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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 learned with regret of the death of John H. | ||||||
4 | Johnson of Chicago on Monday, August 8, 2005; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Mr. Johnson was the founder of Ebony magazine, | ||||||
6 | which was the cornerstone of Johnson Publishing Co., a | ||||||
7 | privately held publishing, cosmetics, television production, | ||||||
8 | and fashion firm based in Chicago; it became one of the | ||||||
9 | nation's largest black-owned businesses, and the owner came to | ||||||
10 | be considered one of the nation's most influential and honored | ||||||
11 | African-American businessmen; for 60 straight years, Ebony has | ||||||
12 | been the biggest African-American owned magazine in the world; | ||||||
13 | and
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14 | WHEREAS, Mr. Johnson lived a life that was more | ||||||
15 | inspirational than any of the cover stories in Ebony or Jet, | ||||||
16 | his other major magazine; a modest beginning proved to be no | ||||||
17 | obstacle, and his life was filled with achievements and honors, | ||||||
18 | including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996; he was the | ||||||
19 | first publisher to persuade the business community of the vast | ||||||
20 | purchasing power of the African-American market; and
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21 | WHEREAS, He was born in Arkansas City, Arkansas, on January | ||||||
22 | 19, 1918, and moved to Chicago with his widowed mother in 1933; | ||||||
23 | he enrolled in DuSable High School, graduating in 1936, and | ||||||
24 | then went on to work part-time as an office worker at the | ||||||
25 | black-owned Supreme Life Insurance Co.; at Supreme Life, he | ||||||
26 | culled newspapers and magazines to prepare a digest of events | ||||||
27 | in the black community for Harry Pace, Supreme Life's | ||||||
28 | president; by 1942, he had the idea of condensing such articles | ||||||
29 | into a monthly magazine, a black version of Reader's Digest to | ||||||
30 | be called Negro Digest (and later Black World before it was | ||||||
31 | discontinued in 1976); and
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1 | WHEREAS, With a loan of $500, using his mother's furniture | ||||||
2 | as collateral, Mr. Johnson mailed a charter subscription offer | ||||||
3 | for the magazine to Supreme Life customers; with 3,000 people | ||||||
4 | responding and each sending $2, he had funds for the first | ||||||
5 | issue of Negro Digest, which he published with the aid of his | ||||||
6 | wife, Eunice, whom he had married in 1941; within a year, Negro | ||||||
7 | Digest was selling 50,000 copies a month; and
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8 | WHEREAS, His breakthrough came in November of 1945, with | ||||||
9 | the first issue of Ebony, a slick-paper magazine modeled after | ||||||
10 | Life magazine; paid circulation of Ebony was about 1.7 million | ||||||
11 | in 2004, and his publishing activities expanded to include Jet, | ||||||
12 | with circulation now at 927,402, and Ebony Jr., as well as to | ||||||
13 | include books; and
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14 | WHEREAS, Four years after it was founded, Jet caused a | ||||||
15 | sensation when in September 1955 it published an open-coffin | ||||||
16 | picture of Emmett Till; the boy's death and the picture of his | ||||||
17 | mutilated face galvanized the civil rights movement; and
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18 | WHEREAS, In 1973 he established Fashion Fair Cosmetics, a | ||||||
19 | line of beauty aids and a sponsor of a large touring fashion | ||||||
20 | show; he formerly owned three radio stations, and he was the | ||||||
21 | first African-American businessman to have his own building on | ||||||
22 | Michigan Avenue; and
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23 | WHEREAS, Mr. Johnson served on numerous advisory | ||||||
24 | commissions on the local, State and federal levels; he served | ||||||
25 | on the boards of some major corporations and educational, | ||||||
26 | cultural, and philanthropic organizations; he attended the | ||||||
27 | University of Chicago and Northwestern University, and was | ||||||
28 | later awarded 31 honorary doctoral degrees and many honors for | ||||||
29 | his business and humanitarian activities; he gave generously to | ||||||
30 | many causes, including $4 million to Howard University in | ||||||
31 | Washington, which named its communications school after him; | ||||||
32 | and |
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1 | WHEREAS, His numerous awards include the Magazine | ||||||
2 | Publisher's Association Publisher of the Year Award, the | ||||||
3 | Advertising Hall of Fame Award, the Arkansas Business Hall of | ||||||
4 | Fame Award, the National Business Hall of Fame Award, the | ||||||
5 | Greatest Minority Entrepreneur Award, the Horatio Alger Award, | ||||||
6 | the NAACP Spingarn Award, and just this year, the John H. | ||||||
7 | Johnson Delta Cultural and Entrepreneurial Learning Center in | ||||||
8 | Arkansas City was dedicated; his autobiography is entitled | ||||||
9 | "Succeeding Against the Odds"; and
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10 | WHEREAS, Mr. Johnson, who retained the titles of chairman | ||||||
11 | and publisher until his death, made Johnson Publishing a family | ||||||
12 | business; his mother, Gertrude, was a vice president of the | ||||||
13 | firm until her death in 1977, his wife is secretary-treasurer, | ||||||
14 | and his daughter, Linda, held several positions before she | ||||||
15 | became CEO; and
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16 | WHEREAS, The passing of John H. Johnson has been deeply | ||||||
17 | felt by many, especially his wife, Eunice; his daughter, Linda | ||||||
18 | Johnson Rice; and his granddaughter, Alexa; therefore, be it
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19 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
20 | NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
21 | we mourn the passing of John H. Johnson, a man who truly rose | ||||||
22 | from a life of poverty to live the American dream and became an | ||||||
23 | African-American business icon, and we extend our sincerest | ||||||
24 | condolences to his family, friends, and all who knew and loved | ||||||
25 | him; and be it further
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26 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
27 | presented to his family as an expression of our deepest | ||||||
28 | sympathy and sorrow for this great loss.
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