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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, The members of the House of Representatives of the | ||||||
3 | State of Illinois were grieved to learn of the death of Chicago | ||||||
4 | community banking pioneer Milton Davis on Friday, February 11, | ||||||
5 | 2005; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, He was born in Jasper, Alabama, and graduated from | ||||||
7 | Morehouse College, a private college for African-American men, | ||||||
8 | with a bachelor's degree in sociology; he served his country | ||||||
9 | honorably in the U.S. Army and took master's level courses at | ||||||
10 | Washington University in St. Louis before he moved to Chicago | ||||||
11 | in 1958, where he worked with Ronald Grzywinski and Mary | ||||||
12 | Houghton on an experimental minority lending program at Hyde | ||||||
13 | Park Bank; he married his wife, Gertude, in 1960; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, During the early years of his marriage, Mr. Davis | ||||||
15 | became a civil rights leader joining South Side Chicago's | ||||||
16 | Congress on Racial Equality (CORE), rising to become its | ||||||
17 | President in 1965, and was arrested many times as he led | ||||||
18 | sit-ins for fair housing and picketed outside Chicago school | ||||||
19 | board meetings to end segregation; and | ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, In 1973, Mr. Davis, Mr. Grzywinski, Ms. Houghton, | ||||||
21 | and James Fletcher bought South Shore Bank to prevent its move | ||||||
22 | downtown; now called ShoreBank, it began providing African | ||||||
23 | Americans, low-income residents, and businesses from Chicago's | ||||||
24 | poorest neighborhoods with access to financial resources; by | ||||||
25 | "pounding the pavement" on the South Side, Mr. Davis and his | ||||||
26 | colleagues reached out to potential shareholders, depositors, | ||||||
27 | and loan customers to help build the first and leading | ||||||
28 | community development bank in the nation; the bank has invested | ||||||
29 | $1.7 billion in underserved U.S. communities; and | ||||||
30 | WHEREAS, Mr. Davis was the co-founder and chairman emeritus | ||||||
31 | of ShoreBank Corp.; ShoreBank is known for making profitable |
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1 | investments in depressed urban areas; it also aids development | ||||||
2 | projects outside the United States, in countries like | ||||||
3 | Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and South Africa; Mr. Davis was bank | ||||||
4 | president from 1973 to 1982 and chairman from 1983 to 1996; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, The bank has gone from $40 million in assets at | ||||||
6 | its founding to more than $1.5 billion today; it has more than | ||||||
7 | 500 employees, and affiliate banks and non-profits in Chicago, | ||||||
8 | Detroit, Cleveland, and the Pacific Northwest; it has helped to | ||||||
9 | finance the unsubsidized renovation and purchase of more than | ||||||
10 | 45,000 affordable housing residences and created or retained | ||||||
11 | more than 10,000 jobs for local residents; and | ||||||
12 | WHEREAS, Mr. Davis served in community organizations | ||||||
13 | across the city, including on the Board of Directors of the | ||||||
14 | Chicago Housing Authority, Columbia College, the Chicago | ||||||
15 | Community Trust, the Southside YMCA, Chicago United, the ETA | ||||||
16 | Creative Arts Foundation, and the Field Foundation of Illinois; | ||||||
17 | he also served on the Illinois Institute of Technology Board of | ||||||
18 | Trustees; last fall, he was honored by Shared Interest, a | ||||||
19 | non-profit social investment fund, for helping to create an | ||||||
20 | international model for financing minority businesses that | ||||||
21 | helped establish The Community Banking Project in South Africa | ||||||
22 | and for creating an internship program at ShoreBank that trains | ||||||
23 | Black South Africans for positions with financial institutions | ||||||
24 | in South Africa; and | ||||||
25 | WHEREAS, Mr. Davis was active in Chicago political life, | ||||||
26 | serving on the fundraising committees of both Harold Washington | ||||||
27 | mayoral campaigns, and he was an advisor to both Washington | ||||||
28 | administrations; and | ||||||
29 | WHEREAS, The passing of Milton Davis has been deeply felt | ||||||
30 | by many, especially his wife, Gertrude (Trudy); his daughter, | ||||||
31 | Shelley; his son-in-law, Omar McRoberts; his granddaughter, | ||||||
32 | Naima Davis-McRoberts; and his innumerable relatives and |
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1 | friends; therefore, be it | ||||||
2 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
3 | NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
4 | we mourn the death of Milton Davis, and we extend our sincere | ||||||
5 | condolences to his family, friends, and all who knew and loved | ||||||
6 | him; and be it further
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7 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
8 | presented to his family as an expression of our deepest | ||||||
9 | sympathy.
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