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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, A. Philip Randolph was born Asa Philip Randolph | ||||||
3 | on April 15, 1889 in Crescent City, Florida to parents who were | ||||||
4 | staunch supporters of equal rights for African Americans and | ||||||
5 | general human rights; in 1891, the Randolph family moved to | ||||||
6 | Jacksonville, Florida, where A. Philip would live for most of | ||||||
7 | his youth; he attended the Cookman Institute, one of the first | ||||||
8 | institutions of higher education for blacks in the country; he | ||||||
9 | was a member of the Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity; and
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10 | WHEREAS, In 1911, after graduating from Cookman, A. Philip | ||||||
11 | Randolph moved to the Harlem neighborhood of New York City; | ||||||
12 | during this time, he studied English literature and sociology | ||||||
13 | at City College and juggled a variety of jobs, including work | ||||||
14 | as an elevator operator, a porter, and a waiter, while | ||||||
15 | developing his rhetorical skills simultaneously; in 1912, he | ||||||
16 | made his first move into politics and co-founded an employment | ||||||
17 | agency, the Brotherhood of Labor, as a way to organize Black | ||||||
18 | workers; and
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19 | WHEREAS, In 1913, A. Philip Randolph married Howard | ||||||
20 | University graduate and beauty shop entrepreneur Lucille | ||||||
21 | Green; shortly thereafter, he organized a drama society in | ||||||
22 | Harlem and performed in several productions; in 1917, he | ||||||
23 | co-founded a political magazine, The Messenger, and began |
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1 | publishing articles calling for the inclusion of more Blacks | ||||||
2 | in the Armed Forces and war industry and demanding higher | ||||||
3 | wages; he also tried to unionize African American shipyard | ||||||
4 | workers in Virginia and elevator operators in New York City; | ||||||
5 | and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, After World War I ended, A. Philip Randolph | ||||||
7 | became a lecturer at the Rand School of Social Science; in the | ||||||
8 | early 1920s, he unsuccessfully ran for office in New York | ||||||
9 | State and became more convinced than ever that unions would be | ||||||
10 | the best way for African Americans to improve their situation; | ||||||
11 | and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, In 1925, A. Philip Randolph founded the | ||||||
13 | Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP) and served as its | ||||||
14 | president; he sought to gain the union's official inclusion in | ||||||
15 | the American Federation of Labor, the affiliates of which, at | ||||||
16 | that time, frequently barred African Americans from | ||||||
17 | membership; the BSCP met with resistance primarily from the | ||||||
18 | Pullman Company, which was the largest employer of Blacks at | ||||||
19 | that time; A. Philip persisted and won membership in the AFL in | ||||||
20 | 1937, making the BSCP the first African American union in the | ||||||
21 | United States; and | ||||||
22 | WHEREAS, During the 1940s, A. Philip Randolph twice used | ||||||
23 | mass protests as a means of influencing the policies of the |
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1 | federal government; he planned a march on Washington to | ||||||
2 | protest discrimination in the war industry workforce but | ||||||
3 | called off the march after President Franklin D. Roosevelt | ||||||
4 | issued an executive order that banned racial discrimination at | ||||||
5 | government defense factories and established the first Fair | ||||||
6 | Employment Practices Committee; he also organized the League | ||||||
7 | for Nonviolent Civil Disobedience Against Military | ||||||
8 | Segregation, which eventually led President Harry S. Truman to | ||||||
9 | issue a 1948 executive order banning racial segregation in the | ||||||
10 | U.S. Armed Forces; and
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11 | WHEREAS, In 1955, A. Philip Randolph became a vice | ||||||
12 | president of the newly merged entity AFL-CIO (Congress of | ||||||
13 | Industrial Organizations); in 1957, he organized a prayer | ||||||
14 | pilgrimage to Washington, D.C. to draw attention to the delay | ||||||
15 | of school desegregation being implemented in the South; he | ||||||
16 | also organized the Youth Marches for Integrated Schools and | ||||||
17 | formed the Negro American Labor Council in 1959; and
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18 | WHEREAS, In 1963, A. Philip Randolph was a principal | ||||||
19 | organizer of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, | ||||||
20 | during which he spoke to an integrated crowd of nearly 250,000 | ||||||
21 | supporters; he shared the podium with Martin Luther King Jr., | ||||||
22 | who delivered his famous "I Have a Dream" speech; A. Philip and | ||||||
23 | Dr. King were among the handful of civil rights leaders to meet | ||||||
24 | with President John F. Kennedy after the march; and
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1 | WHEREAS, The following year, A. Philip Randolph was | ||||||
2 | presented with the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President | ||||||
3 | Lyndon B. Johnson; soon after, he co-founded the A. Philip | ||||||
4 | Randolph Institute, an organization aimed at studying the | ||||||
5 | causes of poverty; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, A. Philip Randolph resigned from his more than | ||||||
7 | 40-year tenure as president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car | ||||||
8 | Porters in 1968; he also retired from public life and spent the | ||||||
9 | next few years writing his autobiography; he died in bed at his | ||||||
10 | New York City home on May 16, 1979 at age 90; he was cremated, | ||||||
11 | and his ashes were interred at the A. Philip Randolph | ||||||
12 | Institute in Washington, D.C.; therefore, be it
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13 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | ||||||
14 | HUNDRED SECOND GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
15 | we recognize the life of A. Philip Randolph, American labor | ||||||
16 | unionist and civil rights activist, and we honor his legacy.
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