|
|||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
| ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Senate of the State of Illinois | ||||||
3 | learned with regret of the death of Truman K. Gibson Jr. on | ||||||
4 | Friday, December 23, 2005; and
| ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, Mr. Gibson was a Chicago attorney who had been the | ||||||
6 | last surviving member of the World War II-era "black Cabinet" | ||||||
7 | of Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman; he was | ||||||
8 | an advocate for African-American soldiers in the War Department | ||||||
9 | from 1940 through 1945 and fought tirelessly to break down the | ||||||
10 | segregation that ruled the U.S. Army, to persuade the military | ||||||
11 | leadership to commit black servicemen to combat instead of | ||||||
12 | relegating them to service and support duty, and to protect the | ||||||
13 | rights and even the lives of African-American soldiers trained | ||||||
14 | at camps mostly in the Jim Crow South where white violence was | ||||||
15 | a constant threat; and
| ||||||
16 | WHEREAS, This story was the heart of Mr. Gibson's memoir, | ||||||
17 | "Knocking Down Barriers: My Fight for Black America", published | ||||||
18 | this year by Northwestern University Press; and
| ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, Born in Atlanta on January 22, 1912, Mr. Gibson | ||||||
20 | moved with his family to Chicago in 1929; as a young graduate | ||||||
21 | of the University of Chicago Law School, he was a member of the | ||||||
22 | legal team that challenged a restrictive racial covenant | ||||||
23 | prohibiting African Americans from living in the Washington | ||||||
24 | Park area of the South Side of Chicago; he spent months pouring | ||||||
25 | over property deeds to build the factual basis for the U.S. | ||||||
26 | Supreme Court case that overturned the covenant; and
| ||||||
27 | WHEREAS, In 1940, Mr. Gibson served as executive director | ||||||
28 | of the American Negro Exposition, which was in effect an | ||||||
29 | African-American world's fair to commemorate the 75th | ||||||
30 | anniversary of emancipation, showcase black excellence in the | ||||||
31 | arts and entertainment, and celebrate African-American |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | contributions to U.S. history, featuring Duke Ellington, Paul | ||||||
2 | Robeson, Lionel Hampton, Count Basie, and other famous | ||||||
3 | entertainers of the day; and
| ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, With the outbreak of war in Europe and the | ||||||
5 | increasing likelihood that the United States would be drawn in, | ||||||
6 | the Roosevelt administration created the office of civilian | ||||||
7 | aide to the secretary of war as an advocate for African | ||||||
8 | Americans; Mr. Gibson served as an assistant to the first | ||||||
9 | civilian aide, William Hastie, and in 1943 was promoted to the | ||||||
10 | job; he played an influential role in finally convincing the | ||||||
11 | U.S. Army that it had to commit African-American troops to | ||||||
12 | battle; and
| ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Mr. Gibson was an adviser to filmmaker Frank Capra | ||||||
14 | of "It's a Wonderful Life" fame in making the movie short "The | ||||||
15 | Negro Soldier" to demonstrate to the civilian population the | ||||||
16 | African-American contribution to the war; he got Joe Louis, the | ||||||
17 | world heavyweight boxing champion, to form a group of boxing | ||||||
18 | champs to put on matches at U.S. Army bases here and aboard; | ||||||
19 | and
| ||||||
20 | WHEREAS, Mr. Gibson was appointed to the Advisory | ||||||
21 | Commission on Universal Military Training by President Harry S. | ||||||
22 | Truman; he had met boxing champ Joe Louis and become his lawyer | ||||||
23 | in the 1930s; during the war, Mr. Louis often reported to Mr. | ||||||
24 | Gibson about racial conditions on Army posts, and after the | ||||||
25 | war, his association with Louis propelled Mr. Gibson into a | ||||||
26 | career as one of the nation's premier boxing promoters; and
| ||||||
27 | WHEREAS, With Chicagoans James Norris and Arthur Wirtz, he | ||||||
28 | ran the International Boxing Club, which ruled the sport until | ||||||
29 | declared a monopoly by the courts in 1959; he pioneered network | ||||||
30 | television broadcasting of the sport; and
| ||||||
31 | WHEREAS, After leaving boxing, Mr. Gibson returned to law |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | practice in Chicago; he practiced law until his health failed | ||||||
2 | in November of 2005; and
| ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, The passing of Truman K. Gibson Jr. has been | ||||||
4 | deeply felt by many, especially his daughter, Karen Kelley; his | ||||||
5 | two grandchildren; his three great-grandchildren; and his | ||||||
6 | great-great-grandchild; therefore, be it
| ||||||
7 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL | ||||||
8 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of | ||||||
9 | Truman K. Gibson, who championed the rights of African-American | ||||||
10 | military members, and we extend our sincere condolences to his | ||||||
11 | family, friends, and all who knew and loved him; and be it | ||||||
12 | further
| ||||||
13 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
14 | presented to his family as an expression of our deepest | ||||||
15 | sympathy.
|