate, as to which was the more destructive. So,<br />

we had debates and they always gave you a subject that was, almost, incapable<br />

<strong>of</strong> having any final answer. But that wasn't the point, the point was to get<br />

you to do the research and the study and to give it in a convincing fashion.<br />

Q: How was it organized? Were you within the English . . .<br />

A: Part <strong>of</strong> the English department, yes. Part <strong>of</strong> the English department.<br />

Q: It was a team, though, that was set up, like two teams?<br />

A: Yes, like two on each side or something <strong>of</strong> that sort, yes. Two or<br />

sometimes three.<br />

Q: Did y 4 deb.ate before the school?<br />

A: Before the school body, student body? Yes.<br />

Q: Did you enjoy that sort <strong>of</strong> thing?<br />

A: Oh, I really enjoyed it. It was great. Taught you how to look up things,<br />

how to present them, how to knock down the points <strong>of</strong> others and how to minimize<br />

the strength or impact <strong>of</strong> what the other person was saying. It was<br />

great, really great for us.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> resources did you have? Your own library in the school there@<br />

Gas it a good one?<br />

A: No, not really. For a long period <strong>of</strong> time, we did not have access to the<br />

white library, you know. I say white library, it was a library that belonged<br />

to the city. There were times when you couldn't get in there, but I finally<br />

was able to start drawing books out <strong>of</strong> there, eventually.<br />

Q: Was this just in your case? Or was it . . .<br />

A: No. No, that was just for everybody. Nobody could get in. What happened<br />

was, this woman, who was the superintendent <strong>of</strong> schools, found out that I<br />

couldn't get books up there and she went up there and raised hell about it.<br />

She said, "Well, you let these kids have the books." So, I started getting<br />

them and then others, you know, started going in to get them. She gave me my<br />

first book--first<br />

present anyone ever gave me <strong>of</strong> a book, was that: white woman.<br />

Her name was Mrs. Willie A. Lawson. Incidentally, she later became the state<br />

superintendent <strong>of</strong> schools for the State <strong>of</strong> Arkansas, first woman.<br />

Q: Did you own many books when you were . . .<br />

A: Yes, my family always gave me books. I always had some books. We had, you<br />

know, a fair library in our school and I read everything I could get my hands


on. My mother and dad used to give me books at Christmas and birthdays and<br />

that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. Not always just toys.<br />

Q: So you liked reading very much, then.<br />

A: Very much. And still do.<br />

Q: Let's'see, were you involved in plays, dramatics, in any way?<br />

A: Yes, we had dramatics there in high school and also, when I was in college,<br />

I was a member <strong>of</strong> the Players Guild and also a member <strong>of</strong> the debating team<br />

when I was in college. be <strong>of</strong> the motivations for the college was that--the<br />

school had some formal dances and I didn't have a tuxedo, but if you made the<br />

debating team, the school furnished you a tuxedo.<br />

Q: Oh! Well! (laughter)<br />

A: So that was a part <strong>of</strong> my motivation to get into it in college. But I<br />

always enjoyed debating. It's always been a very interesting kind <strong>of</strong> thing<br />

for me.<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> the plays in high school that you took part In?<br />

A: Well, we had a play that we did, East Lynn. And what were some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

others, I don't . . . Death Takes a Holiday, we did that in high school and<br />

in college. I don't remember the names <strong>of</strong> any <strong>of</strong> the rest <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

SESSION 2, TAPE 2, SIDE 1<br />

Q: Sir, what I would like to do, if we could, is spend some more time on<br />

Blytheville and your life in Blytheville.<br />

A: Okay.<br />

Q: What was your first job there, first paying job?<br />

A: I guess my first paying job was selling newspapers.<br />

Q: Yes. You talked about that the other day.<br />

A: No, that's another experience. That was the daily papers. Z first sold<br />

weekly papers, the ones that came out <strong>of</strong> Chicago, Kansas City, and Pittsburgh.<br />

They were black papers and we sold them on the weekends. They were weekly<br />

editions and I started writing a column in those papers so that I could say to<br />

people, "Your name's in the paper,'' and they would buy one. (laughter) They<br />

had news from all over, all these little towns where they sold their papers<br />

down South. I wrote a column in all <strong>of</strong> them, just a little penny-ante news<br />

about different things. As a consequence, people would buy them because<br />

people never got their name in the paper in those days, unless they killed


somebody or something foul. So, had a little column, "Mrs. So-and-so had a<br />

party, a birthday party, or a grandson came to visit from Oceola," or something,<br />

you know.<br />

Q: How old were you at this time?<br />

A: Oh, about nine, ten, something like that.<br />

Q: What was your deadlbe for getting your copy in?<br />

A: Well, you would have to get it in by Tuesday, which meant it usually had<br />

to go out Sunday night so they would get it Tuesday. The paper was printed<br />

abovt Wednesday or Thursday. You would get it back on Friday or Saturday.<br />

Q: Was this for all three <strong>of</strong> the newspapers, you sent the . . .<br />

A: Yes. I think I had two at one time and then, at one time, I had all three<br />

<strong>of</strong> them.<br />

Q: What were the names <strong>of</strong> the papers, sir? Do you remember?<br />

A: The Chicago Defender, the Pittsburgh Courier and the Kansas City Call.<br />

Q: How did you sell these? Did you deliver or did you have a stand?<br />

A: No, I would deliver and I would go downtown on Saturday. A lot <strong>of</strong> people<br />

came in from the country on Saturday, you know, from all the rural areas. I<br />

would just circulate through the crowd and sell them. But I had some regular<br />

customers, you know. Paid six cents for them, sold them for a dime.<br />

Q: And did you get paid for the column that you were writing?<br />

A: No, the incentive for writing the column was to get more people to buy the<br />

paper.<br />

Q: About how many did you sell each . . .<br />

A: Oh, I used to sell maybe fifty to a hundred a week or maybe sometimes a<br />

hundred and fifty. They sold pretty good.<br />

Q: And you were about nine or ten years old at this time?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: How long did you conduct this business?<br />

A: Urn, until--1 guess a couple <strong>of</strong> years.<br />

Q: Why did you stop?<br />

A: I don't know. I don't know. I got a little past that and started working


in drugstores and, you know, different things--regular jobs and stuff.<br />

(taping stopped for intercom conversation, then resumed)<br />

Q: You moved on to a job in a drugstore, you say?<br />

A: Yes, I became a porter in the drugstore and delivery boy in it. I had a<br />

couple <strong>of</strong> those jobs and I worked those and I still carried my daily paper<br />

route. I had two jobs at: that time, because I was delivering my daily paper<br />

route and working at the drugstore as a delivery boy.<br />

Q: How large a route did you have?<br />

A: About two hundred papers.<br />

Q; Was it morning or evening delivery?<br />

A: I had both. At one period, I had the morning paper, which was the<br />

Commercial Appeal, which came out <strong>of</strong> Memphis, Tennessee. I would get up at<br />

Eive o'clock in the morning and pick those up. I always get a kick out <strong>of</strong><br />

watching the kids deliver morning papers now. Sometimes my paper comes at<br />

eight, nine o'clock in the morning. When I was a kid, we picked them up at<br />

Eive and I would have my papers delivered before six-thirty. Because when you<br />

said you had a morning paper for somebody, you had a morning paper, it wasn't<br />

a mid-day paper.<br />

Q: What was the other paper?<br />

A: Well, I used to also handle the Memphis Press Scimitar, that was a Hearst<br />

paper that came out in the afternoon. 1 had a paper route for them once. I<br />

once had the paper route for Hearst for the Memphis Press Scimitar and the<br />

Blytheville Courier, which was an afternoon paper at home, at the same time.<br />

So, I used to have two, carried two <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

Q: What were the newspaper reading habits in your family? Did your father<br />

read extensively in the newspapers?<br />

A: Extensively. Cover to cover. And resented any messing up <strong>of</strong> the paper.<br />

In other words, if you read a paper ahead <strong>of</strong> him, he wanted it in order and<br />

he wanted it neat when you got through with it. That's something I can always<br />

remember. You know, there have been a lot <strong>of</strong> arguments in families about I.<br />

that. Some people, when they get through reading the paper, it looks like<br />

it's been through a paper mill or something, you know.<br />

Both my mother and father were omnivorous readers. They read everything.<br />

Papers, magazines. There was always family discussion about current events and<br />

what was going on in the world, always.<br />

Q: In those discussions, you were a little young at the time, but do you recall<br />

anything said about prohibition?<br />

A: (pause) No, I don't remember any discussion about prohibition. I remember<br />

I


when prohibition was over and they had the three-point-two beer and something<br />

like that. Not many discussions about liquor, I don't remember much. We<br />

never had a lot <strong>of</strong> liquor in my house. My daddy would make grape wine and<br />

blackberry wine. They would have it for ceremonial things, like Christmas<br />

when people would have cake and wine or something. But very little drinking<br />

was in the home.<br />

Q: So, you don't recall your father's position on prohibition, then?<br />

A: No, I do not.<br />

Q: Living in an agricultural community, did you work much on the farms, out<br />

surrounding . . .<br />

A: &, yes, there were some summers I spent with farm families when my mother<br />

would go away to college for the summer. I would spend the summer with a farm<br />

family and worked on the farm with them, sure.<br />

Q: Was this the same family more than one summer?<br />

A: Yes, Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian, who were a nice family. I stayed with themi<br />

couple <strong>of</strong> summers.<br />

Q: Were they black or white?<br />

A: They were black, but they owned their own farm.<br />

Q: How large a farm was it?<br />

A: About a hundred and sixty acres.<br />

Q: How old were you at this time?<br />

A: You know, I guess maybe . . . eleven, twelve, thirteen, something like that.<br />

Q: Did you learn to drive the horses in the field? Or that type work?<br />

A: No. No, I wasn't big enough to fool with the horses, they used mules,<br />

anyway. I wasn't large enough to handle a horse or mule.<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> work did you do on the farm, then?<br />

A: The chores. You know, feed the chickens, slop the hogs, bring in firewood.<br />

Various kinds <strong>of</strong> chores like that which were just peripheral to actual farm<br />

life, was just a part <strong>of</strong> it. I chopped cotton and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. Carried<br />

water to the field hands and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing.<br />

Q: Did you help with the milking?<br />

A: Never helped with the milking, no.<br />

I


Q: You didn't do any real field work, then, while you . . .<br />

A: Not basically, no.<br />

Q: You indicated that you had done some clearing <strong>of</strong> land, or worked at that<br />

at some time.<br />

A: Yes, I guess that was probably my senior year in high school. Just before<br />

graduation, we took a few days out and worked in this new ground to get some<br />

money to get clothes and other items for graduation.<br />

Q: And what type <strong>of</strong> work did you do there? The chopping <strong>of</strong> trees or . . .<br />

A: Chopping <strong>of</strong> trees, burning stumps, getting--you see, sometimes they would<br />

haul away part <strong>of</strong> the debris and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing and you would load the<br />

trucks and stuff like that.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> farm was Mr. Sebastian's, predominently? Did they grow<br />

cotton?<br />

A: Cotton, they used to grow cotton and corn. See, in that county was a very<br />

rich land. Actually, probably had the highest production rate <strong>of</strong> cotton in<br />

the world. They grew two bales an acre without fertilizer.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: Yes. The land was very, very productive for cotton and, as a matter <strong>of</strong><br />

fact, that's where they had the first cotton-picking contest in the world.<br />

They used to have it every year. The first prize was $1000, I recall, and<br />

that was a long time ago. They really raised cotton there, they raised more<br />

cotton in that county than in any county in the world.<br />

Q: Did you do any cotton picking while . . .<br />

I<br />

I<br />

A: Yes, I did some cotton picking as a kid. Never was very good at it, never<br />

did really get a handle on being a good one. I just never did. I never<br />

i<br />

picked 200 pounds in a day in my life. One day I had a very good start, I had<br />

140 pounds by one o'clock and I knew I was going to get 200 that day and it<br />

rained. (laughs) Never did really become an efficient cotton picker at all.<br />

Q: How about shucking corn? Did you . . .<br />

I<br />

A: Never did much <strong>of</strong> that, no. 1<br />

Q: When you were clearing the new land, did they work as a large crew?<br />

A: Large crew. I think it paid a dollar, dollar and a half a day or something<br />

like that.<br />

i<br />

Q: Was this a mixed black and white crew?


A: Mixed crews, yes.<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> the foremen on those jobs?<br />

A: No, I do not. I really don't.<br />

Q: Since it was an agricultural conrmunity, there must have been an interest in<br />

the county fair type <strong>of</strong> thing. Was there a county fair each year?<br />

A: Oh, yes, we had county fairs there and they had . . . sewing, preservation<br />

<strong>of</strong> vegetables, mostly canned vegetables. And they got very fancy, like<br />

shingle-pack peaches, and all kinds <strong>of</strong> jellies and jams and best ham, best<br />

shoulders, and the best live animals, you know, hogs. They had, Duroc Jerseys<br />

and Poland China hogs, basically. Those were the big brands in that area.<br />

Chicken production, turkeys and--a regular county fair. But there was a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> competition from the people in the area as to who had the best green beans<br />

and who had the best tomatoes and peppers and all that kind <strong>of</strong> stuff like<br />

that.<br />

Q: Did you make any entries at any time?<br />

A: No, never did make any entries. My mother used to put, you know, fruit and<br />

jams and jellies and stuff like that.<br />

Q: Did Mr. Sebastian have any entries in the fair?<br />

A: I don't know whether I ever remember--remember Mr.--I just don't remember<br />

that--I'm sure Mrs. Sebastian did; particularly, probably; in the sewing<br />

because she was a seamstress, too. (pauses) And they would have things like,<br />

you know, quilts and all that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. People did a lot <strong>of</strong> things for<br />

themselves in those days. The government wasn't giving everybody everything,<br />

you know, nor did people expect it, which is the other side <strong>of</strong> the question.<br />

Q: Did you have a particular family doctor there?<br />

A: Yes, we had Dr. Green and Dr. Roberts. Dr. B. E. Roberts.<br />

Q: Was he black?<br />

A: He was black. Both were black.<br />

Q: Where did he get his training?<br />

A: Meharry Medical College. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, I was delivered by a black<br />

doctor whose name was Dr. Joe Armillo Banks. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, I have my,<br />

second name from him. My second name is Armillo. Dr. Banks was the doctor 9ho<br />

delivered me. In my hometown, we have always had black doctors and black<br />

I<br />

dentists. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, in my hometown, the first liquor store that<br />

came in after prohibition was owned by two black gentlemen, the first in the<br />

town.


Q: Were there any other doctors or was Dr. Roberts the only one?<br />

A: No, there was Dr. Green there, Dr. Gabashine. Dr. Keith and Young were<br />

the dentists, The dentist there now is a Dr. Nunn, who was my high school<br />

basketball coach, who went back to school after I got out <strong>of</strong> high school to<br />

become a dentist. We were a fairly progressive town.<br />

Q: Are you still in touch with any <strong>of</strong> those people?<br />

A: Oh, sure. I'm in touch with my coach, now a dentist, Dr. Nunn. Still<br />

in touch with him. His wife now has a Ph.D. and teaches at a college in<br />

Memphis. His three sons all have their degrees. One is a lawyer and one is<br />

teaching and--I don't know what the other is doing, but they're all doing<br />

something valuable and worthwhile.<br />

You see, in that class that I finished high school--there were thirteen <strong>of</strong> us<br />

in that class and ten out <strong>of</strong> that thirteen now have college degrees and three<br />

have degrees past the college level. That's a pretty good record for a little<br />

town like that, where everybody was poor, but we got a lot <strong>of</strong> incentive and a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> desire from our high school and from our teachers. Everybody just<br />

tried to do something, we just went out and everybody worked and made some<br />

accomplishaents.<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> incentive? Was there a particular teacher that was . . .<br />

A: Well, I think--the town was fairly close-knit. You know, you didn't just<br />

see your teachers during the school time. They all belonged to the churches<br />

and you saw them every Sunday at church, also. So, there was sort <strong>of</strong> a continuation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the educational process between school and church and home and<br />

that was a very close relationship--between the school and the churches and<br />

the homes and the parents and the PTA [Parent-Teachers Association] and the<br />

schools. It all kind <strong>of</strong> worked together. Although we knew that we were<br />

deprived and segregated and subject to divisional kinds <strong>of</strong> governmental spending,<br />

we knew that, if you wanted to do something, you had to be good at it<br />

and you had to work harder, probably, to get the chance to do it. Among those<br />

kinds <strong>of</strong> programs, I think most <strong>of</strong> us got inspired to just to go on to try<br />

to do something better for ourselves.<br />

-<br />

Q: Were other teachers doing as your mother was in summer, going on during<br />

the summer?<br />

A: Many <strong>of</strong> them, yes. Many <strong>of</strong> them were going on to schools during the<br />

summer, that is correct. Because they all, you see, in that day started right<br />

out <strong>of</strong> high school, or very shortly thereafter, or after a normal school or<br />

something, and as conditions improved and requirements got greater they would<br />

go to school six weeks in the sumner, or twelve weeks in the summer if they<br />

could afford it, until they finally got their degrees.<br />

1 can remember a woman who wanted to borrow some money from me to go to summer<br />

school, a teacher. I was about twelve, fourteen, and I was afraid to lend it


to her for fear she wouldn't pay me back. So I went down to the bank and<br />

talked to the president. Told him that I wanted to put the money in the bank<br />

and let her borrow it, ostensibly, from the bank and not from me, because<br />

I knew she would pay the bank back. He thought that was kind <strong>of</strong> interesting<br />

that I would have that kind <strong>of</strong> foresight.<br />

He was a pretty tough old man. He ran the whole town, you know, the sheriff<br />

tipped his hat to this old man, you know, this "Mr. Big." So, my father said<br />

to me when I was going down there, he said, "You kind <strong>of</strong> scared <strong>of</strong> Mr. ~ynch?"<br />

I said, "No, I'm not scared, daddy." He says, "Well," he said, "he's just a<br />

man like anybody else," he says, "and when you go in there, don't see him<br />

sitting behind that big desk. In your mind's eye, you see him sitting on a<br />

toilet stool with his pants down and look him in his eye and talk to him,''<br />

And that's what I did. (laughter) Because I don't care how big a guy was,<br />

could be the president <strong>of</strong> the United States, sometimes if you ever feel like<br />

you're awed <strong>of</strong> somebody, just look them dead in the eye, but in your mind's<br />

eye, see them sitting on a toilet stool with their pants down and then you're<br />

comfortable to them.<br />

My father had a Lot <strong>of</strong> very interesting philosophy. As I, said, he really was<br />

not a college man, but he was a bright man. Had a lot <strong>of</strong> very interesting<br />

philosophy and knew how to program his mind to get things done or to inspire<br />

you to do them, you know. That's a hell <strong>of</strong> a thing for him to--I don't think<br />

I could ever come up with anything that bright to tell my kids, you know,<br />

to . . . But sometimes education can be helpful and then sometimes it can be<br />

burdensome. Because I think sometimes when you have a lot <strong>of</strong> education yau<br />

are concerned about how did Spinoza do it or how did this philosopher do it<br />

or what did this man think. And sometimes you're so concerned about trying<br />

to remember what somebody has done or said that you don't spend enough time<br />

trying to figure out how to best say it er do it yourself.<br />

Q: Yes. And therefore it doesn't relate to the specific situation you're in.<br />

A: Yea. I really believe that I'm very fortunate to have had two parents,<br />

one with formal education and one without formal education, because I had two<br />

parents who both were very educated in the context <strong>of</strong> how to get along in the<br />

world and how to get along with people and how to maximize your own talents.<br />

I'm very, very fortunate to have had that because, sometimes, I see a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

people get so bookish that they deprive themselves <strong>of</strong> that natural thought<br />

process. You've seen that happen, haven't you?<br />

Q: Yes, sir. (pause) What was the banker's name?<br />

A: (~ause) Lynch. Trying to remember his first name. Think it was<br />

AnOrhel<br />

Bert<br />

Lynch. (chuckles) Sounds like Bert down to Georgia, doesn't it?<br />

Bert Lynch.<br />

Q:<br />

1<br />

Yes. (laughter) Yes. Did the Depression have any particular effect n<br />

Blytheville or on your family?<br />

A: Oh, <strong>of</strong> course it did. It didn't have a great deal on my mother becausq my


mother was in a school system and that, you know, sort <strong>of</strong> stayed pretty much<br />

as it was. W e didn't have anything like script or anything like that; they<br />

wer *e paid their regular salaries. As to my dad, it did have an effect because,<br />

you know, the price <strong>of</strong> cotton went down. I remember they had a song, "~ive<br />

cents cotton and ten cents meat. How's a poor man gonna eat?" (chuckles)<br />

Cotton was not as big as it had been.<br />

I think for one period my dad worked for a governmental project.<br />

Be worked<br />

with the, what they called . . . CCC [Civilian Conservation Corps] camps they<br />

had. And he was sort <strong>of</strong> a supervisor down at one <strong>of</strong> those CCC camps for, oh,<br />

about a year, I guess.<br />

Q: Where was this located?<br />

A: Dyer, Arkansas.<br />

Q: Do you know what kind <strong>of</strong> project it was?<br />

A: It was a project where they were cleaning new ground, Yes. Preparing the<br />

woods for agricultural pursuits.<br />

Q: Did he act as foreman d m<br />

there, then?<br />

A: He was a foreman down there, yes.<br />

Q: About what year was that, do you recall?<br />

A: I can't remember. I was just trying to think <strong>of</strong> that, an instant before<br />

you asked. I only remember being down there once; he was home on the weekend<br />

and we took him back down there, so it had to be--well, it was after 1930,<br />

because we wouldn't have had a car before 1930. It was probably 1932, 1933,<br />

1934, somewhere along in there. I know Roosevelt was president then,<br />

because he brought on the program and Roosevelt wasn't elected until 1932.<br />

So it had to be after 1932, probably 1933 or 1934.<br />

Q: So, other than that, you didn't see any drastic effect in the family.<br />

A: Well, no. No, not any drastic effect in the family at all. There was a<br />

general economic down spiral, but most <strong>of</strong> the people in my community had not<br />

been affluent anyhow, you know, not really affluent, so--it really didn't<br />

affect poor people as much as it did people who had made big money, you know.<br />

Q: Did your mother have much difficulty in locating a school for summer . . .<br />

A: No, none whatsoever. No, she always had a very high, good reputation as a<br />

teacher and there were always plenty <strong>of</strong> schools, she had her choices.<br />

Q: You said your first encounter with a lawyer was at Little Rock a t a very<br />

young age. Did you know any lawyers there in Blytheville?<br />

A: Yes, there was a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Barham, George W. Barham, who was a


lawyer who became a judge there. He was very enraptured with the music at<br />

our high school, so much so that he took a group <strong>of</strong> our students to his<br />

hometown, which happened to be Bloomington, <strong>Illinois</strong>, one year to sing in<br />

some programs they had up there. That was a long, long way from Blytheville<br />

in those days. You know, over three hundred miles, and that was a twp-day<br />

trip almost, you know.<br />

Q: Went by train, I suppose.<br />

A: No, they drove up there.<br />

Q: Oh, they did?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: You weren't in this group.<br />

A: No, I was a little too young, but I remember when they went.<br />

Q: Did you get to know anything about a lawyer's trade, as it were?<br />

A: No, not really.<br />

Q: So, you didn't know any <strong>of</strong> them that well?<br />

A: No. Well, I knew them but then 1 just wasn't involved, you know, wasn't<br />

something I was involved in.<br />

Q: On trips--now, you had traveled to Toledo and to Chicago here and so on--<br />

what was it like traveling by train as a black in the 1920's and 19301a?<br />

A: Well, I was quite young but I do remember we were segregated into a, you<br />

know, black section and when we went from St. Louis to Toledo, I remember<br />

that we sat in the mixed part <strong>of</strong> the train. There was no segregation between<br />

St. Louis and Toledo. My mother says when I got on the car, I was four years<br />

old, that I said, "Mama, are we in the right place? This is the white folks<br />

train," or something like that. And my uncle, who had got on the train with<br />

US, says, "No, that isn't. Anybody can sit anywhere they want to now, when<br />

you're going this way."<br />

When we were going out to Toledo, there were a couple <strong>of</strong> teachers on this<br />

train, white teachers, two women. They got to talking to me and teaching me<br />

nursery rhymes and stuff and my mother said I picked them up so fast, these<br />

ladies asked her to let them adopt me and take me with them and my mother<br />

said, "No, no way. 'I Couldn't leave me, couldn't let me go. I don't know<br />

whether they meant it, I guess they did, they asked anyway. They just liked my<br />

answers. They were teaching me nursery rhymes and 1 was picking them up fast,<br />

you know, so they just kind <strong>of</strong> liked that. I guess they were a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

unmarried ladies, I don't know.<br />

Q: Did you have any problem eating on the train?


A: Not on that train. They didn't have any diners on a train, anyway, in<br />

those days. Everybody took their own lunch in a shoebox. Everybody took<br />

their own lunch. Couldn't afford, probably, the diners, anyway, you see.<br />

I remember once my dad was on the train and they charged 1 5 for ~ a Coke and<br />

he just about had a fit, called them "robber barons" and everything else.<br />

1 thought about him the other day. I was at a real fancy golf course and<br />

stopped at the pop machine to buy a Coke, and it was 75C. I thought about<br />

my dad and the time they charged him 15C for a Coke on a train and he just<br />

went into orbit, you know, because he just thought it was just disgraceful<br />

that anybody would rob you like that. How things change.<br />

Every once in awhile something happens in my life that causes me to think<br />

about my dad and what his reaction would have been, you know, in the days<br />

when he lived, because he died in 1937 and there have been a hell <strong>of</strong> a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> changes in this country since 1937. We didn't have television, we didn't<br />

have airplanes like we have today, a lot <strong>of</strong> things like that. It would be<br />

just almost mind-blowing, to anybody coming back from that period now, to see<br />

some <strong>of</strong> the "modernities. "<br />

See, we have lived through the most advanced age <strong>of</strong> mankind. There have been<br />

more technological advances in the last fifty years than in any other period<br />

<strong>of</strong> world development. You see, I can remember riding in a buggy with my<br />

grandfather, riding in a wagon with Mr. Sebastian and other farmers, and now<br />

you travel by jet airplane. I can remember the first time I ever heard a<br />

radio in a car, I must have been ten years old or something. I was walking<br />

down the street and this man comes by and you hear this music coming out <strong>of</strong><br />

the car and you can't believe it. So the kids ran alongside and he would turn<br />

up the music and then slow down, then speed up when we got right by the car.<br />

It was just unbelievable that there would be a radio in a car, just<br />

unbelievable. Now you can sit in your living room and by Telestar you see<br />

Europe, a football game played in Hawaii, the whole thing. So we have really<br />

had from transportation, from communication--particularly in transportation<br />

and communication, the difference has been so much, just so great.<br />

I can remember, you know, T-model Fords and people getting their arms broken<br />

from trying to crank the damn things. Now you get in the cars with air<br />

conditioning and put the thing on, you know, safety sentinel, you put on the<br />

speed and take your foot <strong>of</strong>f the accelerator, yes. So there have been a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> advances and changes we've lived through that age. How old a man are you?<br />

I don't know.<br />

Q: I'm fifty-five now.<br />

A: Well, you can remember all the things I'm talking about, then.<br />

Q: Well, pretty much. Yes, sir. I was born in 1924, so . . .<br />

A: I'm 1921.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. When did you have your first radio in the home?


A: (pause) I don't know. I think probably . . . almost as long as I can<br />

remember, we had a radio at our house and almost as long as I can remember,<br />

we had a telephone. We were one <strong>of</strong> the few families in our area that had<br />

one, I can always remember a telephone put in for a long, long time.<br />

Q: Sir, was there any activist sort <strong>of</strong> thing going on, say in the 19301s,<br />

in the Blytheville area? Against discrimination, for example, were there<br />

any individuals that were involved in that sort <strong>of</strong> thing?<br />

A: Well, there were always some individuals who would be involved. Who, you<br />

know, just wouldn't take a lot <strong>of</strong> the stuff that they put on. A person like<br />

that, they would simply call him crazy and let it go at that, rather than<br />

get everybody else stirred up. But nothing, really, to compare with the kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> activism that exists today, no. You see, you've got to remember that<br />

people still remembered some <strong>of</strong> the violence <strong>of</strong> the period after the Civil<br />

War. There was, you know, this threat <strong>of</strong> lynchings and Ku Klux Klan; all that<br />

was still in the back <strong>of</strong> the older people's minds and they remembered all <strong>of</strong><br />

the concerted meanness. Comparatively, there wasn't a lot <strong>of</strong> racial animosity<br />

in my town. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, there were instances where, you know, there<br />

would be an interracial love affair or something and they would probably just<br />

spirit the guy out <strong>of</strong> town or something. They never had any lynchings and a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> stuff like that. We just didn't have it.<br />

Q: Was the Ku Klux Klan very active in that area?<br />

A: Not at all.<br />

Q: (pause) How did you come to choose Tennessee State as a school, sir?<br />

A: Well, after I finished high school, I was given a scholarship to Morehouse<br />

College in Atlanta and was prepared to go there. Incidentally, that's the<br />

school that Martin Luther King attended. They opened about the first <strong>of</strong><br />

September and a fellow came through there in August, that we knew, who went to<br />

Tennessee State and he was telling me about Tennessee State and Tennessee<br />

State had a course in business administration and that's what I wanted to<br />

take. It opened on the 28th <strong>of</strong> September, about three weeks later than the<br />

school in Atlanta, and I had this little job that summer, so I figured I<br />

could work another three weeks before I went to school. And Tennessee was my<br />

mother's home state and she, <strong>of</strong> course, was high on it. So, I made the choice<br />

and I changed from Morehouse to Tennessee State almost on that three week<br />

basis.<br />

Q: Did the scholarship change, too? Or did you give that up?<br />

A: No, the scholarship did not change, I gave that up, but I got a job<br />

working at Tennessee State.<br />

Q: What was the scholarship based on?<br />

A: Scholarship.


Q: Because <strong>of</strong> your standing in high school.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Had you worked toward this, knowing it as a goal?<br />

A: Not as a goal, no. I just had always been impelled to do as well as I<br />

could and that's why I did it. Scholarships weren't that wide-open like<br />

they are now. There were a lot fewer scholarships in those days than there<br />

are now. But I always figured wherever I went to school I was going to have<br />

to work anyhow, so the scholarship wasn't the main incentive. Just doing<br />

well was the incentive.<br />

Q: Who sponsored that scholarship?<br />

A: Well, Morehouse at that time had very close affiliations with the Baptist<br />

church and we were Baptists and I suppose I got a recommendation from my<br />

minister and then they looked at your record against the records <strong>of</strong> others<br />

who sought to come there .and then decided from among them who should get<br />

the few scholarships they had.<br />

Q: What year was this when you entered Tennessee State?<br />

A: 1938.<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> job did you find there?<br />

A: I didn't find any, they gave me one. You know, you just came in and you<br />

said you wanted to go to school and you wanted to work part <strong>of</strong> it and--they<br />

gave me a job. They gave me a job in the laundry. I worked in the laundry<br />

about two or three months when the head <strong>of</strong> the business department told the<br />

president that I was too smart to work in the laundry and they wanted to<br />

change my job and they brought me up to the comptroller's <strong>of</strong>fice. So I worked<br />

in the business <strong>of</strong>fice from that point forward.<br />

Q: How soon was this after you had started working there?<br />

A: About three months. That sounds braggadocio but I'm just telling you what<br />

the lady said. (chuckles) Not bragging, telling you what the lady said.<br />

Q: What did you do in the comptroller's <strong>of</strong>fice?<br />

A: Oh, worked business machines, regular <strong>of</strong>fice work, filing, just regular<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice work, clerical work.<br />

Q: You started school then, I guess, in September <strong>of</strong> 1938?<br />

A: Of 1938, that's correct.<br />

Q: What were the living conditions like there?


CHARLES CECIL AND BESSIE DUPREE PARTEE, 1918.<br />

"I had two parents who were very<br />

educated in tk context <strong>of</strong> how to<br />

get along in the w odd. "<br />

PHPTOCRAPHS. EXCEPT WHERE OTHERWISE<br />

CREDITED. COURTESY OF CECIL A. PARTEE.


COURTESY OF BESSIE D. IVY<br />

THE FIVE ROOM HOUSE IN BLYTHEVILLE, ARKANSAS, IN WHICH CECIL PARTEE WAS<br />

BORN.<br />

"Had a lot <strong>of</strong>flowers and a garden<br />

in the back."


COURTESV OF BESSIE D. IVY<br />

CECIL PARTEE, WITH BRIEFCASE. ARRIVING FOR HIS FIRST DAY AT SCHOOL. BLYTHE-<br />

VILLE, ARKANSAS, SEPTEMBER 1927.<br />

"We had a book called a primer<br />

and it was the story <strong>of</strong> a young<br />

boy called Baby Ray. "


CECIL PARTEE (L) DISCUSSING A COMMENCEMENT PROGRAM WITH DR.<br />

ANDREW P. TORRENCE, PRESIDENT OF TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY,<br />

ca. 1972. PARTEE, WHO GRADUATED FROM THE UNIVERSITY IN 1942,<br />

WAS THE PRINCIPLE SPEAKER AT THIS COMMENCEMENT EXERCISE.<br />

"Tennessee State had a course in business<br />

administration and that's what I wanted to<br />

take."


CORNEAL DAVIS (L) AND CEClL PARTEE. WHEN PARTEE ARRIVED<br />

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES IN 1957, DAVIS HAD GAINED<br />

THE EXPERIENCE OF 14 YEARS, HAVING STARTED HIS LEGISLA-<br />

TIVE CAREER IN 1943.<br />

"We got a lot <strong>of</strong>guidance, in particular<br />

from Corneal Davis."


CECIL PARTEE (L) CONFERRING WITH CHICAGO MAYOR<br />

RICHARD DALEY.<br />

"He would discuss things with me and<br />

was pretty much on my own to<br />

make the decisions."


A: Beautiful. I stayed in the dormitory and they had nice dormitories and<br />

excellent food. They had a cafeteria style service and the food was<br />

exdellent. Very much unlike many <strong>of</strong> the colleges in that day where they had<br />

the boarding house style where they put the platter on the table and you<br />

would pass it around. We didn't have that at all. We had cafeteria food and<br />

it was excellent food.<br />

Q: It didn't get worse as time went on by?<br />

A: No, sir. It was beautiful.<br />

Q: Was this in the dormitory that you ate?<br />

A: Well, there was a cafeteria; the cafeteria was in its own building,<br />

separate building.<br />

Q: Let's see, Tennessee State, now, was that en entire black school?<br />

A: All-black school, yes.<br />

Q: Is it still today? Presumably not, I guess.<br />

A: It is now a part <strong>of</strong> the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Tennessee system. That's been a<br />

big problem. They have made it a part <strong>of</strong> the system and have just merged it<br />

with a predominantly white school, which was in downtown Nashville, which<br />

came into being since I left. It still has a black president. It's not a<br />

black school anymore because there is a lot <strong>of</strong> white people there. The<br />

school's still in existence, but as a merged school.<br />

Q: What courses did you take that first year?<br />

A: Well, I took typing, I took business mathematics, English, world history,<br />

geography. Also art and music appreciation.<br />

Q: Were there any organizations on campus that you joined that first year?<br />

A: Yes. Yes, there were four fraternities and four sororities on that campus<br />

and I joined the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity,<br />

Q: Did they have a fraternity house?<br />

A: No fraternity houses, no.<br />

Q: Whdre did you meet, then?<br />

A: We would just meet in a designated room in the dormitory.<br />

Q: Was there a rush period for that?<br />

A: Yes, they had a rush period, where they had what they called a "smoker<br />

They would have a smoker in which you would be introduced to the varlous


36<br />

fraternities and then you made a choice. I pledged in January <strong>of</strong> my freshman<br />

year and I was actually inducted in November <strong>of</strong> my sophomore year.<br />

Q: So this was a whole year process <strong>of</strong> making the decision.<br />

A: About six months, really, Between January and November, with being out<br />

for the summer, <strong>of</strong> course.<br />

Q: Did you have a rigorous initiation into the . . .<br />

A: Yes, it was quite rigorous, both mentally and physically, There was a lot<br />

<strong>of</strong> physical attachment to joining a fraternity in those days, with paddles<br />

and all that kind <strong>of</strong> thing, and then there were some guys who would put you<br />

to some mental tests. My final week, some fellow asked me to learn a poem to<br />

say that night. It was a poem, "~ungha Din," which was a little over a<br />

hundred lines. He asked me to commit it to memory for a presentation during<br />

that week and I did. I don't remember it now, because I learned it under<br />

force, but I had to commit "~ungha Din" to memory for this guy. So, they put<br />

you through a lot <strong>of</strong> both physical and mental stress and strain.<br />

Q: Did you feel that it was helpful, the fraternity?<br />

A: Well, I suppose at that day and time it had a great deal <strong>of</strong> meaning, to be<br />

a fraternity man was a social kind <strong>of</strong> attribute and a lot <strong>of</strong> things are<br />

geared along social lines, in addition to the school side <strong>of</strong> it. It was<br />

helpful, I suppose. It gave you a close liaisan with a group <strong>of</strong> men throughout<br />

the country. I still have a very good liaison with--as a matter <strong>of</strong> fact,<br />

we had our annual convention here this year and I was the master <strong>of</strong> ceremonies<br />

<strong>of</strong> a roast, we roasted one <strong>of</strong> our brothers, a fellow who is now the mayor <strong>of</strong><br />

Los Angeles, Tom Bradley, who is a Kappa also. Any town I go into, I can,<br />

just through my Kappa contacts, be put in immediate contact with some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

top people in that city. So I guess, from that vantage point, it has some<br />

meaning.<br />

Q: Was it helpful scholastically in the . . .<br />

A: Well, I suppose I could have got along without it. There were nice guys<br />

in there who you could study with and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing, some guys who<br />

could give you some information about past examinations or things <strong>of</strong> that<br />

sort, or particular teachers' foibles or attitudes or mentality, but that was<br />

not on the major side. That was kind <strong>of</strong> a minor side <strong>of</strong> it, but it could<br />

happen.<br />

Q: You say there were three other fraternities on the . . .<br />

A: Yes, three other fraternities and three other sororities. (pause) I<br />

guess I chose the one I did because I sort <strong>of</strong> liked the guys in that one<br />

better than I did the others. I guess that's what it was about.<br />

Q: Did you know any <strong>of</strong> the . . .


A: I didn't know any <strong>of</strong> them until I got to school. I didn't know any <strong>of</strong><br />

those people until I got there.<br />

Q: Was there anyone back home that knew <strong>of</strong> that fraternity?<br />

A: Yes, but I didn't really realize that, because I hadn't really had any<br />

discussion with anybody back home about fraternities. There was a man for<br />

whom I had worked one summer, a dentist at home that I had worked for. In<br />

those days, dentists made their own teeth and he taught me how to bake the<br />

teeth, the enamel on, and all that sort <strong>of</strong> stuff. So, I worked for him one<br />

summer and when I came back, I had my indication <strong>of</strong> my pledging on my lapel.<br />

He noted that I had a scroll which was a pledge pin for Kappa and he said,<br />

"oh, you're gonna be a Jhppa." I said, "~es." He says, "I'm a Kappa."<br />

And I didn't realize it until then, because I had really had no basic conversation<br />

with anybody about the fraternities until I got there. I'm sort <strong>of</strong><br />

glad I did, because I made the choice on my own without any kind <strong>of</strong> prior<br />

influences. Yes.<br />

Q: (pause) Going back a little bit, was there any individual in high school<br />

that gave you a reason for wanting to go to Tennessee State? Other than<br />

perhaps your mother's interest?<br />

A: No, nobody had really mentioned that school at all. I don't know, I just<br />

always assumed I would go to college and--because I always wanted to be a<br />

doctor, that was my plan.<br />

Q: Oh? A physician?<br />

A: A physician, yes. I found out one day that I had no chemistry for blood<br />

and illness and I hated to be around people when they were sick because I<br />

didn't feel I could do enough for them. So I abandoned the notion <strong>of</strong> begng a<br />

doc tor.<br />

I really went into business because I had wanted to be an actuary, because I<br />

did very well in. math and all. I read an article once about a fellow who was<br />

an actuary and there were only three or four black actuaries in the United<br />

States and I said, "My God, if you'd get to be one <strong>of</strong> those, you could always<br />

get a good job and you wouldn't have to worry and all that." So, I started<br />

out and wanted to be an actuary. By the time I got to be a sophomore in<br />

college and got involved in accounting, I just decided that wasn't for me<br />

because it's a pr<strong>of</strong>ession--I thought, you know--for people who are kind <strong>of</strong><br />

loners, who like to work by themselves and I found I was sort <strong>of</strong> gregarious<br />

and I needed something that involved people.<br />

After I started debating and started doing very well in the debating, it was<br />

suggested to me by one <strong>of</strong> my history pr<strong>of</strong>essors that maybe I ought to consider<br />

going to law school. My roommate was a fellow who came to school saying he<br />

wanted to be a lawyer and so we got to talking about it again and I then<br />

decided probably that would be the way I would go. I would go to law school.


SESSION 2, TAPE 2, SIDE 2<br />

Q: Did you join any clubs in the freshmen year?<br />

A: Yes. Most <strong>of</strong> the major disciplines had their own interest clubs, like<br />

there was a--oh, my freshmen year 1 took physical science too, that was<br />

another course I took. Because the physical science area had a club which<br />

I joined. And I took history and so I joined the History Study Club.<br />

Practically all <strong>of</strong> the major disciplines on that campus had stylized interest<br />

clubs for that particular discipline. History and there was an English club<br />

and, you know, various clubs like that. So I joined most <strong>of</strong> the clubs that<br />

related to my school wo-k, yes.<br />

Q: Did they meet periodically, weekly, or . . .<br />

A: No, they normally didn't meet that <strong>of</strong>ten. What they would do is have one<br />

big project every year. Some sort <strong>of</strong> eye-catching project which would let<br />

the president <strong>of</strong> the tfniversity know that they were really doing something<br />

besides just teaching. It had some cosmetic effect, I'm sure, for them and<br />

it also heightened, I think, the interest <strong>of</strong> kids in that particular discipline<br />

because they would sometimes meet with groups on other campuses in that town,<br />

people in the same kinds <strong>of</strong> fields. See, Nashville was just a plethora <strong>of</strong><br />

colleges, they used to call Nashville the "Athens <strong>of</strong> the South." There were<br />

many other schools that we interfaced with on those kind <strong>of</strong> subjects.<br />

Q: Let's take History Club. Do you remember the first project you were<br />

involved in with it?<br />

A: No, I really don' t.<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> the projects that were underway?<br />

A: Couldn't tell you a single project.<br />

Q: (laughs) When did you start debating, sir?<br />

A: My sophomore year.<br />

Q: How did you get involved with that?<br />

A: Well, the school furnished a tuxedo if you could make the debating team<br />

and I wasn't able to buy one, so I figured if I could make this team, I<br />

could get one, so I did. Came to enjoy it and did very well. As I mentioned<br />

to you earlier, I had done some debating in high school. This was the first<br />

time I had had a debating team where you had an instructor in the art <strong>of</strong><br />

debate.<br />

He found me, I guess, a pretty apt student and interesting and so I<br />

made it. We did some debates there on our own campus and then we debated<br />

some other schools.<br />

Q: Did you just sign up for debate or did you . . .


A: Well, just like going out for the football team, going out for the debating<br />

team, or going out for the choral group, you know. They gave everybody a<br />

chance at it and then they would pick out the ones they want for the team.<br />

Q: What was your first debate, do you remember?<br />

II<br />

A: I really don't. I really don't. I don't remember the subjects on any <strong>of</strong><br />

those. It's interesting, I can remember the ones from high school, but I<br />

can't from college. As I said to you, the ones from high school were subjects<br />

which really didn't have any final answer but they were calculated to inspire<br />

you and inculcate in you the research process. So you would go out and<br />

research things and learn to use a library and get information and all. And<br />

it was more calculated to do that than it was to give you any final answers to<br />

the debate--llke which is more destruative, fire or water, you know, and things<br />

like that. But in college, I don't remember. I don't remember any <strong>of</strong> the<br />

subjects. I don't remember.<br />

II<br />

Q: Did you find much better resource at college for . . .<br />

A: Well, not only better resources but we had individual instruction as to how<br />

best to carry your point. How to, you know, move with the negatives first;<br />

if you had something in your argument that you knew was negative, you should<br />

start with it and build it. At least, give it some sort <strong>of</strong> a veneer that makes<br />

it less vulnerable when the other person attacks it. If somebody is going to<br />

say something about your weak point, it's better you mention your weak point<br />

first so it becomes stronger as you mention it than it would be if you didn't<br />

mention it, sort <strong>of</strong> ignored it and someone comes in and--then<br />

when they knock it down.<br />

it's devastating<br />

It's the same way I do the--you know, it's a carry-over into law. ks I was<br />

practicing law, if I had a person that I represented who had been/to penitentiary<br />

before, I didn't let the state say he had been at penitentiary. In<br />

picking the jury, I would say, "Now, this man has been to the penitentiary.<br />

Are you going to hold that against him in this case? Would you not believe<br />

him, because he's been convicted before?" So that you would take the weakness<br />

<strong>of</strong> your own position, surface it yourself and give it as much strength as is<br />

humanly possible, rather than to sit there and let him look like a choir boy<br />

and then have the other side say, "Well, you know, this guy's been to the<br />

penitentiary before," and then the people say, "Ah, ha!" So, that kind <strong>of</strong><br />

thing.<br />

Q: What other schools did you debate with?<br />

A: Yes, I guess we debated at a school called Lane College. That was down in<br />

Jackson, Tennessee. We had a debate with Fisk <strong>University</strong> which was in Nashville.<br />

I think we debated Kentucky State and--geez, that's so, that's so<br />

fuzzy.


Q: 1've never been involved with a debate team sort <strong>of</strong> thing. When you went<br />

to one <strong>of</strong> these other colleges or universities to debate, was it on a<br />

single subject? Of did you go for two or three days and . . .<br />

A: No, it would be on a single subject. On a single subject and you would<br />

have an allotment <strong>of</strong> time to both sides. You divide up your time, as you<br />

decided, between, say, two or three contestants on either side and then there<br />

would be time for rebuttal and surrebutter. That would be it. Then somebody<br />

would make a decision.<br />

Q: Were these debate sessions well-attended by the student bodies?<br />

A: Well, fairly well attended. Sort <strong>of</strong> relative, wouldn't be as many<br />

people as you would think might be interested. Sometimes it would be more<br />

than you would think would be interested, you know.<br />

Q: So you were on the debate team then for the balance <strong>of</strong> your career there<br />

a t . . .<br />

A: Actually, I guess it was only a couple <strong>of</strong> years because, I don't know, it<br />

just sort <strong>of</strong> faded. They didn't have it after that, I don't think. If<br />

they did, I wasn't aware <strong>of</strong> it. Couple <strong>of</strong> years I took it.<br />

Q: Yes. And you don't recall any specifics on any <strong>of</strong> these other clubs like<br />

the Physical Science Club or the English Club.<br />

A: No, I don't.<br />

Q: How about sports, sir? When did you get involved with sports there?<br />

A: Well, always, as a kid, I played baseball and tennis, and basketball in<br />

high school. When I went to college, I had not the size, physical size, to<br />

make the teams, nor the prowess. The only sports I played in college were<br />

intramural sports. We played intramural football teams and intramural<br />

basketball teams. Physical ed., <strong>of</strong> course, was a requirement so you played<br />

in those areas. But no, none <strong>of</strong> the college sports, on any af the teams, you<br />

know. I didn't play that much tennis in college either because I was<br />

working and really didn't have that much time.<br />

Q: Which courses did you like best at the university? Or at the college?<br />

A: Well, I think probably, American government, English--were probably my<br />

favorites. And the math courses, statistics and tests and measurements and<br />

college algebra. I liked the math courses. Math, English and political<br />

science courses, I think, were my favorites.<br />

Q: Which helped you most in later life?<br />

A: I don't think there's a most, I just think they all sort <strong>of</strong> blend.


4 1<br />

SESSION 3, TAPE 3, SIDE 1<br />

Q: I was in the train station on the way up hers last Friday and ran into<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Rountree.<br />

H<br />

b<br />

A: Oh, yes.<br />

Q: Alvin Rountree from <strong>Springfield</strong>.<br />

A: Yes. Alvin Rountree. And his wife's name is Georgia.<br />

Q: I don't know her that well. I worked with Mr. Rountree , . .<br />

A: She was one <strong>of</strong> the first black teachers in <strong>Springfield</strong>.<br />

Q: Oh, is that right?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: They said that they had been schoolmates <strong>of</strong> yours at Tennessee State.<br />

A: Tennessee State, that's right.<br />

Q: She's from Nashville, I believe.<br />

A: She's from Nashville; he's from East St. Louis.<br />

Q: Oh, he is? I didn't know that. Yes, they were on their way to Kansas City,<br />

I don't know what for, for the weekend. He said he's going to be retiring, I<br />

guess, in about a year. Said he was thinking about going into part-time<br />

teaching, so he would have freedom, and also that he might be involved with<br />

the Urban League in some way or other.<br />

I!<br />

A: Yes, I think he works over in the secretary <strong>of</strong> state's <strong>of</strong>fice, in archives<br />

or somewhere over there.<br />

Q: Yes, in the <strong>Illinois</strong> state archives. hat's where I met him. He's been a<br />

great help in the last three or four years.<br />

I<br />

A: He's been there a long time.<br />

Q: Yes, sir, way back in the thirties. She said to be sure and ask you about<br />

the newspaper you edited at Tennessee Statec<br />

A: Yes, I guess there was--I was editor <strong>of</strong> the paper my senior year, yes.<br />

1 9: What kind <strong>of</strong> paper was it?<br />

A: Just general news circulation. One <strong>of</strong> the things that was disturbing to me<br />

was that we had a request, as a matter <strong>of</strong> fact they were picketing, for /a


gossip column. They wanted a gossip column and I didn't think that it was<br />

appropriate. I made the statement that there was enough gossip, and small<br />

talk, you know, there already and we didn't need to formalize it with a column<br />

and the gentleman, who was my dean and who was the person I reported to under<br />

this project, said, "Well, I want to tell you something." He said, "Gossip<br />

is a part <strong>of</strong> America." He said, "The highest paid journalist in America is<br />

a man named Walter Winchell and that's what his column is. Really, if we get<br />

right down to it, it's gossip. So," he said, "give them a gossip column."<br />

And I relented on that basis.<br />

I decided I would do it thoroughly, so I picked out about eight or ten people,<br />

men and women, mostly women, who were persons who had had some disappointments<br />

on that campus, like girls who had pledged a sorority and did not make it or<br />

girls who were less attractive than others who had been pushed aside for one<br />

reason or the other. I asked them, individually, and privately, to submit to<br />

me gossip and to submit it to me at my post <strong>of</strong>fice box, anonymously. And I<br />

got some real, juicy gossip. And I started to print it. And then I got<br />

burned in effigy because they were mad at this column,it was so introspective<br />

and devastating--but they asked for it.<br />

Q: Was this the same people who had picketed in the first place?<br />

A: I'm sure. I'm sure. The ones who insisted on its inclusion.<br />

Q: How large a paper was it?<br />

A: Eight pages and we had a circulation that would cover the campus. We<br />

had about, I guess, about forty-five hundred kids on the campus. It was an<br />

eight page paper.<br />

Q: How did you have it published? Privately or was it . . .<br />

A: No, it was published by the school, by the printing press there at the<br />

school, yes.<br />

Q: What was the name <strong>of</strong> the paper?<br />

A: Tennessee State Collegian.<br />

Q: So that was your second experience with writing up . . .<br />

A: Yes, it really was, yes. I remember one <strong>of</strong> the editorials that I wrote<br />

that the Dean was just really enamored <strong>of</strong> and it was "Are You in College or Is<br />

College in You?"<br />

Q: Oh? What was the tenor <strong>of</strong> the thing?<br />

A: Well, the thrust <strong>of</strong> it was: "Were you just in college physically or was the<br />

concept <strong>of</strong> college imbedded in your personality and in your thought process?"<br />

If you were just in college physically, you really didn't care much about what<br />

went on or how things went, you weren't really concerned about improving


yourself and so forth. Whereas, in contradistinction, if you had college in<br />

you, then the school itself became a method by which you enlarged your own<br />

perceptions, in which you elasticized your own mind and where you prepared<br />

yourself to make a contribution to society. That was the concept <strong>of</strong> the<br />

differential.<br />

Q: And he really liked that?<br />

A: Oh, he really liked that, yes. He said that was "deep." He said, "NOW<br />

that's deep. I like that .I1 (laughter)<br />

Q: How large a staff did you have for the newspaper?<br />

A: We had about eight or ten people.<br />

Q: Are you still in contact with any <strong>of</strong> those eight or ten?<br />

A: No, I don't think so. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, I can't even remember who they<br />

were, to tell you the truth. (pause) Got it out once a month, I suppose, 1<br />

don't really remember.<br />

Q: How did you get to be editor <strong>of</strong> this? Did you actively go after it?<br />

A: Well, I think the paper was commissioned through the student council and I<br />

was president <strong>of</strong> the student council. The student council had to make a<br />

judgement as to who should be the editor and I suppose I just kind <strong>of</strong> got it<br />

shoved at me, really. I had taken a couple <strong>of</strong> journalism courses and I had<br />

done fairly well, so . . .<br />

Q: What were your functions that you performed in the student council?<br />

A: The student council was divided into four components. We had two freshman<br />

representatives, two sophomore representatives, two juniors and two seniors.<br />

I had been a member <strong>of</strong> the student council since my freshman year. Mostly, we<br />

were a liaison between students and the faculty and the administration; you<br />

know, to articulate the needs, the requests and so forth, <strong>of</strong> the student body.<br />

From time to time, disciplinary problems that arose would be given to us by<br />

the administration to make recommendations as to what should be done in a<br />

particular instance. As I look back on it, I think that the disciplinary prablems<br />

that they gave us were ones that they found it difficult to deal with and<br />

they felt that if we gave our version, our impact on it, then it sort <strong>of</strong><br />

covered their behinds a little bit, you know; so it could be a student decision<br />

rather than an administrative one.<br />

Q: Do you remember any instances <strong>of</strong> . . .<br />

A: I remember one that I thought that we got shafted on. I suppose that's<br />

why it sticks in my mind. There was an extremely, I mean extremely, attractive<br />

young lady who came from St. Louis who said that one <strong>of</strong> her parents was baack<br />

and the other was Chinese. She was a beautiful person physically and notitoo<br />

bad mentally. She was absolutely exquisite. She could have been a movielstar.


She had violated some rule that required her to be back on campus at a certain<br />

time in the evening and she had woefully violated the regulation. She was<br />

supposed to be back at ten-thirty, she got back at two-thirty the next morning<br />

or something, you know. They sent that problem to us, as to what the discipline<br />

should be in that instance. We recommended that she be sent home for the<br />

rest <strong>of</strong> the quarter and return the next quarter and the president overruled<br />

us for some reason or another.<br />

Q: And expelled her, you mean?<br />

A: No, they didn't do anything to her.<br />

Q: Oh, I see, I see. (laughter) Well:<br />

A: Today, with coed dorms, the problem seems like nothing, but then it was a<br />

"biggie." That's the one I do remember because it was such a deviation from<br />

our recommendation, you know. The president just decided, "Well, she'll be<br />

all right," you know.<br />

Q: And I suppose she was all right after that.<br />

A: Oh, I suppose she was, yes.<br />

Q: How did you come to get on the council in your freshman year?<br />

A: I ran for the <strong>of</strong>fice and was elected.<br />

Q: It was the freshman class then that elected you.<br />

A: Freshman class that made the decision, that's correct.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> campaign did you run?<br />

A: Oh, I suppose we had some handbills and you would go around to various<br />

freshman groups and make speeches and tell them what you wanted to do.<br />

Q: Why did you want to be on the council?<br />

A: (pauses) I don't really know. hat's a very interesting question you<br />

have asked me. I don't know. I had always been in some sort <strong>of</strong> leadership<br />

positions in high school. I was president <strong>of</strong> my senior class in high school<br />

and I guess I had--maybe I had <strong>of</strong>fice fever, who knows. I don't know.<br />

Q: Were you encouraged by anyone to do that?<br />

A: No, I wasn't encouraged by anyone. Just decided I wanted to do it . . .<br />

and did it.<br />

Q: Do you remember any 05 the others that served on the council with you<br />

during the four years?


A: Yes, I remember a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Gupton, Wiley Gupton, who was a<br />

senior representative when I was a freshman representative and . . . no,<br />

Wiley Gupton was a junior representative. It was a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong><br />

Luther Glanton who was a senior representative when I was a freshman representative.<br />

He went on from there to Drake <strong>University</strong> to the Law school and<br />

he is now a judge out in Des Moines, Iowa.<br />

There was something about the people that served on the student council that<br />

showed them to be people <strong>of</strong> some maturity and some capability and some<br />

analytical kinds <strong>of</strong> approaches to life, with their feet on the ground, and it<br />

was a nice kind <strong>of</strong> a spot to be in.<br />

Q: Did any <strong>of</strong> them come to <strong>Illinois</strong>? Any one that served on the council,<br />

other than you?<br />

A: I don't remember anyone. Yes, I guess--yes, they did. I think Billy Jones<br />

served on that council and Billy Jones is now a judge down in East St. Louis.<br />

He was from East St. Louis. He was one <strong>of</strong> the others that served on the<br />

council that I can recall.<br />

Q: You mentioned when you changed from your business administrative interest<br />

to law that there was a fellow student that partially influenced you in this.<br />

Who was that?<br />

A: No, my freshman roommate was a fellow whose name is Waldorf Astoria Johnson<br />

who comes from Quincy, Florida. When he came there as a freshman, it was his<br />

desire to become a lawyer. I had not really given much thought to being a<br />

lawyer because I wanted to be an insurance actuary. But, as I took the courses<br />

<strong>of</strong> the freshman and sophomore year with the overview <strong>of</strong> business administration,<br />

I realized that accounting, particularly, was something that took sort <strong>of</strong> an<br />

introverted kind <strong>of</strong> a personality. Particularly after I got into debating in<br />

the sophomore year, I felt that, you know, I was more outgoing and gregarious<br />

than introspective and that I might like something where you dealt with people.<br />

That's when I started sort <strong>of</strong> thinking about going to the law school instead.<br />

ti<br />

Q: Did this change the courses that you . . .<br />

A: Did not change my itinerary. I went ahead and graduated in business administration,<br />

but . . . *<br />

Q: Were there any courses that you took because you knew you were headed<br />

toward law that you wouldn't have taken otherwise?<br />

A: Well, I'm not sure. Of course, we took insurance, we took finance, we<br />

took--1 did take logic, which probably was one I might not have taken if I had<br />

not been thinking about the law. I took statistics, <strong>of</strong> course, which wag part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the other curriculum anyway, and I took tests and measurements which was<br />

about the same thing as the statistics. So, it was pretty much the same, but<br />

I guess I probably took a couple <strong>of</strong> political science courses instead <strong>of</strong> lone.


Q: When did you start thinking about where you night study law?<br />

A: I guess maybe my junior or senior year. There was a pr<strong>of</strong>essor there who<br />

was a graduate <strong>of</strong> Drake <strong>University</strong>, Mr. Eppse, and we had had one or two or<br />

three <strong>of</strong> our graduates to go to Drake law school in Des Moines. So probably<br />

that was where it focused on and they got me a scholarship to go there. Then<br />

someone in the business department had gotten me a scholarship to go to Cornell<br />

to go into a masters in business. Actually, what they wanted me to do was go<br />

up there and get a masters and come back and work at the university in the<br />

business area. In the meantime, I just frankly decided that I didn't want<br />

to go to Des Moines. Because I came from a small town in Arkansas, I wanted<br />

to go to a big city. I had been up in this area a couple <strong>of</strong> summers working<br />

in a steel mill out in Joliet and then I had worked in Chicago one summer. I<br />

liked Chicago and I decided I'd try to come to Chicago. After we made the<br />

arrangement through the State <strong>of</strong> Arkansas for the tuition, then I had my<br />

choices and I came to Chicago instead.<br />

Q: You say you worked summers in a steel mill in Joliet?<br />

A: Yes, I was at what is called a coke plant, Carnegie <strong>Illinois</strong> coke plant.<br />

I became a member <strong>of</strong> the Steelworkers <strong>of</strong> America out there and worked there in<br />

the summer, back in the early forties, at five dollars and eighty cents a<br />

day. Big money.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> work did you do?<br />

A: I was what was called a luterman. When slack coal is cooked and heated,<br />

it's done in ovens, large, large ovens and at the end <strong>of</strong> every oven, there<br />

is a large door, like this door except larger. (points to door <strong>of</strong> the <strong>of</strong>fice)<br />

It's made <strong>of</strong> metal and the cracks around there, you take fire clay and seal<br />

it. You take a trowell, you know, like a bricklayer, and seal those cracks.<br />

That was my job, what's called a luterman. Seal it so that while it cooked,<br />

there would be no air coming in or out. Then you would take the door <strong>of</strong>f and<br />

they would push it through with a big metal coke oven pusher, they called it;<br />

push it out into railroad cars. Take it <strong>of</strong>f and then they would quench it<br />

with water, you know, and make the coke.<br />

Coke was used, I suppose, in steel mills in lieu <strong>of</strong> coal for making steel.<br />

They would put these cokes in there, they got hotter and stayed hot longer.<br />

So this was a coke plant for--you made the coke for use in steel mills<br />

generally.<br />

I worked out there two summers. Had an industrial accident out there. I<br />

almost lost my right leg, which caused me to be given a 4-F status. I missed<br />

school one year because <strong>of</strong> that. 1 didn't get back to being out <strong>of</strong> the<br />

hospftal until around November.<br />

Q: What happened?<br />

A: Fellow who ran the door machine, just through inattention, ran the door<br />

machine into my leg and I had an iron rod that went just about six, five or


six inches, into my leg. And just miraculously missed the bone by a sixteenth<br />

<strong>of</strong> an inch. I was in the hospital most <strong>of</strong> the summer.<br />

Q: How did you come to get the job in Joliet?<br />

A: Well, one spring a fellow came there from Joliet and said there were jobs<br />

up there. And so, when school was out that year, one <strong>of</strong> my friends just took<br />

his dad's car and we drove up there. The jobs weren't that plentiful. I<br />

know the first three or four days around there, we couldn't find anything and<br />

then I finally got a job working at a stove foundry shaking out parts. I was<br />

not physically able to do the work, it was just too much. I think I may have<br />

worked there one or two days and I had to give it up. In the meantime, while<br />

I was waiting to get on at the coke plant, I took a job working for a fanner<br />

cutting asparagus. We cut asparagus for a few days. I don't particuLarly<br />

care for it now. I had too much <strong>of</strong> it. Worked out these about a week and<br />

then I got the job over at the coke plant.<br />

Q: Must have been hard on your back, cutting asparagus.<br />

A: Oh, you better believe it. I always remember what my grandmother used to<br />

say when I was little and I'd be working in a garden with her and 1'd say, "Oh,<br />

my back hurts." She would say, "You don't even have a back, you only have a<br />

gristle." She said, "You don't have a back until you're twenty-one years old.<br />

You got nothing but a gristle back there, so it can't hurt you," you know. But<br />

it is hard on your back, you're leaning over all day long cutting that stuff.<br />

Q: Where did you stay in Joliet?<br />

A: Well, we lived down on Ohio Street with some people. Just a roomer, you<br />

know. It was a room in someone's home. I stayed there for a couple <strong>of</strong> weeks<br />

or so and then I moved up to what is called Riley Hill which was sort <strong>of</strong> a<br />

little area in an unincorporated section between Lockport and Joliet. But<br />

it was right across the road from the coke plant, which made it very convenient.<br />

So I had no transportational cost.<br />

Q: And you spent two summers at this same job, then?<br />

A: Two summers there.<br />

Q: So the second time you returned, they knew you already.<br />

A: Oh, they knew me already, I had no problems then. I had<br />

no problems.<br />

Q: And then you say you worked in Chicago another summer?<br />

A: Yes, I worked for a chemical corporation. Just laboring work for a<br />

company called Emulsol Corporation.<br />

Q: And what did you do there?<br />

A: They had eggs that they powdered and we were packing them in drums for :


shipment all over the world.<br />

It was just laboring work.<br />

Q: And you say you just came to Chicago to look for work then because you<br />

wanted to see what Chicago was like?<br />

A: Yes, and I had a cousin here. I stayed with him and held that job that<br />

summer.<br />

Q: What was his name?<br />

A: Calvin Wills. He had been a Pullman porter for a number <strong>of</strong> years and I<br />

stayed with him. The Pullman porters in those days were in pretty good shape.<br />

They had regular jobs and they made pretty good money. He took me down one<br />

day to get me a job. He made the mistake <strong>of</strong> telling my correct age, which<br />

was a year younger than they were hiring, and I didn't get the job. The man<br />

said to us, "we need people so badly. If you had just lied about it, we'd<br />

have taken him. But now that I know," he said, "I can't." So I missed<br />

being a Pullman porter and traveling all over the country. But I got this<br />

other job.<br />

Q: What did you do during the year you were recovering from the leg injury?<br />

A: Taught school.<br />

Q: Oh, you did?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Where was this?<br />

A: A little town called Birdsong, Arkansas. It was a three-teacher school.<br />

I taught the sixth, seventh and eighth grades, every subject. I had them all<br />

in the same room. 1 suppose there must have been thirty-five kids in the<br />

three grades. They had another teacher for third, fourth and fifth. The<br />

primary teacher taught first and second, and I was the principal.<br />

Q : Well !<br />

A: Yes. The school didn't start until late in November and then I got out<br />

there. They were a very interesting little group <strong>of</strong> kids. In my eighth grade<br />

class graduation, there were eight youngsters. My mother came down and<br />

delivered the commencement address for me. Of my kids, I know where about<br />

three <strong>of</strong> them are. One <strong>of</strong> them went on to finish high school and college and<br />

got a masters and is the head <strong>of</strong> the art department in the high school system<br />

in my hometown.<br />

Q: Oh, is that right?<br />

A: Another has a masters and is teaching in Chicago. The third one is teaching<br />

out in California, out <strong>of</strong> that eight. Now, I don't know about the other five,<br />

I just don't know where they are.


Q: And you're still in touch with these three, are you?<br />

A: Yes. Well, I mean pretty much in touch with two <strong>of</strong> them. One <strong>of</strong> them<br />

I don't see very <strong>of</strong>ten.<br />

Q: Did you enjoy the year <strong>of</strong> teaching?<br />

A: Enjoyed it immensely. It was really a thrill to me to impart knowledge.<br />

I just really get a glow when someone is wrestling with a concept that you are<br />

seeking to impart. You can almost tell when they get it by their eyes. You<br />

can just: see an enlightenment as though there was a halo or circle <strong>of</strong> light or<br />

a beam around their eyes at the time they become knowledgeable <strong>of</strong> what the<br />

concept is about. So I enjoyed it. I really enjoyed it.<br />

It was in the rural area. I lived with a widdwed lady and her eight year old<br />

grandchild. She was a very fine old lady and a very aggressive old lady.<br />

Sometimes in the morning, I would hear a shotgun go <strong>of</strong>f and I didn't know what<br />

was going on at first but then I found out that maybe she had gone down to the<br />

field to shoot a fresh rabbit or a squirrel for breakfast.<br />

Q: 1'11 be darned: (laughter)<br />

A: At that time, I earned $75 a month as the principal, and my room and board<br />

was $3 a week.<br />

There were two churches in the area, an A.M.E. church and a Baptist church and<br />

I went to both <strong>of</strong> them so I could make sure that I would have some relationship<br />

with the kids in their church activities also.<br />

Q: Did you teach church school?<br />

A: No, I didn't teach cherch school, just attended. And there was an A.M.E.,<br />

an African Methodist Episcopal, church there and they had what they call a<br />

presiding elder who came in from time to time and I got to know him. He was<br />

a very fine man and a very inspirational kind <strong>of</strong> man.<br />

When I got ready to leave after the end <strong>of</strong> the first year, they were very well<br />

delighted with the growth and development <strong>of</strong> the kids in my school because I<br />

spent some time with them and they wanted me to stay. I told them I was going<br />

back to college and they said, "Oh, no, stay." They wanted to raise my salary<br />

to $100 a month. That was a lot <strong>of</strong> money but I said, "No, I'm going to go<br />

back to school.'' So I did.<br />

Q: Did you ever entertain the idea <strong>of</strong> becoming a teacher?<br />

A: No, I really didn't. In my mother's famfly, there were six girls and I<br />

guess all <strong>of</strong> them taught school and many <strong>of</strong> the female members <strong>of</strong> my family,<br />

the cousins and all, most <strong>of</strong> them were teachers. I didn't want to be a<br />

teacher. Although I enjoyed it, I want you to know that, but I just didn't<br />

ever desire to be a teacher.


Q: This happened between what years in college?<br />

A: That was between my junior and senior year.<br />

Q: I suppose it was during the senior year that the scholarship decision arose?<br />

A: Perfectly right.<br />

Q: How did you decide on Northwestern?<br />

A: Well, I had made an application to both the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Chicago and<br />

Northwestern and had been accepted at each on the basis <strong>of</strong> my college grades.<br />

Northwestern opened about three weeks later than the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Chicago and<br />

I had come to Chicago that summer, I had this job, and I decided thilt, if I<br />

could work an additional three weeks before I went to school, I would have a<br />

little more <strong>of</strong> a "stash," you know. So I chose Northwestern on that basis.<br />

Q: And you had a scholarship that you could use at both these schools?<br />

A: Well, yes. The scholarship would be paid by the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas<br />

and it would cover tuition at both schools.<br />

Q: Would be paid by the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas?<br />

A: By the State <strong>of</strong> Arkansas.<br />

Q: State <strong>of</strong> Arkansas. They would pay for . . .<br />

A: They would pay the tuition directly to the school. They would send a<br />

check to me and I would just endorse it to the school.<br />

Q: It would seem they would do that for their own schools in Arkansas, but<br />

they chose <strong>Illinois</strong>? Or allowed you to choose <strong>Illinois</strong>?<br />

A: No, what they did was--the scholarship came as a result <strong>of</strong> their obviating<br />

my attendance at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas.<br />

Q: Oh.<br />

A: You see, at the time, the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas was an all-white school.<br />

And they experienced no anxiety to have any black students.<br />

9: I see.<br />

A: And, to avoid it, they just said, "I'll tell you what you do. Don't<br />

hassle it, you just go right ahead somewhere else and we'll pay your tuition,<br />

wherever you get in." So that is what happened. Now, if they had admitted me<br />

to the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arkansas, I could not have gone because I didn't have<br />

any money.<br />

Q: Yes, 1 see.


A: But they said, "You can go somewhere else and we'll pay your tuition."<br />

So I came to Northwestern and they paid my tuition. At Northwestern, they<br />

asked me if I wanted a job and I said, "Yes," and they gave me a job in the<br />

library. The job in the library paid my tuition. So they gave me that in<br />

cash, you see. They just gave me--1 think the tuition was maybe, oh, three or<br />

four hundred dollars a semester, something like that. SO I just got cash for<br />

that.<br />

I worked on the weekends. I waited table in nightclubs on the weekends. So,<br />

I would go to school five days a week without working. I would work Friday<br />

night and Saturday night, and sometimes Sunday afternoon or evening, waiting<br />

table, but I had five days when I was going to school that I wasn't working.<br />

Q: You could study.<br />

A: So I went to day-school and they had an accelerated course over there. I<br />

went to school forty-eight weeks a year so I finished Northwestern eight days<br />

short <strong>of</strong> two calendar years. We had three semesters a year, you see. We<br />

had a couple weeks out at Christmas, a week in the spring between the spring<br />

semester and the summer semester and a week out between the summer semester and<br />

the fall semester. So that's four weeks <strong>of</strong>f during the year.<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: So that's why I said forty-eight weeks a year so you could finish in two<br />

years.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. That must have been quite a grind. How many hours did you carry<br />

for a semester?<br />

A: Full, full semester.<br />

Q: About eighteen hours or so?<br />

A: Yes, because you know, I finished in six semesters.<br />

Q: Did you have any real problem with that? Did you ever think you weren't<br />

going to make it because <strong>of</strong> the . . .<br />

A: Well, Monday was always a hard day because if I worked Sunday night,<br />

Monday could be tough. I used to take these little tablets called No-Doz to<br />

keep from going to sleep. But the trouble with that is you would go through<br />

school but by the time you were close to the evening, Monday afternoon, you<br />

were just really dead, you know, sleepy as hell. Because everything that<br />

brings you up, brings you down, you know; you, there's a . . . But I made it.<br />

Almost went back to Texas with the dean. The dean over there was a man who<br />

had formally been dean at Yale and then he came to Northwestern. Named Leon<br />

Green. He was a very outstanding torts pr<strong>of</strong>essor, had written a book in torts<br />

and had given birth to a theory called the "Rationale <strong>of</strong> Proximate Cause" in<br />

torts. And he was leaving Northwestern, retiring, when I left, when I


finished. And he called me in one day and said, "~ecil, I want you to go to<br />

Texas with me. I want you to go to Houston, Texas." This was in 1946. He<br />

said, "Houston, Texas, by 1980, will be the third largest city in America.<br />

I'll go down and I'll help you to get set up and get started down there and,"<br />

he said, "bring you along to be my protege." He says, "That city is gonna<br />

I<br />

grow so and you will grow with it." He says, "The time will come when your<br />

1<br />

people will own banks and savings and loans and all the kinds <strong>of</strong> businesses<br />

that we have, and," he says, "you'll be right in the mainstream <strong>of</strong> that."<br />

c<br />

Well, I appreciated it and I told him so, but I had just come from the South<br />

and had to go upstairs in the theaters to see a movie and all that and--you<br />

know, you see a drinking fountain and it's not for you and that kind <strong>of</strong><br />

t<br />

thing--and I just decided I didn't want to go through that again.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: So I stayed in Chicago. I've thought about it since in terms <strong>of</strong> what life<br />

might have been like down there but I don't have any regrets.<br />

Q: Where did you llve while you went to the university?<br />

I 1<br />

A: I usually lived with families, a husband and wife. I would rent a room in<br />

someone's home. I never had an apartment <strong>of</strong> my gwn or anything like that.<br />

Was this in Evanston?<br />

No, no.<br />

The law school is in Chicago, on Chicago Avenue.<br />

Oh, I see.<br />

Yes, the law school and the med school are here in Chicago<br />

is out in Evanston,<br />

The rest <strong>of</strong><br />

Where did you live, then? What part <strong>of</strong> Chicago?<br />

In the south side <strong>of</strong> Chicago, 5600 south on Michigan Avenue for a period. / /<br />

I wanted to live in the Y.M.C.A., which is right up the street from the<br />

university. But at the Y.M.C.A., at that time, they were not admitting blacks.<br />

(2: Oh, I see.<br />

A: You know, you don't realize--the Young Men's Christian Association--<br />

couldn't even get a cup <strong>of</strong> c<strong>of</strong>fee in that place.<br />

Q: Did they have a school cafeteria there at the . . .<br />

1<br />

A: Yes, they had a school cafeteria,<br />

Q: So you ate there-<br />

A: Yes, had lunch there every day.


Q: How did you get back and forth?<br />

A: I took public transportation.<br />

Q: You did.<br />

A: Yes. I made arrangements for dinner. There were a couple <strong>of</strong> young ladies,<br />

one <strong>of</strong> whom I knew who had gone to my school who had met another young lady<br />

here at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> Chicago. They were both working on their masters,<br />

and they shared an apartment, a very small efficiency. I made arrangements<br />

with them to help supply the food and I had dinner with them each evening. So<br />

I had a good meal every day, the dinner meal, in an atmosphere with young<br />

people who were in the same kind <strong>of</strong> boat I was, going to school. So then, I<br />

met their friends and so I got a chance to meet nice people, people who were<br />

progressive and people who were doing things.<br />

Q: Were there other people from the school that came up to the law school<br />

here that you knew?<br />

A: Yes, there was a fellow here from West Virginia who's now a lawyer for the<br />

government and there was a fellow in my class from Washington, D. C., who<br />

had been a real estate man out in Washington. He came here. He started when<br />

he was thirty-nine years old. There were very few blacks in my class, I<br />

think there were maybe three or four. And then, the next year, there was one<br />

or two, you know, so I met those fellows. One <strong>of</strong> the fellows that I knew<br />

during that era was a fellow named Hooks who went to De Paul law school. He's<br />

from Tennessee and he went to De Paul law school and he's now the national<br />

president <strong>of</strong> the NAACP [National Association for the Advancement <strong>of</strong> Colored<br />

People].<br />

Q: oh? Yes. (pause) When did you join the NAACP?<br />

A: Oh, I suppose after I got out <strong>of</strong> law school, I took a membership.<br />

Q: So you weren't active while you were in the university?<br />

A: No.<br />

Q: 1 noticed also that you belong to the Chicago Urban League. Were you<br />

active at that time?<br />

A; Yes, I always have kept a membership in the Chicago Urban League, yes.<br />

Q: When did you get started with that?<br />

A: Oh, probably after I got out <strong>of</strong> school sometime or the other.<br />

Q: Yes. You mentioned the one pr<strong>of</strong>essor, Leon Green. Do you recall any <strong>of</strong><br />

the others that were <strong>of</strong> particular significance?<br />

A: At the law school?


Q: (indicates af f innative)<br />

A: Yes, there's a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Walter Schaefer who taught me<br />

constitutional law and some other courses and he later became a Supreme Court<br />

justice for the State <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>. There was a fellow named Fred Inbau who<br />

was one <strong>of</strong> my pr<strong>of</strong>essors there, taught me evidence. There was a fellow named<br />

Irving Goldstein who taught trial technique. Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Havighurst taught<br />

contracts. Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Nathaniel Nathanson who taught administrative law. And<br />

let's see, I'm trying to remember some <strong>of</strong> the other pr<strong>of</strong>essors. I can<br />

remember the fellow who taught conflicts <strong>of</strong> interest. Oh, Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Cary<br />

who taught real property--real popular, he was quite a guy.<br />

Q: Have you kept in touch with any <strong>of</strong> those individuals since?<br />

A: Yes, particularly Justice Schaefer. Yes.<br />

Q: (pause) Other than the dinners with the two girls, did you have any<br />

particular social life that you followed at all?<br />

A: Very little social life that two-year period.<br />

Q: A little bit busy at that time?<br />

A: Very busy.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. What did you do during the four weeks you had <strong>of</strong>f during that<br />

time?<br />

A: Well, I would probably go down to Arkansas to see my folks at least once a<br />

year, either between one semester or the other. Normally at Christmas, I<br />

would stay here and work because there would be plenty <strong>of</strong> opportunities, you<br />

know, the business was good.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: I would work during Christmas and I would go down to Arkansas to see them<br />

between, say spring and the summer session, something like that. I spent the<br />

time here working.<br />

Q: Same type <strong>of</strong> work?<br />

A: Yes, waiting table.<br />

Q: Where did you do that? Right downtown here?<br />

A: Well, the first job I got was over at the Palmer House as a banquet waiter.<br />

I worked there one night and they said that they didn't feed you and I said,<br />

"My God, 1 never worked anywhere as a waiter where you didn't get fed." So I<br />

didn't go back there. I started working for these nightclubs just on the<br />

weekend which was a lot better because if I had gone as a banquet waiter at<br />

a hotel it would have been probably every other night. You work the nightclubs


just on the weekend which was a lot better becauae if I had gone as a banquet<br />

waiter at a hotel it would have been probably every night. You work the<br />

nightclubs on the weekend, you could earn enough to survive pretty, pretty<br />

nicely.<br />

Q: Yes. (pause) Do you recall any other associations with people at the<br />

university that have continued through the years?<br />

A: Well, no, only just: the people I met as students. I, you know, see many<br />

<strong>of</strong> them from time to time in various walks <strong>of</strong> life, But from the faculty,<br />

I don't see many <strong>of</strong> them. A lot <strong>of</strong> my classmates I see from time to time.<br />

Q: Well, you graduated, then, in 19462<br />

A: In 1946, that's correct. October. September something. The end <strong>of</strong><br />

September, 1946, yes.<br />

Q: While you were still at the university in school, had you started working<br />

or figuring out what you were going to do with your law degree when you got it?<br />

A: Well, yes. I had heard from some people who asked me to come into practice<br />

with them. I had some options. There was a man who wanted me to come down to<br />

Birmingham, Alabama, to work with him. I had an opportunity to go to<br />

Memphis, Tennessee, to work with a lawyer there. And I had given some thought<br />

to going west. I don't know how that got in my mind, hut I had been asked to<br />

come to Portland, Oregon. I did not go,<br />

In the meantime, during my final days at Northwestern, we went over to the<br />

court building, to one <strong>of</strong> the courts buildings here, and I met a man who was<br />

trying a case there that we observed and he aaid he would like for me to come<br />

down and talk to him at his <strong>of</strong>fice. He might want to have me work for him.<br />

His name was Joseph Clayton. I went down to talk with him and as soon as I<br />

got out <strong>of</strong> school, I started to work for him. You see, we got out <strong>of</strong> school<br />

in September, I guess, and we took the bar examination in early November and I<br />

worked for him from early November up through January before being sworn in.<br />

As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, you didn't know whether you had passed the bar for almost<br />

a month. I took it in early November and Thanksgiving I went down to visit<br />

my mother and then I went up to Tennessee State to the football game, to the<br />

homecoming game. I can remember the president wanted me to crown the queen and<br />

asked me haw he should introduce me. He said, "Are you an attorney now?" I<br />

said, "No, I can't say I'm an attorney because I haven't: passed the bar yet.<br />

I haven't gotten the results from the examination I've taken." And he said,<br />

'well, what is your degree?" I said, "It's a J.D." [Doctor <strong>of</strong> ~urisprudence]<br />

He said, "Well, we'll just call you Doctor <strong>Partee</strong>." I said, "Okay, fine." So<br />

I was introduced as Doctor Fartee and I crowned the queen.<br />

Then the next day, I got a call from my mother. She said, "The results <strong>of</strong> your<br />

bar examination are here. Shall I open them and read them?" I said, ''No,<br />

honey, just read them. I know you've already opened them." And she chuckled


and immediately said, "We are very pleased to inform you . . ." I said,<br />

"Read no more," because I knew that that was the key sentence.<br />

When they say,<br />

"We are pleased to inform you . . ." you would know you had passed it. So<br />

then I came back to Chicago and I worked for this lawyer until January and I<br />

got my license on January 20, 1947.<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> work did you do for him during that . . .<br />

A: Well, I briefed cases, answered calls in courts for him: you know, the<br />

continuance in cases and look up files and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing, General leg<br />

work, more or less, plus some briefing <strong>of</strong> cases. If there was some paint he<br />

wanted to know about, I would go into the library and write him a brief for it.<br />

A: Then what did you do in January?<br />

A: Then I just started practicing with him as a lawyer in his <strong>of</strong>fice.<br />

Handling some <strong>of</strong> his cases and began to get a few af my own and started<br />

practicing.<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> cases were these?<br />

A: Well, he had a general practice but he more or less specialized in criminal<br />

law and domestic law. And that's how I got started with him,<br />

Q: What was the first case you handled? Of your own.<br />

A: I can't remember that, frankly. (pause) I don't remember. I wouldn't<br />

remember the first one <strong>of</strong> mine from the first one <strong>of</strong> his, hut he had me trying<br />

cases very--right from the beginning I started trying cases. But I had been<br />

with him for three or four months and I had watched him, so I had a feel for<br />

it; and then we had had trial technique in school, so I knew something about<br />

what you were supposed to do.<br />

Q: What court did you work in on most <strong>of</strong> your cases?<br />

A: We had both criminal and civil. I had some criminal and some civil.<br />

Q: And where was the court physically located?<br />

A: Well, the criminal court is at 26th and California and the civil court was<br />

right down here in this building.<br />

Q: Where was your <strong>of</strong>fice then?<br />

A: We were at 3518 State Street.<br />

Q: Oh, that's right downtown here then.<br />

A: No. Thirty-five hundred south, on State Street.<br />

Q: Oh, 3.518, I see, yes. (pause) How long did you continue with Mr. Clayton?


A: Well, I was there for about a year. Then they asked me to be an assistant<br />

state's attorney.<br />

SESSION 3, TAPE 3, SIDE 2<br />

A: I went to the ~tate's attorney's <strong>of</strong>fice, but I didn' t give up my <strong>of</strong>fice. I<br />

still had the <strong>of</strong>fice because I was first assigned to other courtrooms where<br />

sometimes it was a half-a-day, you know, and I would have something to do in<br />

the afternoon at my own place. So I still maintained a relationship with him<br />

in terms <strong>of</strong> trying cases and writing briefs and that sort <strong>of</strong> thing. I still<br />

kept my <strong>of</strong>fice.<br />

Q: You say "they." Who were "they1' that asked you to become assistant.<br />

A: Oh, a judge came to me. I had joined a political organization. I had gone<br />

in to see Congressman Davson and told him that I wanted to become a precinct<br />

committeeman, and he says, "Why?" And I said, ''Well . . ." He said, "Do you<br />

want a job?" I said, "No, sir, I don't want a job." He says, "You're a<br />

lawyer." I says, "Yes." He said, "You went to my school, Northwestern." I<br />

said, "~es." He said, "Well, you're kind <strong>of</strong> strange." And he called a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

fellows in and he said, "I want you to meet a very strange animal, ~ers's a<br />

fellow who's different. Most lawyers want a job and no precinct, and hare' s<br />

a guy who wants a precinct: and no job." He said, "That's kind <strong>of</strong> interesting."<br />

He said, Well, why do you want a ~recinct?" I said, "Well, you see, 1'm not<br />

from here, I don't know a lot <strong>of</strong> the people here, I'm trying to get to know a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> people. If I had a precinct, I would know 500 people by their first<br />

name and 500 people would know me by my first name. And that would give me<br />

some start towards getting known in this city." So he said, "Fine."<br />

So I took a precinct, Now, I had had the precinct: for a year before they<br />

called me in and asked me, they said, "Well, now you said you didn't want a<br />

job but here's a very nice opportunity for you as an assistant state's<br />

attorney." There were very few blacks at that time and I said, "Well, I'll<br />

think ahout it." I talked to Mr. Clayton and he said, "That'll be a fine<br />

opportunity for you pr<strong>of</strong>essionally!' So I became an assistant state's<br />

attorney.<br />

Q; Where was the precinct?<br />

A: The precinct was at: 62nd and St. Lawrence and Champlain. Sixty-second<br />

and St. Lawrence was the basic part <strong>of</strong> it. Sixty-two hundred south on St.<br />

Lawrence Avenue,<br />

Q : In what ward was that?<br />

A: That was in the new 20th ward.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> person was Mr. Dawson?


A: He was a very fine man, a very knowledgeable, enlightened, bright,<br />

articulate man. I enjoyed knowlng him. I learned a lot from him. He<br />

believed in democracy being spread throughout and he obtained a lot <strong>of</strong> jobs<br />

for people and tried to move people up into the mainstream <strong>of</strong> American life.<br />

A fine gentleman, I enjoyed meeting him. He was a nice man.<br />

Q: Who else was involved with that ward at that time?<br />

A: Well, Dawson was the colmnltteeman and Ciongressman and had a fellow by the<br />

name <strong>of</strong> Harvey who was his alderman; William Harvey was his alderman. I<br />

knew him, too.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> person was he?<br />

A: A very fine man; a very, very fine man. He had been a fireman and Dawson<br />

picked him because he had integrity and he had forthrightness and made a good<br />

alderman.<br />

Q: Were you living in the ward?<br />

A: No, I was not living in the 2nd ward. That's the 2nd ward. My <strong>of</strong>fice was<br />

in the 2nd ward, law <strong>of</strong>fice, but I was living in the 20th ward.<br />

Q: When you first started your precinct work, how did you go about becoming<br />

acquainted with these 500 people?<br />

A: Well, my committeeman was a fellow named Kenneth Campbell and he was the<br />

committeeman <strong>of</strong> the 20th ward and he had precinct schools where he taught you<br />

the rudiments <strong>of</strong> being a precinct cornitteeman. How to meet people and how<br />

to discuss the issues with them and all. And so, you didn't just go out<br />

barehanded, you went out with some pre-knowledge as to how to approach them,<br />

how to sell your candidates and things <strong>of</strong> that sort, And how to give service<br />

to people so that when you did come to ask them to support you, you came into<br />

people who had a posture <strong>of</strong> willingness, you see,<br />

Q: Yes. What were some <strong>of</strong> the more important lessons they taught you when you<br />

went out?<br />

A: Well, one <strong>of</strong> the important lessons was that--thfs sounds very trite but<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the things I learned is, if you smoked, you never walk in anyone's<br />

house with a cigarette in your hand or your mouth. Maybe they didn't smoke or<br />

maybe it's inconvenient. Maybe they didn't have an ashtray. It was just a<br />

basic kind <strong>of</strong> thing. And general courtesy and respecting people's opinions.<br />

You could walk into a place to talk to someone and they could be absolutely<br />

opposed to what you were selling--how to respectfully disagree without being<br />

disagreeable. A lot <strong>of</strong> people don't know that, how to disagree without being<br />

disagreeable. It's very important. And you let people talk out their frustrations<br />

and then supply them with facts and figures and hopefully persuade them<br />

to your way <strong>of</strong> life.<br />

I can remember one <strong>of</strong> my first elections was when Harry Truman ran and this


old fellow told me that he's from the South and Truman's fxom the South and<br />

he said, "I don't want no Southerners with all their prejudice," nor this not<br />

that and all and I said, 'Well, let's just take a look at what this man has<br />

done and what he says he's going to do. He's desegregated the Army*" I said,<br />

"Roosevelt never did that." He said, "He's from New York." I said, "Just<br />

because a man comes from the South--first <strong>of</strong> all, if a Southerner decides he<br />

wants to do something that's right on a racial subject, he's more likely to<br />

do it, absolutely do it, than a Northerner." So I carried that precinct for<br />

Truman and that precinct had been Republican before that.<br />

Q: Oh.?<br />

A: Yes. A lot <strong>of</strong> black people for a long time were very motivated by Abraham<br />

Lincoln and--Republican and people would say, "Well, my daddy would turn over<br />

in his grave if I voted for a Democrat," and all that, you know. But we would<br />

turn it around and made it very strongly Democratic.<br />

Those are some <strong>of</strong> the things that I learned through that process. Just how to<br />

get along with people and--you go into a place, you know--the husband maybe<br />

thinks one thing and the wife thinks another. When you walk out <strong>of</strong> there, you<br />

want to he friends with both <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

9: (pause) Who were some <strong>of</strong> the people that helped you in this precinct work,<br />

that worked for you?<br />

A: No, I really don't: think <strong>of</strong> any names, really. I really did it myself. Oh,<br />

you know, you would hire somebody from time-to-time to pass out literature or<br />

something <strong>of</strong> that sort but I mean the philosophy, the philosophical part <strong>of</strong> it,<br />

I handled myself, I handled it myself. I got to know people and sometimes<br />

someone would come in and they would say, "Oh, by the way, my daughter needs<br />

11<br />

a divorce," or, "We would like to get a will drawn. You know, it helps you,<br />

starts to help you develop your business, too.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. (pause) Let's see, now, this was the 20th ward. You say<br />

William Harvey, or was it Kenneth Campbell that was the . . .<br />

A: Kenneth Campbell was the committeeman <strong>of</strong> the 20th ward.<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> help did he give you in your precinct work?<br />

A: Well, as 1 say, he had a precinct school. And he taught you the fundamentals<br />

<strong>of</strong> canvassing, how to canvass, haw to talk to people, haw to organize<br />

your precinct. His motto was "Organize, Deputize, and Supervise." And you<br />

would get people within your framework <strong>of</strong> your precinct to do various thlngs<br />

for you. But you were the person most responsible, I had about four hundred<br />

and fifty people in my precinct, five hundred, and I knew them all by their<br />

first name, and intimately. I knew about them. Every once in awhile, you<br />

would run into somebody who was a friend <strong>of</strong> somebody else you knew and that<br />

gave you another kind <strong>of</strong> meeting ground. Or somebody in their family went<br />

to school with you or something and--so it always made for little tight paints<br />

<strong>of</strong> friendship, you see.


Q: Yes.<br />

A: And that's really what it's about, getting to have the respect <strong>of</strong> the<br />

people so that if I came in and I had a candidate that I was very interested<br />

in and they said, "Well, I don't like rhat guy," I said, "well, just: do it<br />

for me." If I'll be doing something for them, fine; something they would<br />

like, then they would support you. That's fine.<br />

Q: How important were social organizations, such as the church, for example?<br />

Which church did you belong to there?<br />

A: I joined the Congregational church. I grew up in the Baptist church but<br />

when I came to Chicago there was a newly formed Congregational church which<br />

had as its minister a man I knew who had been dean <strong>of</strong> religion at Fisk<br />

<strong>University</strong> in Nashville. I had attended his services there and I was enamored<br />

<strong>of</strong> him as a minister. I joined the church on that basis, because he was the<br />

minister. And I rdmained there. We've had a lot <strong>of</strong> very fine ministers<br />

since, but I remained there. Although I grew up as a Baptist, I just went to<br />

this church, really, on a personality basis <strong>of</strong> that minister.<br />

Q: Do you still belong to that church?<br />

A: Yes, I do.<br />

Q: Did the church membership help you in your precinct work?<br />

A: Well, not overly. I suppose some. There would be some people in your<br />

precinct who were members <strong>of</strong> the same church you were, not an awful lot, but<br />

some. Church membership also broadened your base <strong>of</strong> acquaintanceships,<br />

Q: Were there other organizations at that time that you joined that helped you?<br />

A: I didn't join any other organizations at that time, no. Though a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

lawyers would join the Masons, or this or this, I didn't. No, I didn't join<br />

any other at that time, no.<br />

Q: So this would have been about 1947, along in that period?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Do you recall the first case that you were involved with as assistant<br />

district attorney?<br />

A: No, I really don't. When I first went in the <strong>of</strong>fice I was assigned to the<br />

fraud and complaint department where I had an <strong>of</strong>fice. I talked to people<br />

about complaints rhat they desired to file and that they thought were criminal<br />

against them by other people. We had a series <strong>of</strong> those and then I later was<br />

sent up to the courts, but I don't remember the first complaints I ever heard.<br />

I heard a lot <strong>of</strong> them.


We tried to get a decision between the people who filed the complaint and the<br />

people against whom they had filed it. Many's the time we could work it out<br />

and make people gfve them their money back or something <strong>of</strong> that sort. But<br />

if that didn't work, then we would go up and get a warrant written out for the<br />

person who was the person who caused the problem and then it would go up to<br />

the courts. Sometimes I would follow it up there and sometimes I wouldn't.<br />

Most times I would not.<br />

Then, after I was there a period, they sent me out to some <strong>of</strong> the courts and<br />

I became an assistant in the courtroom. I worked in the various branch courts<br />

and then in the criminal court itself where I tried only felonies. One year,<br />

I and a partner won eighteen felony jury trials in a row for the State.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: Eighteen. That was supposed to be some sort <strong>of</strong> record. And then, the<br />

last year I was there, I was the assistant state's attorney in the chief<br />

justice's courtroom. Then that's when I went to the legislature, after that.<br />

Q: Was there a different type <strong>of</strong> work, then, that last year, than the preceding<br />

?<br />

A: Well, the chief justice court is where all cases came and they would be<br />

farmed out to other courts and then we would try some cases before the chief<br />

justice himself. But in the other years, I was just assigned to a courtroom<br />

where we tried every case that came in there. Murder, rape, manslaughter,<br />

robbery, all kinds <strong>of</strong> cases. With a large percentage <strong>of</strong> them being jury<br />

trials.<br />

Q: You say there are branch courts?<br />

A: Yes, the misdemeanor courts, where they are misdemeanors instead <strong>of</strong><br />

felonies, some <strong>of</strong> them are in local areas--for example, I had two <strong>of</strong> those<br />

where you would go to one first and then--you had the same judge, it's like a<br />

circuit. You would try the cases here and then you would go to another one<br />

after you finished there, We had two courts in the same area.<br />

Q: (pause) Normally, cases that are brought up to the court like that, do<br />

they come from individuals or is it the state's attorney himself that . . .<br />

A: No, they are brought by individuals who have filed complaints against<br />

others. Batteries and assaults and--you get a lot <strong>of</strong> cases where a couple <strong>of</strong><br />

women across a fence are arguing about something and one <strong>of</strong> them pulls the<br />

other's hair, you know. Husbands and wives and all that stuff in the branch<br />

courts.<br />

Q: How many years were you with the state's attorney's <strong>of</strong>fice?<br />

A: Eight.<br />

Q: How did you come to go to the legislature?


A: Mr. Dawson again. Called me, said he wanted to talk to me, said, "You've<br />

made a very fine reputation as an assistant state's attorney." Be said,<br />

1 I<br />

You have good name-recognition and a lot <strong>of</strong> people like you and we would<br />

like to see you run for the legislature. Would you like to do that?'' I<br />

said, "Yes." So I did.<br />

See, one thing about trying criminal cases, there is a lot <strong>of</strong> notoriety.<br />

Every week there's an article about some cases you've tried and stuff. You<br />

do that for a number <strong>of</strong> years and people get to know you. So I had excellent<br />

name-recognition.<br />

Q: When was the at-large election? Was that . . .<br />

A: Nineteen sixty-five.<br />

Q: Nineteen sixty-five. So you weren't involved with that when you first<br />

started out?<br />

A: Oh, yes. Not when I first started out, no. But I was in the House when it<br />

came along.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, I ran one <strong>of</strong> those precinct counting stations together<br />

with a &publican fellow. We ran a precinct counting station and we started<br />

counting ballots at about seven o'clock on Tuesday night and they didn't<br />

finish until Saturday about noon. And we had a full complement <strong>of</strong> people. We<br />

had maybe a hundred and fifty, two hundred people, in the gymnasium <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Catholic school counting these ballots. I tell you, it was really something,<br />

really something.<br />

Q: When you rqn for the House, how did you go about campaigning?<br />

A: Well, I made all the meetings in the area, I got into several churches to<br />

make my speech. We had pretty closely knit organizations and t would go to<br />

the various organizations within the wards where I was running and make a<br />

speech to the captains in terms <strong>of</strong> what I was expected to do, what I would do<br />

and so forth. They, in turn, as they carried their precincts, would disseminate<br />

that information. If someone had a block club meeting or a precinct club<br />

meeting, I would be invited and I would go in arid speak, answer questions.<br />

Q: What were the major issues--your platform, as it were, at that time?<br />

A: Well, at that time we were very, very interested in trying to pass some<br />

legislation for fair employment practices, number one. That was me <strong>of</strong> the big<br />

and key issues. The other was civil rights and public accommodation, because<br />

you have got to remember in 1957 that was before the 1965 civil rights bill<br />

came down from the federal government and there were many places in <strong>Illinois</strong><br />

where you were not accorded your civil rights. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, when I<br />

went to <strong>Springfield</strong> in 1947 to be sworn in as an attorney, I could not eat at<br />

the same hotel with the other lawyers being sworn in. They had it in the


63<br />

Abraham Lincoln Hotel and we were not admitted.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: We were not invited to the hotel for the dinner with our class. And I<br />

lived long enough to be invited to make the principal speech to a similar<br />

class in <strong>Springfield</strong>. Some five or six years ago, I was invited to be the<br />

principal speaker at the luncheon for the new lawyers who were being sworn<br />

in. And I told them I thought it was interesting that I would be invited<br />

because, when I finished, I was not able to come. And there was a lady In my<br />

class named Jewel Lafontant who was also not able to come who became<br />

assistant solicitor general <strong>of</strong> the United States. And I said, "I have a<br />

little spot over here. There's a place across the street over here called<br />

the Senate and I'm the presfdent. So, you know, maybe we are making some<br />

progress. I'<br />

But I also suggested to the black students in that class that, although they<br />

were there having dinner and they were accorded their civil rights, there are<br />

still a lot <strong>of</strong> pockets and areas <strong>of</strong> racism and discrimination and that they<br />

had an obligation to work hard toward eliminating it, just as we did the<br />

things that we were subjected to. That it was not all over and still isn't<br />

all over.<br />

Q: (pause) Were there any times during your campaign, that first time, that<br />

you wondered whether you were going to make it or not?<br />

A: Never. No, as a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, I'm not sure we had any opposition. I<br />

don't think we did. During the five times I ran for state representative, I<br />

don't think I had opposition but once. And I don't, frankly, remember that<br />

person's name. It was not traumatic.<br />

Q: Was that primary opposition or in the regular election?<br />

A: Neither. Normally, in the primary, we would have no opposition, In the<br />

regular election, there might have been two Republicans running against each<br />

other for the third spot. But we were so very closely organized here that<br />

getting the nod <strong>of</strong> the committeeman was all that was really necessary, And<br />

once you had them, you had it, it was a "lock," particularly when you had a<br />

good reputation.<br />

Q: When it came up that this was a possibility, going down there, why did you<br />

accept it?<br />

A: The legislature?<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: Oh, I thought it was a step forward, thought it was a very significant<br />

thing to be one <strong>of</strong> 235 people who made the laws for the state. It was a<br />

real attractive kind <strong>of</strong> thing from that vantage point. It also meant to me<br />

that I could go out into the world and practice law because the legislature


only met for six months every other year. That meant eighteen months that<br />

you would be home practicing law as a private practitioner.<br />

When I first went, you could take your two-year salary at once, so I took<br />

the two-year salary because I figured that I would make less money practicing<br />

law the first year than the second year, for two reasons. One, I would only<br />

be out a year, or a half a year, really. The other being that, the second<br />

year, I would have a full year uninterrupted with the legislature to practice<br />

law. So, for tax purposes, I thought it might sort <strong>of</strong> balance out better that<br />

way. So it did and so I did that for a number <strong>of</strong> years. I would practice law<br />

and was in the legislature. You have got to remember that in those days in<br />

the legislature, you would go down two or three days a week for, well, I'll<br />

say from January up until about April, you were never down there but one or<br />

twa days a week. You were home doing your regular practice the rest <strong>of</strong> the<br />

time.<br />

Q: Now, let's see, you initially practiced with Mr. Clayton. Was there a<br />

change or did you still work with his firm?<br />

A: No, I came out. I opened my own business.<br />

Q: Oh, you did?<br />

A: Yes. Mr. Clayton passed just before I got out <strong>of</strong> the state" attorney's<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice. He had passed.<br />

Q: So you opened up your own <strong>of</strong>fice. Where was it located?<br />

A: At 100 North ZaSalle Street. I went in with a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Louis<br />

Leider, Jewish fellow.<br />

Q: (pause) How long did that partnership extend?<br />

A: It wasn't a partnership. I worked out <strong>of</strong> that <strong>of</strong>fice as an associate.<br />

Well, I was there a couple <strong>of</strong> years and then I moved down to another suite in<br />

the building with a fellow named Sidney Jones who is now a judge. And I<br />

practiced there for . . . well, let's see. I was in that building from 1957<br />

until 1977, twenty years, and then we moved over to 1 North LaSalle.<br />

developed my own firm <strong>of</strong> <strong>Partee</strong> and Green.<br />

Q: You say that would last until 1977?<br />

A: Well, no, we still practice under the name <strong>of</strong> <strong>Partee</strong> and Green but we're<br />

individual practitioners for the reason that I came to other places, he went<br />

to represent an insurance company and he is now general counsel <strong>of</strong> that<br />

insurance company, so we don't have a partnership, but we do have an associat<br />

ion.<br />

Q: When you first started out, it was still in the Kelly-Nash era, wasn't it?<br />

A: No, no.<br />

I


Q: That had already finished?<br />

A: No, Arvey was the national committeeman when I started out.<br />

Q: Did you know him very well?<br />

A: I knew him--yes, 1 knew him very well.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> person was he?<br />

A: Very knowledgeable, very bright . . . a good politician. See, it was he<br />

who decided in 1948 that they had to have some outstanding people to run for<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice. And he picked two people. Paul Douglas, who had been a member <strong>of</strong> the<br />

city council, and Adlai Stevenson, who had been secretary <strong>of</strong> treasure and with<br />

the federal government in the--what is it? Not the United Nations, hut<br />

something comparable to that, you know. Stevenson was supposed to have been<br />

the United States senator and Douglas was to have peen the governor and then<br />

they changed it at the last minute and switched them and made Stevenson the<br />

governor and Douglas the senator. And they won overwhelmingly. That was in<br />

1948 and they won. Of course, you knew the history from then.<br />

Q: Yes. Did you know Paul Douglas personally?<br />

A: Oh, I knew him personally. Fine man. Just a great, great man. He's<br />

just almost incomparable. Very fine man. I knew Stevenson, too, and I<br />

thought he was one <strong>of</strong> the brightest men I've ever met in my life. Maybe too<br />

bright for the American people. You know, he ran in 1952 and 1956 for president<br />

and I'm not sure everybody understood him. He was so bright. I don't<br />

think he ever talked down to people, but I think you havFto be understood by<br />

people--the masses.<br />

Q: Do you know why that switch was made?<br />

A: No, I do not. NO, I do not. I really don't. I've thought about it a<br />

lot af times. I really don't know.<br />

Q: Wasn't Mr. Douglas' wife involved in politics also?<br />

A: Oh, yes, she was a congressman-at-large at one time, yes. Emily Taft<br />

Douglas, bright lady, very bright woman.<br />

Q: Did you know her?<br />

A: Yes, I knew her. In some women's causes, I had worked with her in several<br />

areas.<br />

Q: Do you recall specific areas, examples?<br />

A: Yes, for example, the increased involvement <strong>of</strong> women in politics.<br />

Q: Who was governor when you went down to . . .


A: Bill Stratton.<br />

Q: I assume you knew him pretty well, too.<br />

A: Oh, I knew him very well,<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> person was he?<br />

A: I always got along with Bill Stratton, always. I remember the first<br />

session I was there. I had three bills that I had passed and I went in to talk<br />

to him and he had an assistant with him, a fellow we called "Smokey" Downey. I<br />

was just delighted that the governor signed all three <strong>of</strong> my bills.<br />

Q: Oh? What were those bills? Do you recall?<br />

A: (chuckles) I knew you were going to ask me that. (pause) One <strong>of</strong> them had<br />

to do with a closer inspection <strong>of</strong> casualty insurance companies. Prior to<br />

that time a casualty campany could open up in <strong>Illinois</strong> and operate far two<br />

years before they were audited very closely by the state. And many <strong>of</strong> them<br />

had just come in and milked the public and took the money the first eighteen<br />

months and then phased out the last six and not fulfilled their claims and<br />

not paid <strong>of</strong>f their claims and so forth. So the one bill changed that. We<br />

had a lot <strong>of</strong> people, in my community particularly, who had bought insurance<br />

from companies and had not gotten service and had not gotten claims honored.<br />

The other two--you know, I don't remember. (chuckles) I really don't remember<br />

what they were.<br />

Q: Do you recall how that bill came up, the one on the casualty insurance<br />

companies ?<br />

A: Well, it just was obvious to me that there had been a lot <strong>of</strong> reason for<br />

having a bill like that, so that you could get rid <strong>of</strong> those fly-by-night<br />

operators.<br />

Q: What were the mechanics <strong>of</strong> preparation <strong>of</strong> the bill to get . . .<br />

A: Well, you would get your idea together and you would go into the Legislative<br />

Reference Bureau and there were lawyers in that bureau who would draw the bill<br />

in the language that would be most acceptable for statutory enactment. You<br />

would introduce your bill, take it to committee, and you would testify on it<br />

or you would have other people to testify for it. Get the favorable vote nut<br />

<strong>of</strong> the committee, get it back to the floor and resist any amendments that you<br />

would feel would not be palatable and get it passed in that house and then you<br />

would go to the second house and do the same thing.<br />

Q: Did you have any particular problem with that bill, that first one?<br />

A: Well, I guess I did have a little bit at first--1'm trying to remember<br />

who was against it. But I got it passed.<br />

You know, you've opened up a whole new subject to me.<br />

I've had so much


legislation, I think one day what I would like to do is go down to <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

and just get somebody to start in 1957 and give me a list <strong>of</strong> all the bills<br />

I've personally handled and those that I've been a big supporter <strong>of</strong>. So many<br />

<strong>of</strong> them now, it's just--I can't remember them all. There are thousands.<br />

There's one way I can do that. My wife has probably got about fifteen scrapbooks<br />

for me. She used to keep all that information and I could probably go<br />

through those scrapbooks and churn out a lot <strong>of</strong> the high points. Because,<br />

for example, when I first went to the legislature, I felt that people in the<br />

community did not know enough about what the legislative process was about.<br />

And so I wrote a series <strong>of</strong> articles for the Chicago Defender, the local paper<br />

out our way, on the legislative process, you know. In a very elementary kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> way, so the people could understand, you know, what we were about and how<br />

it's done and so forth. Gradually, the articles became more sophisticated as<br />

I discussed the intricacies and nuances <strong>of</strong> the pending legislation.<br />

Q: Did you have any other activities like that to keep the people informed as<br />

to what was going on or what you felt was important?<br />

A: In later years, I would get out a little three or four page tome about what<br />

my activities had been, highlights <strong>of</strong> the legislative session.<br />

Q: And was that published by the Defender?<br />

A: No, no. That was published by me personally. We would just get it out to<br />

everybody in the district.<br />

SESSION 4, TAPE 4, SIDE 1<br />

Q: Sir, I got a little bit ahead <strong>of</strong> the chronology <strong>of</strong> things yesterday and<br />

I would like to go back and pick up two primary subjects today. First <strong>of</strong> all<br />

I would like to know something about your wife and her family background, and<br />

then secondly I would like to go back into your political base, the ward and<br />

the early days <strong>of</strong> that, if that's all right, sir.<br />

A: That's okay.<br />

Q: When was your wife born, sir?<br />

A: My wife was born in 1927. May 10.<br />

Q: And your wife's name is . . .<br />

A: Paris, first name. Middle name, Angelina.<br />

Q: And her maiden name was Bradley.<br />

A: Bradley.


Q: Where was she born, sir?<br />

A: She was born in Chicago.<br />

Q: Had the Bradleys been in Chicago long when she was born?<br />

A: I don't really know. Her father was from New Orleans. I never met him,<br />

he died before we were married,<br />

A: What line <strong>of</strong> work was he in3<br />

A: He was a chef cook.<br />

Q: So your wife went to school here in Chicago then altogether.<br />

A: Chicago.<br />

Q: Yes. (pause) And where did you meet your wife?<br />

A: Through mutual frfends.<br />

Q: When was this?<br />

A: 1949.<br />

Q: Do you remember the occasion?<br />

A: (pause) I went to a restaurant for lunch and she was with a friend <strong>of</strong> mine<br />

and his girl friend having lunch. He introduced me to the t w ladies ~ and<br />

that's when I first met her.<br />

Q: Did ehe live near where you were living at the time?<br />

A: Oh, twenty blocks or so away.<br />

Q: Was it love at first sight sort <strong>of</strong> thing or did it gradually dewlap?<br />

A: Well, r thought she was a very interesting person and I wanted to know her<br />

again and to meet her again and it developed, I met her in September and we<br />

got married in December.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Goadness, that's another kind <strong>of</strong> parallel. I met my wife in October, we<br />

were married in April. (laughter) A little longer. Well! So it was a<br />

rather whirlwind . . . Let's see now. Was that the year that you were running<br />

for election?


A: No, that was about two years before I first ran for election. I first ran<br />

in 1956, we were married in 1955--a year be£ ore, I guess.<br />

Q: Why did you decide to get married in December? Usually it's a June wedding<br />

if the . . .<br />

A: I don't really know except that we thought that we were ready and we did.<br />

Q: Yes. Let's see, she went to high school here in Chicago. Did she go to<br />

college?<br />

A: She went to a business school.<br />

Q: Here in Chicago itself.<br />

A: Chicago, yes.<br />

9: Yes. Where did you live when you were first married?<br />

A: At 516 ?&st 62nd Street.<br />

Q: What type <strong>of</strong> quarters was that? Apartment?<br />

'A: An apa.rtment, yes.<br />

Q: Can you descrfbe what the apartment was like?<br />

A: Well, it was a four-room apartment in a twelve-flat huilding. It was a<br />

nice, neat apartment. We did some substantial wark these to make it very<br />

comfortable.<br />

Q: And how long did you live there?<br />

A: Lived there until 1957 when we moved to a larger place, a six-room apartment,<br />

at 5836 Michigan Avenue. We lived there until 1959, when we built: a<br />

place, a two-flat condominium, with another couple and that's where we still<br />

live,<br />

9: So you've had three homes, then?<br />

A: Three homes, that's correct.<br />

Q: What did she think about your going into the legislature a year after , . .<br />

A: She was very interested in my doing what I thought I might want to do. She<br />

was very supportive.<br />

Q: What was she doing when you first knew her? What type <strong>of</strong> wark?<br />

A: She worked at Michael Reese Hospital in the serum center.


Q: Is her mother still living?<br />

A: Her mother still is alive, yes.<br />

Q: Still here in Chicago, I guess.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: All right, sir. Let's see, when was it that you asked for the precinct<br />

committeeman position? What year?<br />

A: Probably the fall <strong>of</strong> 1947.<br />

Q: When did you first think that this might be a good move to make?<br />

A: Well, I suppose right after I got out <strong>of</strong> law school. I started reading<br />

some books about how to build a law practice and one <strong>of</strong> the statements that<br />

kept recurring was that a young lawyer should be a "joiner," you should join<br />

as many organizations as you felt was necessary to get to know some people<br />

and get some exposure to the population. And I suppose that's probably the<br />

motivation, I saw this joining an organization as being something in that<br />

vein. 1 think I ought to point out that when I started joining various<br />

organizations, including the political organization, 1 had no idea <strong>of</strong> ever<br />

going into politics.<br />

A: It was a matter <strong>of</strong> just trying to get to know some people.<br />

Q: I see, yes. (pause) Now, were you living in the precinct that was<br />

assigned you at that time?<br />

A: Yes, I was.<br />

0: How was it decided that you would have that precinct?<br />

A: Well, T suppose nobody else wanted it, frankly. It had been an overwhelmingly<br />

Republican precinct in the election before that and I guess they were<br />

just pretty glad to get somebody who wanted to take it. They had snmeane<br />

there who was just sort <strong>of</strong> there as a part-time person, to help them out a<br />

little bit, but they never had anyone just assigned to it who had rhe same<br />

kind <strong>of</strong> interest I had in developing it. So, it was just sort <strong>of</strong> a natural<br />

that they would give me that precinct.<br />

Q: Who was the Republican precinct committeeman when you . . .<br />

A: It was a woman by the name <strong>of</strong> Viola Montoya. She incidently was one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

best Republican precinct captains in the City <strong>of</strong> Chicago.<br />

Q: a, is that right?


A: Yes.<br />

q: Did she continue active after you . . .<br />

A: Very much so; very, very active. A very hard worker and a very difficult<br />

adversary.<br />

Q: Did you get to know her quite well?<br />

A: I got to know her quite well.<br />

Q: In what way was she a difficult adversary?<br />

A: Well, the lady's dead and I don't want to say anything unkind about her,<br />

but I can remember once putting some literature in a mailbox in an entrance<br />

where there were six families, Five <strong>of</strong> them were home that I talked to and<br />

one was not there. I left the literature for the one family and I came back<br />

to see if they had gotten home, to go to talk to them, and she was taking the<br />

literature out <strong>of</strong> the box, tearing it up. I suggested to her that I thought<br />

that was improper and she went into a rage and said some things to me, I<br />

think, calculated to make me angry, to cause me to strike her or something. I<br />

think she thought that that would be something that she could use against me.<br />

I just told her that I wasn't going to do anything like that but that I didn't<br />

appreciate it. She was tough; she was a tough old gal.<br />

Q: Was she an older person?<br />

A: Well, no, she was older than T was but I guess--at that time, I was twentythree<br />

or four years old, something like that. She was about, probably,<br />

thirty-five or forty, something like that.<br />

Q: And she had been there for quite some time then, I guess.<br />

A: Yes, quite some time.<br />

Q: What was the social make-up <strong>of</strong> the precinct?<br />

A: Well, it was all black and there were middle to middle-upper class people.<br />

Q: What type homes were mostly in this area?<br />

A: Mostly two-flat buildings and owner-occupied. There were a few multiple<br />

apartment buildings, like some twelves or some sixteens, but basically and<br />

fundamentally they were mastly two-flat, home-owner.<br />

Q: What was your first encounter with Mrs. Montoya?<br />

A: Well, I suppose maybe the first memorable encounter was that situation I<br />

have just described to you. She was a person who was very conscientious for<br />

her party. The thing that used to trouble me, there was always some sort <strong>of</strong><br />

a little nasty kind <strong>of</strong> statement that she would make, about either the party


or the candidates or about me, that wasn't so. I had not really been accustomed<br />

to that kind <strong>of</strong> thing but I just let it roll <strong>of</strong>f me like water <strong>of</strong>f a<br />

duck's back and went ahead and did my own job.<br />

Q: You started in 1947, so the first big election to be worked was the 1948<br />

election, I guess.<br />

A: That's true.<br />

q: Yes. And up until that time you say that most <strong>of</strong> the voting had been<br />

Republican?<br />

A: Very heavily Republican in that precinct, yes.<br />

Q: What happened in the 1948 election?<br />

A: In the 1948 election, we won with Truman two-to-one in that precinct.<br />

Q: And you think it was largely due to your getting out and knowing people<br />

and talking to them?<br />

A: I would be unfair to myself if I didn't say that I had done a damq good<br />

job in there.<br />

Q; Did it continue--well, it did continue Democratic from that point on. Did<br />

it get stronger?<br />

A: Became increasingly more Democratic as each election went on.<br />

Q: How long did you serve as the precinct committeeman?<br />

A: Until . . . 01, at least for the next ten years, T'm sure.<br />

Q: (pause) Then you did take over the ward at . . .<br />

A: Became the cormnitteeman in January <strong>of</strong> 1971.<br />

Q: In 1971. What did you do between 1957 and 1971, then?<br />

A: I was president <strong>of</strong> the ward organization. Worked in the <strong>of</strong>fice generally.<br />

Q: And what type <strong>of</strong> work was that: then?<br />

A: Well, talking to the other captains and supervising and helping, and making<br />

speeches throughout the ward.<br />

Q: Did you conduct a training program or was that . . .<br />

A: I was a part <strong>of</strong> that production on the training program, yes.


Q: Was this in replacement <strong>of</strong> Mr. Campbell?<br />

A: No, Mr. Campbell--when I became committeeman?<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: Yes, Mr. Campbell died in December <strong>of</strong> 1970. December 31, 1970. And I was<br />

made acting ward committeeman as <strong>of</strong> the eighth or tenth <strong>of</strong> January.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: So, president <strong>of</strong> the organization, how does that relate to the committeeman<br />

position?<br />

A: Well, the president <strong>of</strong> the organization is in charge <strong>of</strong> the programs as they<br />

develop within the ward. When the candidates would come out, I would have the<br />

opportunity to introduce them, to talk to the ward about various kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

current events to keep them informed so they could talk to their peaple from<br />

a vantage point <strong>of</strong> knowledge and understanding <strong>of</strong> the issues which arose on a<br />

day-to-day basis. So whenever we had the meetings, I would call the meeting<br />

to order and discuss various things and, <strong>of</strong> course, the committeeman would<br />

come out and he would discuss them also. But: I was sort <strong>of</strong> preliminary,<br />

Q: How <strong>of</strong>ten did you have these meetings?<br />

A: Well, we usually met a couple <strong>of</strong> times a month. There was about two meetings<br />

a month. In election time, perhaps, sometimes even more <strong>of</strong>ten.<br />

Q: And where were these meetings held?<br />

A: We had a ward headquarters. Initially, it was at 59th and State Street<br />

and then we later moved over to 32% East Garfield Boulevard at a storefront<br />

that was. fixed up for an <strong>of</strong>fice for the committeeman and a meeting hall for<br />

the precinct committeemen, or captains as we call them in Chicago.<br />

Q: Did you have an <strong>of</strong>fice in . . .<br />

A: Never did have an <strong>of</strong>fice in there, no.<br />

Q: So you operated somewhat out <strong>of</strong> your own <strong>of</strong>fice then, your law <strong>of</strong>fice?<br />

A: No, I operated out <strong>of</strong> that headquarters but I didn't have any specific<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice assigned to me there. There were always a couple <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>fices that anybody<br />

could use in case they wanted to have meetings or something <strong>of</strong> that sort.<br />

But I didn't have a specific <strong>of</strong>fice where I went there every day.<br />

Q: When you first started out as a precinct committeeman, how closely did you<br />

work with the other precinct captains?


A: Well, we would meet at the same time and we would discuss various kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

approaches to make in the precinct as the kinds <strong>of</strong> problems arose. You would<br />

get advice and you would give advice to others based on your own experiences.<br />

But the committeeman was responsible for the coordination <strong>of</strong> the whole ward.<br />

Q: Who were some <strong>of</strong> the other captains at that time when you first started out?<br />

A: Oh, there were a lot <strong>of</strong> people that worked, See, the ward was always about<br />

fifty-eight or fifty-nine precincts. There's diminishing significance in the<br />

names, I, think <strong>of</strong> the others, as many have passed on, retired, and so forth.<br />

There are just fifty-eight or fifty-nine other captains.<br />

Q: So when you became president, then, you were more or less in charge <strong>of</strong> the<br />

fifty-eight or fifty-nine precinct captains.<br />

A: No, the committeeman was always in charge. I didn't really have any<br />

"in-charge" position, I just had the job to do <strong>of</strong> making the speeu.hes and<br />

lining up the issues and discussing the issues and keeping people informed as<br />

to the kinds <strong>of</strong> questions they were likely to encounter and the kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

answers that they ought to accurately give.<br />

Q: In your position as president, was there a higher level part <strong>of</strong> the organization<br />

that you discussed things with?<br />

A: Only with the committeeman.<br />

Q: Only with the committeemen themselves, That is the ward cornitteemen?<br />

A: Ward committeeman, the ward camitteeman, yes.<br />

Q: So you worked very closely with Mr. Campbell, then, a ll those years.<br />

A: I did, indeed.<br />

Q: Do you remember any distinctive captains that worked under you that were<br />

outstanding in any way?<br />

A: Yes, but I would hesitate to mention any <strong>of</strong> them because I'm going to<br />

forget some and that would just make them uncomfortable.<br />

Q: What was the social structure <strong>of</strong> the total ward? Was it very similar to<br />

what that precinct was?<br />

A: Very similar, yes, very so--well, not the total ward. The area where I was,<br />

I say, was middle to upper-middle class, but there were parts <strong>of</strong> our ward<br />

that were middle class and below, where the housing was not as good, the<br />

people did not earn as much money. It was a totally black ward, though.<br />

Q: Oh, the entire ward was also . . .<br />

A: Yes. You would have an isolated person, like somebody might be married to a


Filipino or some man may be married to a white woman pr some woman may be<br />

married to a white man or something. That was very, very, very seldom seen.<br />

It was basically black. It would be 99% black.<br />

Q: And were most <strong>of</strong> these, then, fairly recent arrivees in Chicago?<br />

1<br />

I<br />

E A: Well, no, not all <strong>of</strong> them. A lot <strong>of</strong> people had been born in Chicago.<br />

There were a large number <strong>of</strong> people who had come up from other states,<br />

generally from the South. They, you know, covered the full spectrum. They<br />

were from maids and cooks to school principals and people who did--doctors,<br />

lawyers, all kinds <strong>of</strong> people. You know, pretty much across the board kind<br />

<strong>of</strong> population.<br />

/i<br />

9: Was there much industry in that section?<br />

A: Industry in the context <strong>of</strong> manufacturing, no. There were a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

businesses. Within that particular area, there were four streets that had<br />

substantial business interests, from drugstores to cleaners and all kinds <strong>of</strong><br />

regular service businesses.<br />

Q: Of the other ward committeemen, were there any that you were becoming<br />

well acquainted with at that time?<br />

I1<br />

A: Well, yes. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, at that time there were only about three<br />

or four black ward committeemen in Chicago and I knew them all and attended<br />

their annual affairs and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. It was almost a social kind <strong>of</strong><br />

thing, too, because each ward would have a massive fund-raiser every year, a<br />

social affair, either a dance or a dinner dance or something <strong>of</strong> that sort. And<br />

we would always at tend those.<br />

Q: Who were these other black committeemen?<br />

A: Well, af course, Congressman Dawson was committeeman <strong>of</strong> the 2nd ward and<br />

Ralph Metcalf became the committeeman <strong>of</strong> the 3rd ward, after he replaced a man<br />

named Committeeman WPmbish, Senator Wimbish. And Attorney Holman was the<br />

committeeman <strong>of</strong> the 4th ward and an engaging undertaker by the name <strong>of</strong> Bob<br />

Miller was the committeeman <strong>of</strong> the 6th ward. Those were the four wards that<br />

had black committeemen at the time I first started. And that, <strong>of</strong> course, grew<br />

and developed to the point where now there are about fifteen black ward<br />

cormnit teemen.<br />

Q: Were you, as president, then, involved with holding this annual fundraising<br />

dinner ?<br />

A: Oh, I was involved, sure. There were occasions when I was to speak or<br />

there were occasions when I was the master <strong>of</strong> ceremonies, generally, <strong>of</strong> our<br />

fund-raisers. We did various kinds <strong>of</strong> fund-raisers, they weren't always a<br />

dinner. Most <strong>of</strong> the time it was a dinner dance but on other occasions we<br />

would have--I remember once we had a wrestling show and another occasion we<br />

had a theater party. We sort <strong>of</strong> varied the themes so that people didn't get<br />

bored,


Q: This was an annual fund-raising affair. Were there other smaller affairs<br />

such as precinct fund-raising activities?<br />

A: Not very much in a precinct, fund-raising activities, no. Just generally<br />

for a ward activity <strong>of</strong> one sort or another.<br />

Q: By 1957, Mr. Daley had become mayor. When did you first meet him?<br />

A: He became mayor in 1955. I think I met him in 1955 when he first ran for<br />

mayor. He came to our ward to speak and I met him.<br />

Q: Did you have much to do with Mayor Daley and the higher level <strong>of</strong> the<br />

organization as president?'<br />

A: Not until 1971when I became a committeeman. Then I had more direct<br />

contact.<br />

Q: You had committee meetings periodically, then, with all the committeemen?<br />

A: Yes, you would have a county--see, when you are a committeeman you became<br />

an automatic member <strong>of</strong> the county central committee and the central city<br />

committee--city committee and the county committee. And, <strong>of</strong> course, the<br />

presiding <strong>of</strong>ficer in each <strong>of</strong> those was the mayor.<br />

Q: So in 1971 on, then, you were involved in those type meetings?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: How <strong>of</strong>ten did they meet?<br />

A: Oh, two or three times a year.<br />

Q: Only that <strong>of</strong>ten?<br />

A: Yes. More <strong>of</strong>ten just prior to an election or something significant like<br />

that.<br />

Q: Yes, T was just going to ask, as the elections came up, on slate-making<br />

and that sort <strong>of</strong> thing, there would be mare.<br />

A: There were more frequent meetings, yes.<br />

Q: In the slate-making procese, was this done primarily by the entire group?<br />

A: By the county central committee, that's correct.<br />

Q: Was there much controversy in committee action on that?<br />

A: No, there was not. The mayor who was also chairman would put out feelers<br />

in terms <strong>of</strong> picking candidates and he wou1.d normally have some recommendations<br />

and most <strong>of</strong> those recommendations were pretty sound and there was not a great


deal <strong>of</strong> controversy about them.<br />

Q: So there was not an awful lot <strong>of</strong> debate involved in slate-making.<br />

A: Sometimes a political organization, to be effective, has to be more autacratic<br />

than democratic.<br />

Q: And this was quite autocratic, then?<br />

A: I didn't say "quite" autocratic, but it was as atxtorratic as democratic,<br />

and it worked and most participants liked it that way, as rickets were both<br />

ethnically and geographically balanced.<br />

Q: I see, yes, sir. And where were those meetings held?<br />

A: The Cook County central cornittee always had a suite in one <strong>of</strong> the hotels,<br />

had a meeting area in the hotels. At one time we were in the Morrisan Hotel<br />

before it was torn down and then we moved to the Sherman Hotel and then to<br />

the LaSalle Hotel. And then to the Bismarck, where we now have aur suite <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong>fices.<br />

Q: As time went: by, you say, there was a growing number <strong>of</strong> black comrnitt~ernen,<br />

Other than the ones that you've already named, who were some <strong>of</strong> thase that<br />

came in?<br />

A: Well . . . The next ward, I guess, after the 6th ward was the 21st ward.<br />

There was a fellow there by the name <strong>of</strong> Joe Robichaux, then Bennett Stewart,<br />

And then the 34th ward in which the committeeman was Wilson Frost. And then<br />

the 7th ward which was Joseph Bertrand. Then the 17th ward which is William<br />

Shannon. The 1.6th ward which is James Taylor. And then the 28th ward which<br />

was Isaac Sims. Then the 29th ward. Let's see, are those the only wards?<br />

(pause) Eighth ward, John Stroger.<br />

Q: And these were all black?<br />

A: All black committeemen.<br />

Q: So there's been a steady growth then <strong>of</strong> blacks in the committee structure<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Democratic party.<br />

A: That's right.<br />

Q: I believe it was one <strong>of</strong> Rakove's books where he relates the movement <strong>of</strong><br />

blacks into Chicago to the earlier migrations <strong>of</strong> ethnic groups, Irish and so<br />

on, and indicates that in time this will be a black-controlled city. Do you<br />

feel that would be true?<br />

A: Yes, I do. T think certainly the hlack population is large enough to have<br />

the capability <strong>of</strong> electing a black mayor. Yes, I certainly think so. Mare<br />

than that, I think there perhaps are black candidates who would have the<br />

acceptability <strong>of</strong> a substantial part <strong>of</strong> the white populace who would vote ifor


a black mayor. We just saw that happen two days ago in Birmingham, where<br />

there was not a majority, but even more dramatically in a situation in Los<br />

Angeles, where the black population is only 20 percent and there is a black<br />

mayor there. That's because <strong>of</strong> the individual and his acceptability by the<br />

general population.<br />

Q: Again we're getting a little ahead but do you feel that--now, the black<br />

population has grown here in Chicago itself and generally each ethnic group<br />

that's come into Chicago has started in the central part and then moved<br />

outward. Do you think in time that will happen with the blacks also? That<br />

they will . . .<br />

A: Oh, I think certainly it's a certain percentage <strong>of</strong> blacks who will move<br />

out <strong>of</strong> the city. That's happening right now. Many <strong>of</strong> the suburban areas<br />

are getting more and more black population all the time, and they are people<br />

who moved from the central city. The same kind <strong>of</strong> thing that motivates<br />

white people to move out <strong>of</strong> the city into the county, for schools or whatever<br />

else they feel they need there, motivates black people, too. So, for blacks,<br />

it's more economic than racial.<br />

Q: Going back again to the early days <strong>of</strong> your precinct committee business,<br />

why was it that the Democrats replaced the Republicans?<br />

A: Well, I suppose really the changes started to come as early as the third<br />

term <strong>of</strong> Roosevelt. There had been, as you know, a rather monumental depression<br />

commencing in the 1930's and by the end <strong>of</strong> the 1930ts, when Roosevelt had<br />

instituted a lot <strong>of</strong> programs that were <strong>of</strong> direct help to poor people, there<br />

came about a transition and a lot <strong>of</strong> people switched from Republican to<br />

Democrat. But it really didn't hit until about the 1940's. They stayed with<br />

the Republican party during the first couple <strong>of</strong> terms <strong>of</strong> Roosevelt. He was<br />

elected in, what, 1932? I would say, the 1932 and the 1936 election, there<br />

were a large number <strong>of</strong> black people who moved over to the Democratic party.<br />

But starting in the 1940 election and by 1944, it was almost a fait accompli.<br />

Q: So that was the availability <strong>of</strong> welfare and that sort <strong>of</strong> thing that . . .<br />

A: No, no, no. Not welfare as much as increased job opportunities and other<br />

kinds <strong>of</strong> governmental programs, like the FHA [Federal Housing Administration 1,<br />

where people could borrow and buy homes and the bank holiday and subsequent<br />

action that vouchsafed money deposited in banks and the fact that the government<br />

would guarantee that your deposits would not be wiped out in a bank when<br />

banks folded and all. The other economic stabilizers that Roosevelt put into<br />

being, I think, were a great deal more important than anythfng else he might<br />

have done. T don't think that welfare had much to do with it, it was not a<br />

big issue then.<br />

Q: Was there much need for welfare in the 20th ward?<br />

A: Well, there was some--certainly it isn't equal to what it is today. People<br />

were not attuned as much to governmental help as they are today. People sort<br />

<strong>of</strong> felt that they had to run their own lives and had to work at perhaps not


well paying jobs but they had to do something. Most people felt an obligation<br />

to care for themselves and that is in contradistinction to today, where most<br />

people feel that the government sort <strong>of</strong> owes them a living. That's not only<br />

the 20th ward, that's kind <strong>of</strong> all over the country. And that includes everybody,<br />

including Chrysler Corporation, you know; that's welfare too, you know.<br />

Q: What did you think <strong>of</strong> the Chrysler situation? 1s that . . ,<br />

A: Well, it's not an easy kind <strong>of</strong> solution and I don't think anyone should just<br />

flippantly say it's good or it's bad. I think it does suggest to us though<br />

that, in a country where we operate on the laissez-faire system, where we<br />

believe that every business should stand on its own two feet and they should<br />

rise or fall on the basis <strong>of</strong> their own success or competence, it's sort <strong>of</strong><br />

fading. 1 think that we somehow feel that there are some other issues involved,<br />

other than just the business fading. One <strong>of</strong> those issues, <strong>of</strong> course,<br />

is that, if a business is permitted to go out <strong>of</strong> business for whatever reason,<br />

there will be a large number <strong>of</strong> people discommoded, a large number <strong>of</strong> people<br />

without employment. And we are quite concerned that we do not increase our<br />

unemployment rolls and, for that reason, business gets more governmental help<br />

for one reason or the other. But, you know, twenty years ago in this country<br />

it would be unthinkable for a government to try to prop up a business, particularly<br />

one in private enterprise.<br />

Perhaps you know, government has always helped in other kinds <strong>of</strong> ways. You<br />

take one <strong>of</strong> the most outstanding kinds <strong>of</strong> businesses now, though it's e<br />

mutual, is rural electrification, REA. That came about back -in the 1930's<br />

and 1940's when the major utility companies did not <strong>of</strong>fer the kind <strong>of</strong> service<br />

in the inner farm community that people felt ought to be extended. The telephone<br />

line or the electric line may run right straight down the highway hut<br />

they didn't get to that farm way over in the inner area <strong>of</strong>f the main arteries,<br />

People banded together and government lent the REA money at 2 percent so they<br />

could build these additional kinds <strong>of</strong> service organizations to give electricity<br />

to the inner farmer. Now they are very strong and very wealthy and,<br />

perhaps in some instances, have forgotten that their start came from the<br />

government who is still trying to help people who are depressed and underemployed<br />

and without the means to help themselves, So the government has done<br />

that all the time in those kinds <strong>of</strong> situations.<br />

But that's a mutual, it's not privately owned. It's owned by all the farmers<br />

involved in the area, Chrysler is a different kind <strong>of</strong> a situation because it<br />

is privately owned by stockholders. It's a for-pr<strong>of</strong>it organization, whereas<br />

RFA is supposed to be basically not-for-pr<strong>of</strong>it but for service. It's a<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>itable business for those involved. So the government has always been<br />

involved somehow in keeping things going and there's nothing new about that.<br />

Q: Relating that situation back to your precinct committeeman time, was there<br />

anything <strong>of</strong> that nature that went on in the precinct? Was there anything that<br />

you worked for to get far the precinct people?<br />

A: Well, those people who were looking for help in areas like jobs, we would<br />

try to help them find them, whether they would be in government or in private


industry. We were concerned about making sure the curbs and gutters were kept<br />

in good order, that the streets and alleys were clean, that the trees were<br />

pruned, that the garbage was picked up. We were always concerned about<br />

getting new sewers and the kinds <strong>of</strong> things that would keep the houses from<br />

having overflows in their basements and things <strong>of</strong> that sort. Those are among<br />

the more basic reasons. You would organize clean-up, fix-up campaigns and<br />

the kinds <strong>of</strong> help that a city could give to the people to make the quality <strong>of</strong><br />

life more palatable. Over the years we started building neighbarhood health<br />

centers and making sure that the social services were granted people.<br />

We always kept a lady in our <strong>of</strong>fice who was there to answer questions as to<br />

where people could go to get certain things done. Like, you know, the social<br />

security questions and the welfare questions and other kinds <strong>of</strong> social<br />

questions that people would encounter and wouldn't know how to go about doing<br />

them. We would make sure that we wauld be there to give them that information.<br />

Q: Do you remember any specific problems that arose at that time th8t were<br />

difficult to solve?<br />

A: Well, the problems pretty much remain the same throughout the caurse af<br />

history. People have the same kinds <strong>of</strong> basic needs for the improvement<br />

<strong>of</strong> the quality <strong>of</strong> life. You know, you've got a kid finishing high school,<br />

where should he write, where should he go to try to get a scholarahip--ah,<br />

just the same problems over and over.<br />

Q: Were there major educational problems in the precinct?<br />

A: Major educational problems, no. You would give people whatever kind <strong>of</strong><br />

advice you could about schooling and where to go to school or how to get<br />

into those schools, for trades, for other job skills, and things <strong>of</strong> that sort.<br />

But 1 wouldn't say major educational problems, no.<br />

Q: There was a fairly good school system, then, in that . . .<br />

A: Well, that all depends on your point <strong>of</strong> view. Pretty much across the<br />

nation there's a feeling among a lot <strong>of</strong> people that the schools, particularly<br />

the high schools today, are not <strong>of</strong> the same caliber and quality that they were<br />

years ago, and I think, perhaps, that may be so, Or maybe our methods for<br />

evaluating education are not constant or we're evaluating education based on<br />

how we saw it rather than the way it is today. I personally think, though,<br />

that the schools are not as sound as they were 20 years ago, or 30 years ago,<br />

anywhere in the country, so far as the high schools are concerned. Their<br />

methodology <strong>of</strong> just sort <strong>of</strong> pushing kids along and not letting anybady fail<br />

and making sure they get out is, I think, probably responsible for it. 1<br />

notice out in Ohio the other day somebody filed a suit against a school board;<br />

a fellow said that his son was graduated from high school and he couldn't read.<br />

And he felt that he was entitled to be compensated for that. So that is what<br />

that's about.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. Sir, when you went to become a precinct committeeman, you at<br />

that time didn't join any other organizations. How soon was it that you


joined other organizations for the purpose <strong>of</strong> . . .<br />

A: Well, I didn't join any other organizations for the purpose <strong>of</strong> getting well-<br />

known. I was already a member <strong>of</strong> the Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity and, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, that was a social group that I had joined in college and it had a<br />

chapter here.<br />

Q: oh?<br />

A: So I was a member <strong>of</strong> that and a couple <strong>of</strong> other clubs, One was The<br />

Assembly, which was a very large club <strong>of</strong> up-and-coming progressive men.<br />

But that was about the extent <strong>of</strong> my clubs.<br />

Q: Where was the Kappa Alpha Psi chapter?<br />

A: It was located in Chicago and we had a house over at 47th and Ellis<br />

Avenue.<br />

Q: So it wasn't connected with a particular school?<br />

A: No, Men from all over the country, who belonged to that fraternity, when<br />

they came to Chicaga they would join that particular Chicago alumni chapter.<br />

Q: Oh, I see, alumni chapter.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: And it was quite active, then?<br />

A: ah, quite active. Some <strong>of</strong> the leading business and pr<strong>of</strong>essional men i n<br />

Chicago in my community were members.<br />

Q : Can you name some <strong>of</strong> them?<br />

A: Oh, sure. There was--now, that--there again, I hate to name them because<br />

T'm going to leave out some very important ones in there.<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: I would rather not name then. Let me just say that there were a large<br />

number <strong>of</strong> doctors and lawyers and school principals and school teachers and<br />

businessmen who were members.<br />

Q: Yes. Were there any that were particularly helpful to you?<br />

A: Yes, there's one fellow, whose name is C. Roger Wilson, who was a very<br />

highly placed state employee in the state unemployment <strong>of</strong>fice. He was a very<br />

highly placed man in that and when I came--it was through him that I got my<br />

first job when I came up to Chicago that one summer, through that connecltian.<br />

Q: And he was in a Chicago <strong>of</strong>fice here or a state <strong>of</strong>fice?<br />

I


8 2<br />

A: It was a state <strong>of</strong>fice but located in Chicago.<br />

Q: Oh, I see, yes. Was the <strong>Illinois</strong> Building operating at that time?<br />

A: 160 North LaSalle.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: I assume it was, but I wasn't in it at that time,<br />

Q: And what was The Assembly, you say? Where did it meet?<br />

A: At various places. We used to meet at an insurance company, at their<br />

auditorium, <strong>of</strong> an insurance company. It was pretty social, a fairly social<br />

club .<br />

Q: Yes. Were these regul.ar monthly meetings?<br />

A: T don't remember meeting that <strong>of</strong>ten. Maybe two or three times a year and<br />

they would have a big Christmas dance. I remember that was the big function,<br />

the Christmas dance.<br />

Q: Did they bring in speakers?<br />

A: No, that wasn't that kind 05 a club. No.<br />

Q: Was there a particular rype <strong>of</strong> place where you made more speeches than<br />

others?<br />

A: Oh, I suppose I've made more speeches in ward headquarters than in other<br />

pl.aces. And in churches. That would, principally, be the most, during my<br />

youth--talking about formative days, now?<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: Yes. Yes, at churches and ward headquarters wauld be principally the<br />

places where I would speak.<br />

Q: And your audience at ward headquarters, was that predominently the precinct<br />

captains and that sort <strong>of</strong> thing?<br />

A: Well, in most <strong>of</strong> the meetings, yes, but then we wauld have rallies.<br />

SESSION 4, TAPE 4, SIDE 2<br />

A: In the rallies, I would be talking to a pretty diverse group <strong>of</strong> people.<br />

Q: Were these rallies on special occasions?


A: Generally just before an election.<br />

Q: So it was a rally in support <strong>of</strong> the election?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Let's see, now. We touched on your activities in the 1948 election. Let's<br />

see, the next one would have been an <strong>of</strong>f year election.<br />

Q: In 1950, yes.<br />

A: But that would be principally for local candidates, you see.<br />

Q: Do you remember any specific condidates that you were very active in<br />

supporting at that time?<br />

A: No. No, I do not, because we were supportive <strong>of</strong> an entire ticket. It is<br />

very rare that we ever give any particular emphasis to any one candidate<br />

except if he had a special problem. We voted for the Democratic ticket, to<br />

support the entire ticket. The message was, "Vote Democratic, pull the lever<br />

for the whole ticket." That's the way we did it. And that was, <strong>of</strong> course,<br />

the strength <strong>of</strong> this organization. I mean this whole Chicago organization<br />

supporting the entire ticket.<br />

Q: And you had no real problem with that? The preclnct was headed in that<br />

direction by that time?<br />

A: Oh, yes. You would always have somebody that wanted, you know, ta take<br />

care <strong>of</strong> one person or this, that and the other, or pick a guy because he was<br />

a Methodist or because he was a Rotarian or because he was a Lion ar something,<br />

Yo11 know. But basically and fundamentally, we carried the whole ticket. It<br />

was a party operation.<br />

Q: Were you active at the ward level in the media, like the geefender or the<br />

Tribune and that sort <strong>of</strong> thing? Did you approach them actively for support or<br />

provide information?<br />

A: Well, are you now talking about after T becape a legislator? Tn that<br />

period ?<br />

Q: No, sir, still in that early period.<br />

A: Not in that period, no.<br />

Q: So from the ward, then . . .<br />

A: You would get an article when you had an affair, in order ta tell wha<br />

talked about, that kind <strong>of</strong> thing, but generally, no.


Q: So I guess placing advertisements for those that were running, and that<br />

sort <strong>of</strong> thing, would be done at . . .<br />

A: That would have been done by the candidates themselves. We didn't get<br />

involved with that, no.<br />

Q: So actually, other than the rallies and the about twice a month meetings,<br />

that was the extent <strong>of</strong> the formal activity <strong>of</strong> the committee structure?<br />

A: Yes, except for call meetings to deal with specific problems that arose from<br />

time to time.<br />

Q: (pause) Okay. When you ran for the legislature, who did you replace?<br />

A: Well, it really wasn't a replacement as such. In 1955, the legislature<br />

redistricted and as a result 05 the redistricting we got mare distrkts in<br />

Chicago than we had had before. And I was in a district and was chosen as one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the two Democrats in that district, So I actually did not replace anyone<br />

because it was a brand new district.<br />

Q: And this was the 22nd district?<br />

A: The 22nd district, that's correct.<br />

Q: And who was the other Democrat that ran with you?<br />

A: His name was Charles Armstrong. He was a lawyer also and was very, very<br />

interested in the education committee and he was a member <strong>of</strong> the education<br />

committee and passed a bill that, back in those days, was called the Armstrong<br />

Law, which if properly implemented would have saved a lot <strong>of</strong> the grief we have<br />

in Chicago now about so-called school problems today.<br />

Q: And there was a Republican, then, that ran at the same time?<br />

A: Yes, his name was J. Horace Gardner.<br />

Q: Did you know him very well?<br />

A: Knew him very well. He was the Republican committeeman <strong>of</strong> the 20th ward.<br />

Q: Crh, I see. And this, because <strong>of</strong> the cumulative voting, was two Democrats<br />

and one Republican from that area.<br />

A: That's correct.<br />

Q: And, at that time, there were only the three that ran in the regular<br />

election, then?<br />

A: Right.<br />

Q: So really there was no opposition to any <strong>of</strong> them?


A: No, I don't think we had opposition but once during that first five terms.<br />

Q: In that first election, roughly, what was the division between the Republican<br />

and Democratic vote? Was there much Republican vote at all?<br />

A: Not much, no. I would rather go back and check the secretary <strong>of</strong> state's<br />

figures than to guess at it, but it probably was eight or ten-to-one, something<br />

lfke that probably.<br />

Q: Even at that time.<br />

Ai Yes.<br />

Q: And you went to the legislature, then, in January, T guess?<br />

A: January, 1957.<br />

Q: Was that your first time In <strong>Springfield</strong>?<br />

A: No, I had been to <strong>Springfield</strong> in 1947 to be swwn in as a lawyer.<br />

Q: Oh, I see. Yes, sir. But, except for that, you had not been to <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

?<br />

A: I don't remember whether I had been there in connecttan with any legal work<br />

or not. I'm aot sure. 1 don't think so, though.<br />

Q: Where did you stay when you first went to <strong>Springfield</strong> in 1957?<br />

A: At the St. Nicholas Hotel.<br />

Q: And that was Democratic headquarters, mare or less, at that time, wasn't it?<br />

A: It was Democratic headquarters, yes.<br />

Q: What did you do the first day you arrived down there?<br />

A: Well, I was sworn in and I had a group <strong>of</strong> about ten or twelve friends from<br />

Chicago who came down for my swearing in. My mother and dad came up from<br />

St. Louis and after we were sworn in--we had our preliminary meeting--we went<br />

back over to the hotel and we all had a big dinner, a little celebration.<br />

Q: Preliminary meeting? Of what nature?<br />

A: No, I said a dinner. We just went back to the hotel and had a dinnqr with<br />

my friends.<br />

Q: ah, I see, yes. (pause) Who were the people that were closest know to<br />

you when you first went down to <strong>Springfield</strong>? Of the others that went don<br />

that: year?


A: Of course, I knew. Corneal Davis.<br />

A: And Fred Smith . . . and a fellow by the name <strong>of</strong> Kenneth Wilson. 1<br />

suppose I knew them better than I did anybody else. Except this. You see,<br />

I had been eight years in the state's attorney's <strong>of</strong>fice and there were some<br />

legislators I came in contact with through the courts that I would have<br />

known, yes.<br />

Q: What I was driving at was, when you first arrived down there, how did you<br />

go about ].earning the process <strong>of</strong> legislation? Or were you pretty familiar<br />

with that before you went down?<br />

A: No, there were some guides like--not a book but maybe a brochure that<br />

explained some <strong>of</strong> the things. The --- Blue Book has a section In it on how a bill<br />

passes and how the legislature functions and that sort <strong>of</strong> thing and I had read<br />

all <strong>of</strong> that.<br />

Q: The Legislative Council .now has an introductory . . . ,<br />

A: Course. Yes, but they didn't have it at that time, or certainly not as<br />

sophisticated or elongated.<br />

Q: So you were kind <strong>of</strong> on your own as to figuring out exac*tly what you were<br />

going to do.<br />

A: We got a lot <strong>of</strong> guidance, in particular from Carneal Davis.<br />

Q: Oh? What types <strong>of</strong> things did he alert you to?<br />

A: Oh, about making sure that you thoroughly understood the hill before you<br />

voted on it and not popping <strong>of</strong>f on every question, which undermines your<br />

effectiveness. Sometimes you can talk so <strong>of</strong>ten down there that when you get<br />

up, people don't listen. If you talk less <strong>of</strong>ten and you know what you're<br />

talking about, you get more <strong>of</strong> an audience and you get more appreciation <strong>of</strong><br />

what you say and more support <strong>of</strong> what you said. That kind <strong>of</strong> thing.<br />

Q: Would you say you got most <strong>of</strong> your information, then, from Mr. Davis?<br />

A: Oh, 1 got more information from him than I did from anyone else. I got a<br />

lot <strong>of</strong> information by reading and by watching and listening and observing.<br />

Q: How long, after that first day you arrived down there, did you go into the<br />

session or start your work?<br />

A: We had session the first day I was there.<br />

Q: What was that . . .<br />

A: They open up the session and then they pay you. First job I've ever been on


where they paid you far two years the first day you got there.<br />

(laughter)<br />

Q: Do you recall that first day? What happened on the first day?<br />

A: Oh, nothing significant. I guess we were in the process <strong>of</strong> organizing, I<br />

guess, and electing our speaker and so forth.<br />

Q; Were you assigned a seat?<br />

A: You're assigned a seat. T got a seat beside my friend Kenny Wilson who<br />

came from the next district up, the 21st. He had been in the legislature two<br />

years earlier, so it was a good spot for me because he was knowledgeable, Be<br />

is now an appellate court judge. He*s s very knowledgeable fellow and I<br />

got a lot <strong>of</strong> help from him.<br />

Q: And which committees were you assigned to in the organization?<br />

A: Now, that I cannot remember. I would have to go back to the . . .<br />

Q: Letts see, you were on the insurance committee, I believe, weren't you?<br />

A: I'm not sure <strong>of</strong> that. See, after twenty years it's kind <strong>of</strong> difficult to<br />

point out what committees you were on on a particular year, because they've<br />

been up and down.<br />

Q: I see.<br />

A: I think . . . think I was on cities and villages. See, then, too, the<br />

names have changed over the years, too.<br />

Q: Yes, sir, That would be municipalities now, I gueqs.<br />

A: It might have been municipalities then, I don't know. Municipalities in<br />

the House, then. See, I have been in the House and Senate and the structure's<br />

different, so--1 tell you, on those kind <strong>of</strong> questions, I would really rather<br />

that we go to the books because it's laid out there, the committees.<br />

Q: What I'm trying to do is get a feel for what you felt that first day and<br />

dllring this organization. Was it confusing?<br />

A: No, it's never been confusing to me. I understood what was going on and<br />

what the plans were. No, I never was confused at any time about any <strong>of</strong> it,<br />

including the first day.<br />

Q: In regard to the committees, were you involved at all in the committees<br />

that you were assigned to serve on?<br />

A: In other words, was I in the day-to-day world on those committees? One,<br />

I know I was. I was involved in the judiciary committee, I was assigned to<br />

the judiciary committee, which is a committee on which only lawyers could<br />

serve at that time. We were concerned wlth the laws, with reference to the


courts. The judiciary committee handled most <strong>of</strong> the laws <strong>of</strong> that sort, That<br />

was like throwing a rabbit in a briar patch because T had been 8 lawyer since<br />

1947 and we're talking about 1957. I had been a lawyer ten years, so 1 was<br />

not naive nor uninformed, I guess I was dry behind the ears by then.<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: So, I know I served on that committee . . .<br />

Q: Well, what I was driving at--now. for example, on the judiciary committee,<br />

were you interested in being assigned to that committee before the assignment?<br />

A: Yes, as a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, you had ro send in the names <strong>of</strong> the committees<br />

that you wanted to serve on and judiciary was one--my first choice, as a<br />

matter <strong>of</strong> fact,,<br />

Q: I see, yes.<br />

A: 1 have been very fortunate. T always got my choices. Whatever committees<br />

1 asked for, I got them.<br />

Q: Well, let's see, now. Who was making the assignments when you first went<br />

down there?<br />

A: The Democratic leader-now, and ~'m not sure who that was. T think it<br />

was--at that time, I think it was George Dunne. (pause) 1 think so. I got<br />

the committees I wanted.<br />

Q: After organization, what was the first actian that you became involved in?<br />

Was it committee action or floor action?<br />

A: Probably--let me see . . . In these days when you came down the first day,<br />

you would sit down and you would get organized and then you wouldn't come back<br />

until sometime in February when they got the board set up with the names and<br />

the desks with your nameplates and all that, So I came back--1 think there<br />

was, it seems to me, some deficiency appropriations that we had to pass that<br />

first day. Because one--1 know one was fifty or sixty million dollars. T<br />

remember having to vote on something for fifty or - sixty million dollars was<br />

just ,. . a<br />

Q: And you were surprised at the amount, huh?<br />

A: Yes. (chuckles)<br />

Q: So it was about a one-day tour down there and then you came home. What did<br />

yau do then to prepare for going back?<br />

A: Well, 1 started getting together the ideas that T wanted to put into bills<br />

and getting the bills drawn preparatory to being introduced when I got back.<br />

Q: Yes. Did you do your own drawing <strong>of</strong> the bills?


BLACK DEMOCRATS IN THE 77TH ILLINOIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY. IN FRONT ROW<br />

( L TO R): SENATORS CHARLES CHEW, JR., KENNETH HALL, CECIL A. PARTEE,<br />

RICHARD H. NEWHOUSE AND FRED J. SMITH. SECOND ROW (L TO R): REPRESENTA-<br />

TIVES LEWIS A. CALDWELL, RICHARD A. CARTER, JAMES A. MCLENDON, ROBERT<br />

L. THOMPSON, CORNEAL A. DAVIS AND JAMES Y. CARTER. BACK ROW: REPRE-<br />

SENTATIVES RAYMOND W. EWELL, JAMES C. TAYLOR, ISAAC R. SIMS, EUGENE M.<br />

BARNES, HAROLD WASHINGTON AND OTIS G. COLLINS.<br />

"I rather carefully avoided a black caucus as such,<br />

particularly since I was the president and leader<br />

<strong>of</strong> the entire legislature."


READY TO CALL THE SENATE TO ORDER.<br />

"We never started a session<br />

late, not one minute during<br />

the entire time."


CECIL PARTEE AT WORK IN THE SENATE PRESIDENT'S OFFICE.<br />

DURING HIS EARLIER SESSION AS SENATE PRESIDENT PRO<br />

TEMPORE. HE HAD RELINQUISHED THIS OFFICE TO LT. GOVER-<br />

NOR PAUL SIMON.<br />

"I bad a smaller <strong>of</strong>fice over on the side."


CECIL PARTEE (L) AND GOVERNOR DANIEL WALKER. PARTEE, AS<br />

SENATE DEMOCRATIC LEADER DURING THE WALKER ADMINISTRA-<br />

TION, FOUND HIMSELF CAUGHT BETWEEN THE WALKER DEMO-<br />

CRATIC ORGANIZATION AND THE REGULAR DEMOCRATlC ORGANI-<br />

ZAT ION.<br />

"They just always kept me in a tizzy<br />

trying to satisfy and protect both<br />

ends <strong>of</strong> the party. "


A: No, it was the Legislative Reference Bureau.<br />

Q: So did you send them the data, then, on . . .<br />

A: No, you sat down with them across the desk, discussed the idea that you had<br />

in mind and you would have somebody rough-draft what you wanted to do or,<br />

point-by-point item, what you wanted the bill to include, what you wanted it<br />

to exclude. And then they would put it in written form for introduction.<br />

Q: Let's see, at that time, when you first went down there, when you were<br />

submitting a bill, not a new bill but something which amended a previous bill,<br />

wasn't there something about you amended only in part as opposed to replacing<br />

it with an entire restatement <strong>of</strong> the law?<br />

A: There are two ways to amend a bill. One, you could <strong>of</strong>fer an amendment in<br />

the cormnittee and if that amendment had acceptability within the committee<br />

and the bill was voted out as amended, it would hit the floor in that form.<br />

Or you could wait until a bill came out <strong>of</strong> a committee and on second reading,<br />

which is the amendment stage, you could <strong>of</strong>fer an amendment on the floor. And<br />

if that amendment had acceptability on the floor, it would be attached at<br />

that time. And then, when it got the third reading, it would contain, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, what you had added or taken out.<br />

Q: Do you remember any amendments that you made in committee action?<br />

A: Oh, gosh. (chuckles) I can't go back that far in terms <strong>of</strong> specifics. I<br />

can certainly remember that there were many times I thought that maybe<br />

something was couched in language which could be clearer and more forthright<br />

and I would <strong>of</strong>fer an amendment to do that, Or I would <strong>of</strong>fer an amendment to<br />

add something to a bill or to take something out that 1 thought was inappropriate<br />

in that particular bill. Well, there were many times that--specifically,<br />

no, I don't remember.<br />

Q: Was this a formal type action? Or was it generally kind <strong>of</strong> informal in<br />

the committee action?<br />

A: Formal. Formal, Committee, <strong>of</strong> course, is less formal than floor action.<br />

But it's formal, you have got to do it in writing, you know; you can't just<br />

talk about it.<br />

Q: Yes. Where did the judiciary committee meet?<br />

A: (pause) Seems to me we met in M-5. See, M-5 no longer exists. That<br />

mezzanine down just <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> the first floor down there was a series <strong>of</strong> little<br />

meeting rooms. See, the capitol has been so configurated and reconfigurated<br />

so many times in twenty years, I hardly remember where various ones met.<br />

Q: How <strong>of</strong>ten did a committee like that. meet? Was it on call?<br />

A: It was on call <strong>of</strong> the chair but they had a schedule. It met at leas? once<br />

a week and sometimes you would have to have additional meetings dependiqg on


the volume <strong>of</strong> the business to come before that committee. And sometimes pu<br />

would have to have night meetings in order to handle all the bills.<br />

Q: In each individual meeting, was there a general time?<br />

A: You would get a notification that the meeting is going to be at a certain<br />

place at a certain time and the bills to be considered would be listed and they<br />

would give them by number so that, when you got into the meeting, you knew<br />

exactly what bills were to be considered.<br />

4: How soon beforehand would that notification occur?<br />

A: Generally a week before.<br />

Q: So you had time to . . .<br />

A: Sure, unless it was some call meeting or something. You would go in a<br />

meeting say on Tuesday and they would say, "Well, we're going to meet again<br />

Wednesday night and these are the bills that are going to be considered."<br />

You would generally know what was going to be considered.<br />

Q: If a number <strong>of</strong> bills were coming up, huw did you go about finding a draft<br />

<strong>of</strong> those bills?<br />

A: Oh, you had a book on your desk with every bill in it, every bill. As<br />

bills were introduced and printed they were put in your bill book. You had<br />

copies <strong>of</strong> all the bills.<br />

9: This was done by what agency? Do you recall?<br />

A: (pause) It was an outside printing company. Some outside group did the<br />

printing.<br />

Q: I see, yes. Did you have much occasion to use the Legislative Reference<br />

Bureau for anything other than the drafting <strong>of</strong> the bills?<br />

A: No. No, nothing much more than that.<br />

Q: No research type thing?<br />

A: No, we didn't have that in those days. You did your own research. We<br />

didn't even have a telephone to call home or call your <strong>of</strong>fice or anything <strong>of</strong><br />

that sort. You would just put some money in the phone booth. We didn't even<br />

have credit cards in that day, You just put some quarters or dimes, whatever<br />

it took, in there, to do it. No, we didn't have any help at all. We had no<br />

interns, we had no staff, you did it yourself.<br />

Q: So really your <strong>of</strong>fice was more or less your hotel room?<br />

A: Your head.


Q: Well! (laughter)<br />

A: Yes, didn't have any <strong>of</strong>fices. The leaders had <strong>of</strong>fices in those days, the<br />

speaker would have an <strong>of</strong>ffce. Maybe the assistant majority leader and the<br />

assistant minority leader, and then the minority leader and the majority leader<br />

would each have probably an <strong>of</strong>fice, I think they had <strong>of</strong>fices. I don't really<br />

remember that they had <strong>of</strong>fices, to tell you the truth; but I do know the<br />

speaker had one and the president <strong>of</strong> the Senate.<br />

Q: So if you had any typing to be done, you had to . . .<br />

A: We had a pool.<br />

Q: In the statehouse building itself, huh?<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Did the party headquarters provide any help <strong>of</strong> any nature <strong>of</strong> that type?<br />

A: No, not <strong>of</strong> that type, no.<br />

Q: When these bills were coming up, how <strong>of</strong>ten did you--1 believe you call it<br />

11<br />

caucus," where decisions are made within the party? How <strong>of</strong>ten did those<br />

occur ?<br />

A: We had caucuses maybe . . . not necessarily any regular basis. We would<br />

have them as need arose, where there was some bill that there might have been<br />

some controversy on and we wanted to make sure everybody understood what it<br />

was and what the party position was on it. They were called more as need<br />

arose rather than at any specific prearranged dates or times.<br />

Q: Where did these usually occur?<br />

A: In whatever meeting room was available. You would go to some committee<br />

hearing room that would accommodate all the guys, big enough to accommodate<br />

everybody.<br />

Q: Were any <strong>of</strong> them held in the hotel as opposed to the . . .<br />

A: No, no, they were all in the building.<br />

Q: Did you have--I suppose you did--have a number <strong>of</strong> informal meetings, then,<br />

In the hotel?<br />

A: No, not really, Anything related to the business <strong>of</strong> the legislature would<br />

normally be in a meeting held in the capitol building.<br />

Q: When you were down there, you spent a coasiderable part <strong>of</strong> your time in the<br />

capitol building,<br />

A: Yes.


Q: Normally, what time would you get there in the morning?<br />

A: They normally started about tea o'clock, around ten, and you would go<br />

until the business was over for that day, but generally--that's hard to say,<br />

because--well, over a twenty-year pertod, it's been so Eluctuative.<br />

Q: Yes.<br />

A: But they normally start around ten. I think that--you wauld start at the<br />

Senate at nine, nine-thirty, but ten o'clock was pretty much the starting time<br />

over there. Of course, a lot <strong>of</strong> times we would have committees, maybe,<br />

before that, you know. We would have a committee at eight-thirty or nine, you<br />

see, and come on the floor at ten.<br />

Q: What was the first occasion for you to speak on the floor? Do you remember?<br />

A: No, I do not. No, I don't. (pause) You see, it sounds funny that I<br />

don't remember but: T know why. Having been a lawyer ten years, speaking to<br />

groups, speaking to juries over the years, there's really nothing significant<br />

about starting to speak to a group <strong>of</strong> people, you know, on the floor. Now,<br />

if I had come from another world, like if I had been a farmer, if I had been<br />

a druggist or something, 1'n sure it would have pr~bably been more memorable<br />

and more indelibilized in my recollection, but I simply don't remember.<br />

Q: From the earlier days, do you remember any particular debates that you got<br />

into on the floor with other individuals on any subject?<br />

A: In my early days, no, I do not. No I really don't.<br />

Q: Did this happen very <strong>of</strong>ten?<br />

A: That I would get involved in debate? Oh, yes. I wasn't a guy that was<br />

up every day, but when I got up, I had something to say and they listened.<br />

knew what I was talking about, too.<br />

I<br />

Q: Yes, sir. Now, if you were in <strong>Springfield</strong> and you needed to research<br />

something for information, where did you go to do your research? The <strong>Illinois</strong><br />

State Library?<br />

A: Well, the library or that building just . .<br />

Q: Centennial building?<br />

A: Centennial building, yes. They had very adequate libraries over there, very<br />

adequate. If I wanted to look up a law <strong>of</strong> another state or something, I may<br />

go into the Legislative Reference Bureau. I wauld on that occasion, because<br />

they had volumes <strong>of</strong> court decisions and the statutory law from all over the<br />

country. So, if you wanted to make a comparison with some other state or something,<br />

you would go in there, the Legislative Reference Bureau.<br />

Q: Now, the Legislative Council was available at that time, was it not, for


esearch if you needed it?<br />

A: Bill I)ay did help me a lot in later years.<br />

Q: You didn't have occasion to use it?<br />

A: No, not very <strong>of</strong>ten.<br />

Q: (pause) So when you were researching, did you normally act on your own or<br />

did you get together with a number <strong>of</strong> people to develop a position?<br />

A: Pretty much on my own. Just as I would as a practicing lawyer and I wanted<br />

to find out about something, I would just kind <strong>of</strong> do it myself.<br />

Q: So, and once you felt you had the information you needed, then it was a<br />

matter <strong>of</strong> getting together with the other individuals that you knew were on<br />

your side qnd come up with a position?<br />

A: You didn't always have time to get together with the individual you knew<br />

was on your side. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, you didn't always know who was on your<br />

side. When the debate started and you got up and made your input, then you<br />

may have somebody from the Republican party over here and somebody from<br />

upstate over there and those coalitions would be formed pretty much instantaneously<br />

rather than sitting down working out our strategies.<br />

Q: Were there any individuals from downstate that you became quite active<br />

with in those early days?<br />

A: Oh, yes, I worked with a lot <strong>of</strong> those fellows from down there. Clyde<br />

Choate and Paul Powell and, in the early days, a fellow named Butch Katcliffe,<br />

a fellow named Joe Stremlau. Several <strong>of</strong> them. I got along with all <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

I would help them with their programs, they would help me with minc.<br />

1 remember helping them considerably with the Southern <strong>Illinois</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

when they first started moving toward helping to build it and develop it. I<br />

worked very closely with them and so, when we got ready to put in the <strong>Illinois</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> Circle campus, they were helpful to me, getting that set up.<br />

Q: Who was the leader in the Southern <strong>Illinois</strong> <strong>University</strong> development?<br />

A: Paul Powell and Clyde Choate.<br />

Q: Do you remember any specific actions that were taken that you . . .<br />

A: I don't remember any specific actions except I do remember that the <strong>University</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> at Champaign, through their representatives, were not very<br />

keen on the building up <strong>of</strong> this new university down there.<br />

I<br />

Q: And who would that have been? Do you remember any individuals there?<br />

A: No. (pause) You know, whenever you build a new school, the ones tha! are<br />

f


established are not too happy about it because they always think it's going to<br />

take students from them and so forth and so on. I can remember when we put in<br />

Sangamon State, the people who were more upset were, seemed to me, SIU people.<br />

By then, see, because they had developed and they were afraid <strong>of</strong> competition,<br />

but I always thought it was very unusual that a city like <strong>Springfield</strong>--a<br />

state capital that didn't have a college, a full college, was just unbelievable.<br />

I couldn't: think <strong>of</strong> any state capitals in the country without a university<br />

or without a college except <strong>Springfield</strong>, until they got Sangamon State.<br />

I<br />

Q: Were you active in any other university actions other than Southern <strong>Illinois</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> and the Chicago Circle and Sangamon State?<br />

A: Well, 1 was very active in the whole junior college program.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: I was persuaded towards support <strong>of</strong> that junior college program for the<br />

principal reason that as college expenses became greater, it was very obvious<br />

to me that a large number <strong>of</strong> people would have a very difficult time sending<br />

kids away to college, particularly in large families, the cost was so prohibitive.<br />

We felt the junior college system would be very much needed because<br />

if a kid could stay home and eat and sleep at home the first two years and get<br />

that first two years under his belt, by that time he's a more mature persan<br />

and it's easier then for him to help himself, to go out and start to work on<br />

that last two.<br />

On that same theory, Sangamon State and Governor's State universities will<br />

have that principle, where they start at the junior year and they go through<br />

junior, senior and then into the graduate school. It made it a lot easier for<br />

a lot more people to get an education, you see.<br />

I just always thought about California. They have been so far ahead <strong>of</strong> us on<br />

the junior college system. You take a fellow like Jackie Robinson, Jackie<br />

Robinson only played two years <strong>of</strong> college football at UCLA. He played the<br />

first two years at Compton Junior College. California had junior colleges for<br />

many, many years. We were a little late coming to it, but we finally did it.<br />

The community college system, the whole thing that made college education more<br />

accessible to people with limited funds, it's just been a great thing, I think,<br />

for the whole state.<br />

I<br />

Q: Who in the legislature was kind <strong>of</strong> a prime mover on that junior college . . .<br />

A: I don't know, but I've always been very, very supportive <strong>of</strong> it, I'll tell<br />

you that.<br />

Now, there are some concepts where I can remember who the prime mover was.<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong> was very, very behind in the area <strong>of</strong> how we treat people who have<br />

mental illnesses and I can remember that Sam Shapiro was a main mover in that<br />

one. Sam Shapiro was a member <strong>of</strong> the House at that time with me. I can<br />

remember trying to help him with that program and <strong>Illinois</strong> developed into one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the top states in the mental health field, where we started from "borscht,"


started from nothing.<br />

Q: Did that occur quite early in your legislative career?<br />

A: Well, fairly early, yes, fairly early.<br />

Q: Do you remember a specific bill <strong>of</strong> any sort that he was . . .<br />

A: No, it was a series <strong>of</strong> bills. You know what would be helpful to me.<br />

Q: Yes, sir?<br />

A: If your staff would go back and look at my legislative record and pick out<br />

what they consider the major kinds <strong>of</strong> bills and all that I was involved w ith,<br />

I would like to see that and see what that included.<br />

Q: All right, sir.<br />

A: And it's a very easy thing to do. They just go back to the digests<br />

[Legislative Synopsis and Digest] from that period and they're all alphabetized<br />

and the whole thing in terms <strong>of</strong> the numbers and you can see which were the<br />

major bills and which ones that T was leader on and so forth,<br />

Q: Are there particular areas that you feel are really important to you?<br />

A: Yes, I would thin--see, the way we've been really delving on the House<br />

picture and--I spent ten years in the Senate and I have passed some rather<br />

significant legislation in the Senate. For example, T passed the first bill<br />

in the United States that mandates the teaching <strong>of</strong> consumer education in<br />

high schools.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: Some other just outstanding kinds <strong>of</strong> legislation, some <strong>of</strong> it in the banking<br />

field and others. Go through the resolutions too. For example, I had the<br />

lead on the resolution far the eighteen year old voting.<br />

Q: Oh?<br />

A: Some very significant kinds <strong>of</strong> stuff.<br />

Q: All right, sir, W i l l that do it for today, then, sir?<br />

A: Yes, that's fine.<br />

Q: Good<br />

A: The time just . . .


SESSION 5, TAPE 5, SIDE 1<br />

Q: What I've done, under the heading <strong>of</strong> education and promotion <strong>of</strong> civil<br />

rights in education, is run through the bills that you were involved with<br />

in the House and then carried on into the Senate. In that folder are some<br />

from the Senate. If 1 may, I'll just call attention to some <strong>of</strong> the bills<br />

or groupings <strong>of</strong> bills and see what you recall about those particular ones.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: For example, back in 1957 you were cosponsor on a bill, the primary<br />

sponsor was Simon. I dnn't know, was that Paul Simon in the House?<br />

A: Paul Simon, yes.<br />

Q: In which he submitted a bill which would require superintendents to make<br />

sworn statements <strong>of</strong> nondiscrimination in schools before they would receive<br />

state aid. And this was approved. He also, in 1961, introduced a bill<br />

where affidavits would be required. Now, I don't know what the difference<br />

between the two bills was but they were both approved. Does this strike a<br />

bell with you?<br />

A: Yes, it does strike a bell with me. That was one approach that was taken<br />

to make certain that those persons most responsible for making certain<br />

that the schools were operated on a nondiscrimination basis would have some<br />

accountability. In asking principals ar superintendents to make that statement,<br />

either by the first method or the second, would in some measure make<br />

certain that that principal would operate the school on a nondiscriminatory<br />

basis. That was probably a sort <strong>of</strong> an opening round in the whole thing <strong>of</strong><br />

making certain that there would be no school discrimination. There had been<br />

and there were many instances where it was provable that there was some<br />

discrimination in our school systems. That was one <strong>of</strong> the ways used to try<br />

to avoid it and to stop it.<br />

Q: Do you know how Paul Simon came to be the primary sponsor on that first<br />

bill? Now, it was a Representative Marks on the second bill having t~ do<br />

with the affidavits.<br />

A: No, I. don't really know how he came to be the sponsor. It was an idea<br />

that had probably emanated with him or with some person who asked him to put<br />

it in. I don't know. And Representative Marks was a very fine representative<br />

who came along with the second one in 1961; sort <strong>of</strong> a tightening up<br />

process, I assume.<br />

Q: I see. How did you become involved with these bills?<br />

A: Well, it was a concept that I certainly agreed to and believed in and<br />

it would be normally natural for me to cosponsor a bill <strong>of</strong> that nature.<br />

Q: Do you recall how you became aware that these bills were in the mill?


A: Well, not specifically as to these particular bills, but normally when<br />

any legislator has a bill that he wants to introduce, he would be inclined<br />

to talk to other legislators who he would feel would bc <strong>of</strong> the same bent,<br />

and would be <strong>of</strong> the same mind on that particular subject, and ask them to<br />

co-sponsor it. As a matter <strong>of</strong> fact, a bill's success in many instances<br />

depends on the number <strong>of</strong> co-sponsors that it has. There have been bills<br />

where people have sought co-sponsors equal in number to the number <strong>of</strong> votes<br />

required to pass a bill. One <strong>of</strong> the things that happens, <strong>of</strong> course, is<br />

that when a person co-sponsors a bill, he is likely to believe in the subject<br />

matter <strong>of</strong> that bill and will be supportive <strong>of</strong> that bill right down the<br />

line. And that insures the passage <strong>of</strong> the bill on that basis. So normally<br />

when you would introduce a bill you would get as many co-sponsors as you<br />

could because that sort <strong>of</strong> locks them in to supporting the bill.<br />

Q: I see. Yes, sir. Now, Paul Simon was a very downstater. I wonder how<br />

his interests were developed along this line?<br />

A: Well, sometimes legislators do not introduce bills that relate particularly<br />

to their districts. There are those who have a feeling for what is<br />

best for the state. On that basis he might have introduced it irrespective<br />

<strong>of</strong> whatever happened. He might have come from a district where there was<br />

no discrimination. He may have come from a district where there were very<br />

few minorities but he would nonetheless feel that this was a proper approach<br />

to what was obviously a very serious question.<br />

Q: I noticed Representative Armstrong took six years to get a bill passed<br />

on redistricting <strong>of</strong> the school system. He started in 1957, it was tabled,<br />

didn't get to a vote evidently. In 1959, it was voted on and failed and<br />

then tabled again in 1961 and then approved finally by the governor in 1963,<br />

passed through. Do you recall the situation regarding redistricting?<br />

A: I dan't remember the situation as regarding the redistricting. My<br />

clearest recollection is about another bill that he had, unless this is<br />

the same bill that's referred to as redistricting, which was called the<br />

Armstrong Law. I really can't tell you what the components <strong>of</strong> that bill<br />

were but it did in a measure address the subject <strong>of</strong> discrimination In<br />

schools. It was, for that period <strong>of</strong> time certainly, the best kind <strong>of</strong> bill<br />

that had been pr<strong>of</strong>fered to that point. I would have to check it to find out<br />

its exact terms but it was a significant step forward in the eliminati* <strong>of</strong><br />

discrimimat ion in schools.<br />

Q: Do you recall what time--was this the time period?<br />

A: I'm not: sure, but it would seem to me i.t would, probably would, it<br />

probably would be 1963, yes.<br />

4: Do you recall that that Armstrong Law took several years for passage?<br />

A: To pass, yes, that's correct.


Q: Be must have . . .<br />

A: There was a lot: <strong>of</strong> resistance to it to begin with.<br />

Q: What kind <strong>of</strong> resistance was given to it?<br />

A: Well, people just refused to vote fortit or voted against it.<br />

Q: Do you recall any <strong>of</strong> the reasons that . . -<br />

A: Well, you know, there are always two kinds <strong>of</strong> reasons. Announced reasons<br />

and real reasons. I don't remember specifically the reasons. Thexe would<br />

be some who would say, "Well, there is not discrimination. That just<br />

doesn't exist," simply, you know. And there were others who might favor<br />

discrimination but they wouldn't say they favored discrimination, they<br />

would have some other technical kinds <strong>of</strong> reasons that they might pr<strong>of</strong>fer<br />

to avoid the effect <strong>of</strong> the bill. But it did take several years to get it<br />

passed I remember.<br />

Q: Do you remember any individuals who were most opposed to the Armstrong<br />

Law?<br />

A:) No, I really don't, I really don't. I suspect that Representative<br />

Clabaugh probably was in the vanguard <strong>of</strong> the opposition at that time.<br />

later years he came around a little bit.<br />

In<br />

Q: Where was he from, sir?<br />

A: Champaign.<br />

Q: Prom Champaign, yes.<br />

A: He was the chairman <strong>of</strong> the Education Committee in the House den the<br />

Republicans had the House.<br />

Q: I see, yes. Another bill that was introduced by Representative Marks<br />

in 1961 gave superintendents means to investigate discrimination in the<br />

schools. Do you recall . . .<br />

A: I don't recall the specific bill but it would be, certainly a very<br />

necessary bill because one <strong>of</strong> the questfons that was always raised about the<br />

legislature giving an additional duty to a school or to a school board without<br />

giving them the money to do it with--that was, <strong>of</strong> course, an objection<br />

that might be pr<strong>of</strong>fered by someone who would be opposed to the concept. But<br />

they would say, "Well, you can't get this to our school board because they<br />

don't have the money to do it .I' So his passing a bill which gave them the<br />

money to make the investigations would answer those kinds <strong>of</strong> complaints<br />

about it.<br />

Q: And in that case, <strong>of</strong> course, it was approved. They were both approved


for that. About 1968, Chicago started busing in schools. Was there any<br />

reflection in the legislature at that time regarding busing?<br />

A: Well, when you say busing, I'm not sure that we mean busing in the<br />

context that we understand it now, that is to transport persons to comply<br />

with equal protection laws or with the integration <strong>of</strong> schaols. I'm not<br />

sure that is what is meant. I do remember that we had some difficulties<br />

over the years making certain that the state gave money to Chicago for use<br />

for youngsters who had to be transported from home to school. Downstate<br />

the state had always been supportive <strong>of</strong> the school bus system, That started,<br />

<strong>of</strong> course, with youngsters who were in the rural areas being transported<br />

into larger towns to schools. For a period we had a serious fight getting<br />

money from the state for Chicago's transit authority for children who had to<br />

go from one school to another. For example, kids who may want to go to a<br />

trade school or something, or maybe in another part <strong>of</strong> the city and they<br />

would have to ride the bus, And we felt that they, too, had entitlement to<br />

financial support on the buses. So, if that's what we're talking about<br />

busing in 1968, I think that's probably right.<br />

Q: Well, there seemed to be some issue involved, Ray Page, for example,<br />

came out against busing if it were used for racial integration purposes.<br />

A: Yes, 1 think he did, I think he did. I'm almost sure he did.<br />

Q: Did you know Mr. Page at that time?<br />

i<br />

1<br />

A: Oh, yes, I knew him.<br />

Q: What type person was he?<br />

A: Well, he was a person who believed, I suppose, in what he was about in<br />

that period <strong>of</strong> time, I think he probably felt that he was adhering to the<br />

philosophy <strong>of</strong> the time. There was na great outcry in the white community<br />

to eliminate discrimination and I suppose he felt that he was being responsive<br />

to what the majority desired.<br />

Q: Senator Saperstein had two bills introduced in 1971 and 1972 for<br />

equalizing educational opportunity; that is, providing facilities such a<br />

psychological guidance and other aids to the schools. She was primary o<br />

that. Do you recall that couple <strong>of</strong> bills, both <strong>of</strong> them . , .<br />

I<br />

A: I don't remember that couple <strong>of</strong> bills. I do know Senator Saperstein<br />

was a person who had a number <strong>of</strong> bills over the years that related to<br />

children and ta the handicapped and to persons with psychological problems<br />

and things <strong>of</strong> that nature. These two specific bills I don't remember.<br />

Q: Yau introduced a bill in 1971 to establish an <strong>Illinois</strong> equal opportunfty<br />

law fellowship program at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>. Do you recall thap<br />

bill?<br />

I<br />

A: Yes, 1 do. There was at the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> a proven allegatibn


that the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> law school, particularly, had had an<br />

inordinately small number <strong>of</strong> black students. In the current year <strong>of</strong> 1971<br />

the <strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong> had opened up and had a substantial number <strong>of</strong><br />

black students. My .recollection is it was somewhere around twenty. And a<br />

dean <strong>of</strong> the school came and asked me to put the bill in because they were<br />

seeking something like a hundred thousand dollars to be used for tutorial<br />

purposes. Many <strong>of</strong> the youngsters who were in the program were having<br />

difficulty keeping up with their class because they had, many <strong>of</strong> them, had<br />

what might be described as inadequate preparation for law school, although<br />

they were college graduates. The dean felt that they needed extra help and<br />

extra work and that they had to be tutored in some subjects. The money was<br />

for that purpose. My recollection is that the bill failed.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. Do you know why it failed? Was there . , .<br />

A: Yes, I think it failed for one particular reason. During my discussion<br />

with the dean, he pointed out to me that these youngsters, mast <strong>of</strong> them,<br />

were not working and that they did not have time to hold a job and keep up<br />

with their class and have the tutorial sessions. During the questioping <strong>of</strong><br />

him, that question came out, that these men were not working and many <strong>of</strong><br />

the senators wha are like myself, self-made people, just found it very<br />

distasteful that we would be subsidizing students who weren't working. You<br />

know, people would say things like, ''Well, I worked every day that I went<br />

to school. I worked and I won't see state money used to send somebody to<br />

school who isn't working," and that kind <strong>of</strong> thing. I myself worked my way<br />

through but I didn't have the same attitude. But many <strong>of</strong> them did. I<br />

would think that would be really the principal reason why that bill failed,<br />

because <strong>of</strong> the self-made people who objected to supporting people in school<br />

who did not work.<br />

Q: Was there any attempt after that to set up this fellowship?<br />

A: No, that's the only time we tried it, I think, because I just thought<br />

it was dead, that it wasn't possible to do it.<br />

Q: Yes. (pause) Senator Fred Smith in 1971, and you plus five other<br />

people, proposed a negro history week, a resolution establishing negro<br />

history week. Do you recall that resolution? And was this the second<br />

year <strong>of</strong> that, that was one <strong>of</strong> the questions I had. It said to establish<br />

again negro history week.<br />

A: I don't remember the resolution; I do remember the concept. It was<br />

established along there, I know.<br />

Q: What was Mr. Smith like?<br />

A: Well, he had been in the House a number <strong>of</strong> years and he had been in the<br />

Senate a number <strong>of</strong> years when I got to the Senate. A very articulate<br />

gentleman who understood very well the legislative process and who was for<br />

a long period <strong>of</strong> time the only black member <strong>of</strong> the Senate during the period


he was there. We joined him in 1967 after reapportionment and there were<br />

then Sour or five <strong>of</strong> us in the Senate.<br />

Q: I see.<br />

A: But he was a nice fellow.<br />

Q: In regard to grants to non-public schools, Senator Cherry introduced<br />

a bill in 1972, plus yourself and some 20 others, allowing these grants.<br />

you recall that situation?<br />

Do<br />

A: Yes, I do. The bills would benefit principally parochial and Catholic<br />

schools, I had the view that if, for example, there were no parochial or<br />

there were no Catholic schools, the cost <strong>of</strong> education <strong>of</strong> the children who<br />

were in those schools would, <strong>of</strong> course, be borne by the state. And we were<br />

always at a crisis situation in providing sufficient dollars for those<br />

youngsters who were in public schools. If we had to open up public schools<br />

to every single youngster in this state, including those who attended<br />

Cathalic schools, the bill would have been a great deal more money. So<br />

from a practical standpoint, and ecanamic standpoint, I felt it was justified<br />

to give some sort <strong>of</strong> subsidy or some money for the support <strong>of</strong> our<br />

parochial and Catholic schools.<br />

The question, <strong>of</strong> course, was not that simple. The other side <strong>of</strong> that<br />

question related to the constitutional impact <strong>of</strong> that question. Whether or<br />

not it was within the framework <strong>of</strong> constitutional province to do that.<br />

There is, <strong>of</strong> course, a very clear part <strong>of</strong> our constitution in terms <strong>of</strong><br />

separation <strong>of</strong> state from religion and there were thase who were opposed on<br />

the basis that this would be dollars from the state going to support a<br />

religion. That, <strong>of</strong> course, is a question that was litigated very, many<br />

times in our own Supreme Court and in the Supreme Court <strong>of</strong> the United<br />

States on various approaches to it. There were approaches to subsidizing<br />

the busing, there were approaches to purchasing and furnishing books.<br />

There were several questions that arose and were faced on an individual<br />

basis in that general area.<br />

Q: Yes. How did you get involved with that bill?<br />

A: Well, just as I've said, I thought that if we could, constitutionally,<br />

subsidize a portion <strong>of</strong> the expenses <strong>of</strong> the parochial schools, we would<br />

economically be saving a lot <strong>of</strong> money because it would mean that we would<br />

be spending a lot more if they closed, if all those parochial schools<br />

closed aqd all <strong>of</strong> those youngsters had to go into the public school system.<br />

Q: How was the idea <strong>of</strong> the bill started? Were you involved in coming up<br />

with the idea that there ought to be . . .<br />

A: No, I wasn't involved in the idea <strong>of</strong> coming up with it. I suppose<br />

the idea emanated from the Catholic schools, probably, throughout the state<br />

and particularly those in Chicago. We were importuned by the hierarchy <strong>of</strong>


the Catholic chufch, and other groups like Lutherans and all that had<br />

schools to ask for this kind <strong>of</strong> help.<br />

Q: Did Senator Cherry approach you to cosponsor the bill?<br />

A: I'm sure he did. He might have said to me that he had such a bill<br />

and I knew what the concept was and if 1 were in agreement with that concept<br />

then I would sponsor it, which I did.<br />

Q: Other than voting for such a bill, what does cosponsoring involve?<br />

A: Well, if you cosponsor a bill, it means you agree with the concept <strong>of</strong><br />

the bill and, in addition to voting for it, you would be expected to speak<br />

for the bill when it came up for debate, to answer questions as they arose.<br />

The sponsor usually answers most <strong>of</strong> the questions, hut a cosponsor would<br />

be supportive in answering the questions or addressing some <strong>of</strong> rhe arguments<br />

in opposition. You would be expected, <strong>of</strong> course, to help it get through<br />

committee and to vote for it on the floor. You would also be expected to<br />

resist amendments which would weaken the impact <strong>of</strong> the bill.<br />

Q: Do you recall any amendments with this particular bill?<br />

A: I wouldn't remember any specific amendments, no.<br />

Q: Do you remember any <strong>of</strong> the committee action in regard to this bill?<br />

A: Not in specificity, no.<br />

Q: There was a bill introduced by Senator Graham in 1973 which was to<br />

forbid the phyment <strong>of</strong> dues in associations when those associations would not<br />

allow member and nonmember schools to participate in athletics or sports.<br />

Do you recall that bill?<br />

A: I don't remember that at all.<br />

Q: It failed. Were there any other areas in education that we haven't<br />

touched on here? Any other specific educational bills that had to do with<br />

the civil rights <strong>of</strong> the students or <strong>of</strong> individuals that you feel were<br />

important?<br />

A: (pause) I don't remember any <strong>of</strong>fhand, any others <strong>of</strong>fhand.<br />

Q: Okay. On the Fair Employment Practices Commission, the effort to get<br />

this established went over several years starting in 1953, before you<br />

were involved there, I guess. Evidently Senator Wimbish was very active in<br />

1953 in attempting to get a bill through on this. Did you know Senator<br />

Wimbish ?<br />

A: Knew him very well. He preceded Senator Smith in the Senate. When he<br />

left the Senate, Senator Smith went there. I suppose that Representative<br />

Corneal Davis in the House was a prime sponsor <strong>of</strong> the bill for many many


years and for many many years it failed. I think finally maybe in 1965,<br />

my recollection is, it passed in the House and also passed in the Senate.<br />

Senator Korshak was there at that time and was one <strong>of</strong> the prime movers <strong>of</strong><br />

its passage.<br />

That was the raw bill that gave us the Fair Fmployment Practices Act. They<br />

had some very definite exclusions. I think originally the bill excluded<br />

all employers with less than LOO employees and over the years you'll find<br />

a large number <strong>of</strong> bills whittling it down to 75, then to 50, then to 25, and<br />

then to 15. Eventually, a bill which had been <strong>of</strong>fered many many times<br />

passed both the House and the Senate.<br />

I handled a bill in the Senate which gave the Fair Employment Practices<br />

Commission initiatory powers which gave it the right an its own to make a<br />

complaint for disctirninatian. Prior to that: time, the only avenue for making<br />

a discrimination complaint on employment had to come from the individual<br />

who was aggrieved by a situation. The idea for the commission to have the<br />

power was because the commission had the capability <strong>of</strong> looking at an entire<br />

industry and determining, a great deal more than in individual, whether<br />

there was or was not discrimination within that industry. And then they,<br />

the members <strong>of</strong> the commission, could initiate a complaint and not have to<br />

rely solely on an individual who had been aggrieved.<br />

That was a very hard fought battle over the years and there was a great deal<br />

<strong>of</strong> resistance to it. But finally we got it passed. I think T handled it<br />

and I think it got passed maybe as late as, oh, 1973 or somewhere along<br />

there, or maybe 1974, maybe even 1975, I don't know.<br />

Q: The basic bill was 1961, 1 believe. Now,Senator Percy--at that time<br />

he wasnk in politics <strong>of</strong>ficially as yet--was credited with making a compromise,<br />

or coming up with a compromise solution to the problem, which<br />

eliminated the business <strong>of</strong> initiation by the commission as one <strong>of</strong> the items.<br />

Do you remember Mr. Percy's involvement in that?<br />

A: No, I don't. Corneal Davis could probably remember that. I don't know<br />

anything about that.<br />

Q: I see, yes. The bills, as they were put in down there, were some that<br />

had a tremendous number <strong>of</strong> cosponsors on it, as many as seventy, eighty<br />

cosponsors.<br />

A: That's right. The bill commenced to pass in the House a long time before<br />

it ever passed the Senate. It might have passed the Bause three or four<br />

sessions before it passed the Senate.<br />

a<br />

Q: Yes, sir. Did you know Martin Lohmann?<br />

A: Lohmann?<br />

Q: Lohmann, from Pekin, a Democrat.


A: No, I don't know him.<br />

Q: We have interviewed him and he was one that was opposed to this because,<br />

as he pointed out--and also I found that Senator Arrington had stated--that<br />

there were real problems in finding sufficient black people that were<br />

educated sufficiently to take some <strong>of</strong> these jobs. Did you find that to be<br />

true?<br />

A: Absolutely not. Absolutely not. There were plenty <strong>of</strong> black people for<br />

the jobs that they were seeking. No, I don't find that to be true at all.<br />

Q: Well, that seemed to be one <strong>of</strong> the main oppositions to the bill.<br />

A: Well, you see, if that were sa, just on the basis <strong>of</strong> logic, if there were<br />

no black people to take the job why would there be any opposition?<br />

Q: Yes, T see. (laughter) Yes, sir, I see.<br />

A: Yes. You're opposed to something because it's a problem to you. If<br />

there are no black people to take the jobs involved, there sha~ldrift'~be any<br />

opposition because there wouldn't be a. problem. So I don't buy that at all.<br />

Q: You don't recall the specific circumstances <strong>of</strong> the passage <strong>of</strong> the bill,<br />

then, with the amendments that apparently were made to the bill in order to<br />

make it acceptable to those that were opposed?<br />

A: Yes, well, I don't remember the specific amendments because, you see, I<br />

was in the House at the time and the compromise came in the Senate. But I<br />

could tell you that I would give you a wager that one <strong>of</strong> the comp.romises<br />

was the large number <strong>of</strong> businesses that were excluded by the provision that<br />

said that it should only apply to thase coxporations with a hundred or more<br />

employees. That's part <strong>of</strong> it. They may haw had the initiatory 2lause in<br />

there and they took that out so, when the bill passed in its original form,<br />

there was na initiatory clause giving the commission itself the right to<br />

implement complaints. There might have been some other features in the bill<br />

that gave it strength and teeth that they took out. So that might have been<br />

part <strong>of</strong> the campromise.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. Then, as soon as that was passed, apparently Mr. Davis and<br />

you and others went right to work to . . .<br />

A: To aMend it up, to amend it to be a stranger bill, yes.<br />

Q: How did you go about keeping together on that? Did you have discussions,<br />

group discussions on this?<br />

A: Well, yes--the right for a person to be able to get a job based on his<br />

own qualifications was so fundamental and basic there was no reason for any<br />

meetings as such. We might have had some strategy meetings in terms <strong>of</strong> who<br />

or what people we ought to invite to come down to testify for it or something


<strong>of</strong> that nature. But other than that there was no real need to have a meeting<br />

because this was something that was so desired by the people in our<br />

community that you just, you just know that this is something that people<br />

wanted.<br />

Q: Do you recall any <strong>of</strong> the hearing action in regard to that? Was there<br />

any . . .<br />

A: Oh, yes, they were always very hotly contested committee hearings on it<br />

and there were people who would come to testify, both pro and con. The<br />

specifics <strong>of</strong> those I don't remember but they were always long and harrowing<br />

and there was a harangue every time the bill came up because some <strong>of</strong> the<br />

opposition was just very very bitter and denunciatory <strong>of</strong> the whole concept.<br />

Q: Do you recall any lobbying that went on in regard to the bill?<br />

A: Well, not in specifics. I know that certain organizations like the<br />

N-double A-C-P [National Association for the Advancement <strong>of</strong> Colored People]<br />

and the Urban League and all would always send representatives to testify<br />

for the need. And industry would probably normally send somebody who would<br />

be there to testify against it as being harassing and burdensome and onorous<br />

on business.<br />

Q: (pause) When the initiative part was finally passed in 1969, Jhrold<br />

Washington led a filibuster in order to get the bill up and to get it<br />

considered. Do you recall that filibuster?<br />

A: No, because that was over in the House. See, I went to the Senate in<br />

1967, so I don't remember the details <strong>of</strong> it. I know that there was a<br />

filibuster and finally it got passed over there and it got over to the<br />

Senate. Now, I'm not sure that that's the same year we passed it in the<br />

Senate or not. I don't really remember what year we passed it in the<br />

Senate.<br />

9: Yes, it was 1969.<br />

A: Good, because I know that when it was passed in the Senate, I was thq<br />

principal sponsor <strong>of</strong> it, that I know.<br />

Q: Yes. Ralph Smith was involved in a compromise at that time. Do you,<br />

recall any compromise?<br />

A: Ralph Smith was speaker <strong>of</strong> the House at that time and what the compromise,<br />

the terms <strong>of</strong> the compromise was, I don't know. But apparently if there was<br />

a filibuster, the compromise would be to get the bill called under certain<br />

circumstances to stop the filibuster, I would assume.<br />

Q: Yes. One we haven't gotten to yet, since they changed the procedure in<br />

the Eegislative Reference Bureau records, we haven't been able to analyze<br />

as yet the bills in 1975 and 1976 that you were involved with other than


those wbich you were primary spgnsor on. So I don't have any continuation<br />

on that. Do you recall any further action in 1975 and 1976 regarding the<br />

FEPC?<br />

A: I don't remember. I know, in 1975, I had to pass a bill to increase the<br />

salaries <strong>of</strong> the members af the commission, ,<br />

Q: Both in 1974 and 1975. You had a bill in each year that increased them.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Why did you feel that they should be increased, str?<br />

A: Well, their loads had become a lot heavier and they spent a great<br />

deal more time with the cormissiqn. I just felt that they were justified in<br />

getting a raise. It wasn't a big raise, like for--1 think it finally went<br />

to $10,000 or something Like that, I don't know what they get now but it<br />

was just to, I think it was from.$5000 to $10,000 or something like that,<br />

The ahairman had been getting $7500 or,~omething like that, so we raised<br />

them all.<br />

)' ,<br />

Q: Yes, sir, Once the bill was passed, was it effective?<br />

A: I think it had its effect, yes. X've not handled many personal cases<br />

under it. I've had a couple <strong>of</strong> cases under it but I think a ll in all it<br />

had its effect. And more than that, I don't think it was as onerous and<br />

as devastating to industry as they had claimed that it would be prior to<br />

its passage.<br />

Q: Sir, in regard to fair labor standards acts there was an attempt over a<br />

period-<strong>of</strong>-years in order to get this established and it seems that in all<br />

cases it failed in passage. One part <strong>of</strong> that was the business <strong>of</strong> women's<br />

wages being equated with those <strong>of</strong> men. In 1959, Representative Kaplan and<br />

you and 32 others were involved in a bill which prohibited discrimination<br />

in wages because <strong>of</strong> sex. Do you recall that bill?<br />

A: No, net except just conceprually. I don't reqember anything about the<br />

bill as it went through the legislature. It was an idea that I agreed<br />

with and that's why I agreed to co-sponsor it, but I just really don't<br />

remember anything else about .it.<br />

Q: What do you remember about Representative Kaplan?<br />

A: He was a very fine representative. He later became a judge in Chicago.<br />

A very conscientious man and a thoroughly and well-prepared man on any<br />

subject he would bring up. ,<br />

Q:,Do you know why he was particularly concerned about the issue <strong>of</strong> women's<br />

wages?


A: No, I do not.<br />

Q: Why were yau concerned with it?<br />

A: Because I thought it was the best thing for the women in my area and<br />

for the rest <strong>of</strong> the state.<br />

Q: Did they call this to your attention in your area or your district?<br />

A: I couldn't tell you whether they did or didn't. I could probably tell<br />

you that after the bill was introduced, there were a lot <strong>of</strong> people in<br />

my area, one in particular, who were very supportive <strong>of</strong> the concept.<br />

Q: Yes. Which brings up the subject, how did you manage your mail in<br />

the House, let's say in those days?<br />

A: Well, in those days, we did not have any <strong>of</strong>fices and we had nowhere to<br />

work from. We dictated at our desk. We had a pool <strong>of</strong> stenographers and<br />

you would get your mail and weed it out as to those letters that you felt<br />

obliged to answer. I usually tried to answer all <strong>of</strong> my mail, every single<br />

person who wrote me got some kind <strong>of</strong> an answer. If it were something that<br />

I felt obliged to dictate on, to explain either a positive or a negative<br />

position on a bill, I would do so, There were instances where you got<br />

just tons <strong>of</strong> mail on a subject that would be on postcards or something<br />

saying, "I favor House bill so and so and so and so." In that instance,<br />

so that the person would know that you had received the mail, we had some<br />

cards printed so that all your secretary had to do was to address it in<br />

the name <strong>of</strong> the person to whom it was to be sent, in which you would say<br />

either that you were opposed to the bill, and you let the people know that,<br />

or you would say you were for it. We had some stock answers that we gave<br />

in those instances. So at least their mail would be answered and it would<br />

be communicated to them first that you had received it and secondly what<br />

your position would be. There might be a bill on which you might say on a<br />

card that you have it under study and you are going to wake a decisidn soon<br />

before you voted on it, but that you would bear in mind the position that<br />

they took at the time you voted.<br />

Q: Did you receive many petitions for action?<br />

A: Very few petitions for action.<br />

Q: In 1965, Mrs. Saperstein and you plus 94 others introduced a bill on the<br />

wages. Do you recall that one?<br />

A: No. It may well have been the same bill that Kaplan had presented<br />

before, I don't know.<br />

Q: Yes, in 1959, 1965, 1967 and 1969, in all those years, it was introduced<br />

and in most cases tabled. It didn't come to a vote, evidently. When a<br />

bill . "


A: I might explain that tabling so that you might know what happened. At<br />

the end <strong>of</strong> the legislative session, June 30th in those days, there would be<br />

a motion made to table a11 bills which had not been heard. They would<br />

first make a motion to table all bills on second reading, and then they<br />

would make a motion to table all bills on third reading. So, at the end<br />

<strong>of</strong> June 30th, there would be no bills on the calendar. There would be a<br />

clean slate. In later years, after we got into annual sessions, btlls<br />

were not tabled in that fashion and they remained on the calendar to be<br />

dealt with during the next session <strong>of</strong> the legislature which would be<br />

within the two years <strong>of</strong> the current session.<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: So, you will find a great deal mare bills tabled in that era than you<br />

will now because all bills that remained as <strong>of</strong> June 30th, which had not<br />

been heard, were tabled in the old days.<br />

Q: Which meant yau had to introduce them again in order to start.<br />

A: Start all aver, that's correctb<br />

Q: 1 notice in many cases in the Senate it was stated that the bill was<br />

stricken. What did that mean? Stricken from the calendar, I believe was<br />

the term.<br />

A: Well, generally if it were stricken rather than tabled, it would be<br />

because the sponsor, fearing for the defeat <strong>of</strong> the bill or for some other<br />

reason, would move to strike the bill from the calendar.<br />

Q: I see. (pause) Let's see, the fair labor standards acts. In 1971,<br />

Mrs. Saperstein, again, and you and 27 others in this case, introduced two<br />

bills. One having to do with labor in general and the other having to do<br />

with labor in agriculture. Both <strong>of</strong> these failed. Do you recall those<br />

particular bills?<br />

A: No, I don't remember those.<br />

Q: (pause) In regard to housing, in 1957, there was a bill introduced by--<br />

the main sponsor was Mikva, and you and some eleven others, in regard to<br />

- discrimination in housing. Do you recall that particular bill?<br />

A: Yes, I do. That was the very first year that Representative Mikva and<br />

I came to the legislature. The concept <strong>of</strong> fair housing or open housing or<br />

open occupancy, all those terms are the same, was first introduced in the<br />

<strong>Illinois</strong> legislature. The bill was not a very strong bill, it bas a mild<br />

bill because there was a great deal <strong>of</strong> resistance to open housing and the<br />

open housing concept. The bill, in a measure, would have provided for<br />

soie . . . it wasn't to farce anybody into any particular place, it would .<br />

seek to place minority families in all areas. It was almost on a . . .<br />

. . in a measure, it would be some sort <strong>of</strong> selective housing where you would


the word I seek now is . . . quota kind <strong>of</strong> basis almost, Even that, as<br />

s<strong>of</strong>t as it was and as mild as it was and as weak as it was, was very fiercely<br />

opposed.<br />

Q: Do you recall any <strong>of</strong> that opposition? Apparently it would have been in<br />

the committee action primarily.<br />

A: Yes, I don't remember specifically year by year. But I could tell you<br />

the full story <strong>of</strong> the bills. Later, I guess I put in my first one In 1959<br />

or somewhere along there and . . .<br />

Q: In 1961, 1 believe it was.<br />

A: In 1961? Well, we couldn't get it passed in the House when we first<br />

put it in. Eventually, we did get it passed in the House and then for a<br />

long number <strong>of</strong> years, it passed the House but we couldn't pass it in the<br />

Senate. I think I put it in in 1961, 1963, 1965, and eventually, I think<br />

in 1965, I passed it in the House. And then it went over to the Senate in<br />

1967. By that time I was in the Senate and it always gat killed in the<br />

committee. They sent it to the License and Miscellany Committee for one<br />

reason or the other and it got killed. The Republicans always killed it.<br />

They had the larger number <strong>of</strong> people in the committees. It always got<br />

killed. Eventually, we got very very close to passage, but we never<br />

actually passed the fair housing law in the state <strong>of</strong> <strong>Illinois</strong>.<br />

Same things intervened which made it perhaps unnecessary for passage. One<br />

thing was the Supreme Court <strong>of</strong> the United States, in an opinion, established<br />

the precedent for open housing. And then there was congressional legislation<br />

which gave people an avenue for enforcing open housing. And more than<br />

that, in the 1970 Constitution, the concept for fair housing was made a<br />

part <strong>of</strong> the constitution.<br />

Then we absolutely refused then to go ahead with a specific bill because<br />

we thought that any kind <strong>of</strong> bill that you could pass, if indeed you could,<br />

wauld lessen the impact <strong>of</strong> the overall statement for fair housing in the<br />

constitution. So then we didn't seek to pass a law itself because a law<br />

would have the effect <strong>of</strong> circumscribing those situations in which fair<br />

housing was allowed and would not have the strength, vitality, or it would<br />

not be as large in scope as the constitutional provision itself.<br />

SESSION 5, TAPE 5, SIDE 2<br />

Q: You called for the Human Relations Board to take over the management<br />

<strong>of</strong> this rather than trping to set up a separate commission. Do you<br />

remember the . .<br />

A: Well, yes, there were several different kinds <strong>of</strong> approaches made. I<br />

think at one time I even gave thought to--I don't know if I ever put it in


the form <strong>of</strong> a bill--gave thought to trying to combine the functions <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Human Relations Commission and the fair housing and put them into one<br />

commission, I noted that that had been done rather successfully in the<br />

state <strong>of</strong> Minnesota. Whether I ever did that by way <strong>of</strong> a bill, I don't<br />

remember, but I do remember giving it some thought. We may have tried to<br />

amend the Human Relations Act to give it the power to deal with the subject<br />

<strong>of</strong> fair housing, and I think we did take that approach on some occasions.<br />

Q: Yes. There were several bills which you introduced, rather specific<br />

bills such as making a real estate <strong>of</strong>fice a place <strong>of</strong> public accommodation<br />

subject to . . .<br />

A: That's correct. There was one to make a real estate <strong>of</strong>fice a place <strong>of</strong><br />

public accommodation. There was another to make banks and savings and<br />

loan associations a place <strong>of</strong> accomodation. I can remember that was in 1965,<br />

if I recall, because I asked Adlai Stevenson, who was a freshman legislator,<br />

to handle those bills. They were simply different approaches to the same<br />

subject matter <strong>of</strong> open housing.<br />

For instance, for the reason if you could make certain that a bank or a<br />

savings and loan could not be involved in a discriminatory action as<br />

respects housing, it would have the overall effect <strong>of</strong> opening up the<br />

housing market to minorities. The same thing with savings and loans and<br />

banks and real estate <strong>of</strong>fices. It was an attempt to put the onus on the<br />

industry that dealt with housing in contradistinction to individual cases.<br />

So that was just simply another approach that we toak. Those bills passed<br />

the House, as I remember, and they got killed in the Senate.<br />

Q: One <strong>of</strong> the things that developed through the years--in 1966, it came to<br />

a head here in Chicago--was the local municipal ordinance which apparently<br />

did the same thing that you were attempting to do at the state legislature.<br />

Of course, the Chicago ordinance was tested first in the circuit court and<br />

then in the <strong>Illinois</strong> Supreme Court and was upheld. Do you recall the<br />

circumstances around that ordinance?<br />

A: No, not in detail. I do know that there was a great deal <strong>of</strong> hue and<br />

cry concerning it because the same forces had opposed it. But Mayor<br />

Richard Daley decided he wanted to do it and it got passed in the city<br />

council on the open housing situation. And I think the implementation <strong>of</strong><br />

it was with the human relations commission <strong>of</strong> the city, I think. Yes.<br />

Q: And this occurred in several other municipalities, apparently throughout<br />

the state.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: Then, in 1968, the legislature validated these types <strong>of</strong> municipal<br />

ordinances.<br />

A: That's correct. Now, you've got to remember that all <strong>of</strong> that came after


the 1965 Civil Rights Act at the federal level, when LBJ [Lyndon B.<br />

Johnson] was president. When this 1965 Civil Rights Act was passed that1<br />

changed, <strong>of</strong> course, a lot <strong>of</strong> climate. Then it was a federal law and then<br />

cities, <strong>of</strong> course, sort <strong>of</strong> abided the decision and went on and put in their<br />

individual laws. Then there was a validation <strong>of</strong> the ordinances that had<br />

been passed, that's right, at the state level.<br />

I<br />

Q: Yes, sir. The year 1967 seems to have been a big year in the legislature<br />

for consideration <strong>of</strong> this type <strong>of</strong> thing in the housing. Do you<br />

recall the circumstances <strong>of</strong> that year?<br />

A: Well, in 1965 there was a bill passed for the reapportionment <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Senate. That is when I ran for the Senate--subsequent to that election,<br />

in 1966, and when I went to the Senate in 1967--in the 1967 legislative<br />

session where, incidently, I received the Outstanding Freshman Award.<br />

Q: Yes, sir.<br />

A: There came to the Senate, at the same time I did, several House members<br />

who had served with me in the House. We had a great deal mare legislators<br />

from Chicago based on the reapportionment. Instead <strong>of</strong> one black senator,<br />

we then had four,<br />

Q: Yes, sir. A bill which you introduced with the housing affairs had to<br />

do with the Weston nuclear plant, or this came up in regard to getting<br />

the bill passed. Do you recall that?<br />

A: Yes, I recall that very well. The federal government was looking for a<br />

place to put a large nuclear plant, a plant that would bring a substantial<br />

amount <strong>of</strong> money to <strong>Illinois</strong> if it were located here. They had designated<br />

the site and the government, the federal government that is, had given<br />

the impression that unless we passed an open housing law that plant would<br />

not be located in <strong>Illinois</strong> and I was using that as an argument for the<br />

passage <strong>of</strong> an open housing law, so that we could acquire that plant. But<br />

that didn't sell. The opposition was so strong they would rather deprive<br />

themselves <strong>of</strong> the dollars than to pass the law.<br />

Q: Yes. I notice there was a bill that was passed to provide the--1 think<br />

it was thirty million dollars for the purchase <strong>of</strong> land for the plant.<br />

A: Yes.<br />

Q: During the discussion, evidently on the floor for this bill, it was<br />

stated that Senator Chew became extremely emotional regarding it, Do you<br />

recall that instance?<br />

A: Don't remember the specific incident but I do remember he did get<br />

emotional on the subject at one or two times. Don't remember the specific<br />

incident, no, I da not.


Q: Do you remember what type <strong>of</strong> emotionality was involved when he was<br />

speaking?<br />

A: Well . . . spirited and strident debate. Be may have said damn or hell.<br />

He just got really carried away in terms <strong>of</strong> frustration with the resistance<br />

that was coming to the bill under those circumstances and probably made a<br />

very spirited speech on the subject.<br />

Q: 1 understand that this Licensing and Miscellany Committee was headed by<br />

Frank Ozinga and I understand that you were fairly strident in some comments<br />

about Ozinga and his killing <strong>of</strong> open housing.<br />

A: Yes, I might have been strident about the entire committee and Ozinga<br />

as chairman, yes, because I never felt that they ever gave me a fair hearing<br />

on it. I thought that when they came in there their minds were made up and<br />

they weren't prepared to listen to what the true facts were.<br />

In those days, it's to be remembered, I couldn't even get any newspapers,<br />

any editorial comments in favor <strong>of</strong> fair housing. I went once to Peoria<br />

and talked to the editor there who was a man that I considered a very fine<br />

man and asked for an editorial in favor <strong>of</strong> the concept and he told me that<br />

he didn't think that people who worked for him and his newspaper would do<br />

it on the basis that they didn't believe in the concept. Be said they<br />

didn't believe in the concept and hence they wouldn't write favorable<br />

articles. I said, "Well, I'm not asking that they believe in the concept,<br />

but what I'm asking is, 'Do your peaple have journalistic integrity?"' He<br />

says, "You are doggone right they do. They certainly do have journalistic<br />

integrity." I said, "Then, if they have journalistic integrity, let them<br />

make a survey, since you say they don't need it in Peoria. Let them make a<br />

survey <strong>of</strong> the city <strong>of</strong> Peoria and I'll abide those results,," He said, "You<br />

got it."<br />

So the newspaper people in the Peoria Journal-Star made a survey and they<br />

didn't write one editorial in favor <strong>of</strong> open housing, they wrote twelve<br />

editorials in favor <strong>of</strong> open housing and put them in a little booklet called<br />

A House Divided. I was just more than gratified that they did it. Although<br />

they may not have believed in it, they had the journalistic integrity to<br />

write what the survey revealed and the survey revealed a real need for open<br />

housing in Peoria which they had initially felt that they didn't need.<br />

Q: What were some <strong>of</strong> the other things that you did in order to promote<br />

this?<br />

A: Well, I talked to various kinds <strong>of</strong> people, people from religious groups,<br />

people from the real estate industry. We had some rather large people from<br />

the real estate industry. I mean well-heeled, substantial and progressive<br />

real estate people who would come in to testify against it. The real estate<br />

industry itself, the broker's industry, they were very much opposed to it.<br />

I can remember one day I was discussing it <strong>of</strong>f the floor--at<br />

dinner as a


matter <strong>of</strong> fact--with the head <strong>of</strong> the real estate group in the state and he<br />

said, "No, <strong>Cecil</strong>," and he slammed his hand down on the table and developed<br />

just a torrential nosebleed. They rushed him to the hospital. We were<br />

really arguing the whole thing out at the dinner and next morning when he<br />

woke up in the hospital there were a dozen roses there from me. Although<br />

he was my adversary, I just felt that I wanted to do that. But in the<br />

housing, the real estate people were very much opposed.<br />

Q: Who was that individual?<br />

A: I was trying to think <strong>of</strong> his name when I was telling you that. I don't<br />

remember at the moment, I just don't remember his name. He was the man<br />

who preceded Bob Cook. Bob Cook is now the head <strong>of</strong> the real estate group.<br />

He was the man who preceded Bob Cook.<br />

I<br />

Q: There were some other relatively minor bills related to this. Senator<br />

Swanson, again in 1967, introduced a bill to prohibit discrimination against<br />

unwed mothers and their children in housing. Do you recall that bill?<br />

A: I recall it. I think it was kind <strong>of</strong> tongue-in-cheek because Senator<br />

Swanson was one <strong>of</strong> the ones who was a member <strong>of</strong> that famous Ozinga committee<br />

that was killing all the housing bills. So I sort <strong>of</strong> think that was kind <strong>of</strong><br />

tongue-in-cheek. What happened to the bill, you recall?<br />

Q: It failed, sir.<br />

A: Yes. I don't think it would have much chance.<br />

Q: Evidently it was voted on. There were a couple <strong>of</strong> others like that.<br />

Senator Smith had a bill which stated that no.housing projects under the<br />

housing authority could have discrimination in them in the management or<br />

the construction work and all that sort <strong>of</strong> thing. Another one was intro-<br />

duced by Senator Newhouse--all<br />

<strong>of</strong> these, <strong>of</strong> course, had your participation<br />

in it--which said that real estate broker's licenses could be rescinded<br />

if . . . So there were a number <strong>of</strong> others that were involved in that.<br />

A: Sure. We took as many approaches to the subject as we could think <strong>of</strong>.<br />

Q: You mentioned that Swanson was on the Ozinga committee. Now, I notice<br />

that, again in 1967, there were a tremendous number <strong>of</strong> bills, eighty or<br />

nfnety, in which you cosponsored with Senator Swanson in regard to the<br />

housing authority. Most <strong>of</strong> them--well, I shouldnlt say most <strong>of</strong> them, but<br />

about twertty let's say--had to do with substituting a regional housing<br />

authority far the local housing authority and for the land clearance commissions.<br />

Do you recall that situation?<br />

A: Yes, I think I do. Those I felt were reasonable. They had to do with<br />

making sure that there was more housing built. I think that's basically<br />

what it meant:. Yes.


Q: And was this surprising that it came from Swanson, that he was the<br />

primary sponsor?<br />

A: No, he may have been just the sponsor <strong>of</strong> the bill. It may have came from<br />

the governor's <strong>of</strong>fice probably. He was just handling it for the administration<br />

probably.<br />

Q: I see, yes. There were two groups <strong>of</strong> bills. Specifically there were<br />

eighteen there, only two <strong>of</strong> those were approved. All the rest were tabled.<br />

The two that were approved recalled the funds from the local authorities<br />

and established a state fund for the payment <strong>of</strong> expenses in the projects.<br />

Do you recall that?<br />

A: No, I don't remember those <strong>of</strong>fhand,<br />

Q: Another group <strong>of</strong> sixteen bills, all <strong>of</strong> them were tabled, was making the<br />

adjustments from in the housing authority.<br />

A: I don't remember those. Now, when I say all these I don't remember, they<br />

just don't have--you know, they're not indelibilized in my recollection. T<br />

would have to go back and look at the bills and see what they said and it<br />

would a11 come back to me.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. We do have a sheet in that folder there on that which<br />

summarizes all <strong>of</strong> those. Also in 1967, there were three bills, one with<br />

Swanson, one with Simon and one with Fred Smith, all having to do with<br />

introducing the idea <strong>of</strong> conservation and rehabilitation into the housing<br />

activity. Do you recall any <strong>of</strong> those bills?<br />

A: No, not with specificity. Conservation <strong>of</strong> existing housing has been a<br />

concept that was advanced, I suppose as early as that, on the theory that<br />

there was a lot <strong>of</strong> housing which was old and decrepit but which was very<br />

soundly built and structured, which had the capability <strong>of</strong> being rehabilitated.<br />

And that's very true today. There are a lot <strong>of</strong> very sturdy sound<br />

buildings with very thick walls which lend themselves to rehabilitation.<br />

And those buildings, when rehabilitated, are perhaps better housing, in the<br />

context <strong>of</strong> heat conservation and all those kinds <strong>of</strong> things, than some <strong>of</strong><br />

the stuff they're building now. Some <strong>of</strong> the stuff they're building now,<br />

with paper-thin walls that you can hear somebody flush their toilet across<br />

the hall or something . . . (laughs) That was, I guess, really the start <strong>of</strong><br />

the program <strong>of</strong> conservation <strong>of</strong> housing and rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> housing.<br />

(taping stopped for a telephone call, then resumed)<br />

Q: Sir, I was wondering, in regard to this conservation and rehabilitation,<br />

since you were involved with three bllls in that year, was there anything<br />

in your district which caused you to become involved in that? What was the<br />

situation with rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> homes?<br />

A: Well, I suppose I had the recognition that, within my district, there<br />

were several structures that had the capability <strong>of</strong> being refurbished, con-


served or rehabilitated as well as in other areas <strong>of</strong> the state.<br />

would be my motivation.<br />

And,that<br />

Q: Was there anyone particular in your district that called this to<br />

attention, or called any particular buildings to your attention?<br />

A: No, I don't think so. They wouldn't have had to, I would have just recognized<br />

it on my own.<br />

Q: In 1971, with Senator Cherry, you made a mernorlal to the U. S. Congress<br />

to continue the model cities program. What was your concern with the model<br />

cities program, sir?<br />

A: Well, the Congress had given the impression that they were going to<br />

eliminate it and we felt that it should still obtain. You see, model<br />

cities came into existence when there was a lot <strong>of</strong> strife and unrest in the<br />

inner-cities across the nation. There were riots and other kinds <strong>of</strong> things<br />

and we felt that the model cities prpgram would be a very stabilizing<br />

influence on helping people to rehabilitate themselves and to get themselves<br />

started toward the regular job market. We wanted the Congress to know that<br />

it was our view that it would be disasterous if that program went down.<br />

Q: Was the program active in your district?<br />

1<br />

A: Oh, yes, very active in my district.<br />

Q: In what way? What was being done?<br />

A: Well, the model cities program, they hired a large number <strong>of</strong> people and<br />

the focus was on neighborhoods, and getting people within a particular<br />

neighborhood, through various kinds <strong>of</strong> federal.programs, to upgrade themselves,<br />

prepare themselves for additional kinds <strong>of</strong> responsibilities in the<br />

work market. And it also <strong>of</strong>fered employyent to people during the period <strong>of</strong><br />

transition between poverty and--moving forward. There were programs that<br />

actually fed people who were in necessitest circumstances. There were<br />

programs that were geared toward freeing women to work, like day care<br />

centers and things <strong>of</strong> that sort where their children could be kept in the<br />

daytime to free them to work. A11 <strong>of</strong> those programs, we felt, had a<br />

salutary effect on government in that, if you can get people <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> welfare<br />

rolls and <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> necessitest circumstances, where they are not earning, into<br />

giving them a viable kind <strong>of</strong> an existence, it would mean a great deal more<br />

to the state, to the people themselves and to the revenue impact on the<br />

state. It would be upgraded.<br />

Q: And did it continue?<br />

A: The model cities program continued until probably--it was just phased out<br />

in 1978, as a matter <strong>of</strong> fact. There were some other programs which came<br />

into existence which helped to support the same concept. At the federal<br />

level, many <strong>of</strong> the programs that were a part <strong>of</strong> the Democratic administration<br />

previously were eliminated but then the new concept <strong>of</strong> revenue sharing


came in where the federal government would just give direct grants <strong>of</strong><br />

dollars to a city to be used within that city to support social and ather<br />

services.<br />

Q: Yes, sir. One last item this morning, sir. In 1974, you with two<br />

others, with Senator Netsch being the primary sponsor, proposed ta create<br />

a Senate committee on housing to study the state pollcy concerning housing.<br />

Do you recall that actian or proposal?<br />

A: If I saw the bill itself it would probably jar my memory. I really<br />

don't know what the motivation for that was at this moment. And I can't<br />

tell you specifically.<br />

Q: You don't remember if the committee was formed?<br />

A: No,<br />

Q: Okay. Well, sir, if that's all right, then.<br />

A: All righty.<br />

Q: I sure appreciate your time, sir,<br />

A: Oh, you're mare than welcome. I enjoy this. It helps me to remember<br />

a lot <strong>of</strong> my personal history.<br />

Q: Good.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!