In writing about Guichard Parris, Class of 1927, and his 40+ year career with the National Urban League, my mind began to shift to thoughts of the current living Amherst College Black Alumni who, in my mind, is the greatest living Amherst College Black Alumni. My thoughts shifted to Hugh Bernard Price, Class of 1963, who served as the President of the National Urban League from 1994 to 2003.
Hugh Price (1941 – )
Posted onMay 26, 2011Hugh Bernard Price, civil rights activist and president of the National Urban League, was born on November 22, 1941 in Washington, DC. Raised in a middle-class home by his parents, Charlotte Schuster and Kline Price, Price became aware of racial struggles and the importance of activism as a child. He began his schooling in a segregated elementary school and graduated from an integrated high school. His parents were involved in the early litigation which would lead to Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954.
Price graduated with a BA from Amherst College in 1963 and married Marilyn Lloyd that same year. He entered law school at Yale in New Haven, graduating in 1966. New Haven became Price’s home, as he became an attorney with the New Haven Legal Assistance Association in 1966, and then with Cogen, Holt and Associates in 1970. In both positions Price focused on supporting low-income clients. Although never directly involved with the civil rights movement of the 1960s, Price spent much of his life working to improve the lives of impoverished urban blacks.
In 1977, Price moved to New York City, where he was hired as an editorial writer for the New York Times. His editorials focused primarily on issues concerning race and poverty. In 1982, Price became the senior vice president and director of the production for WNET-TV in New York City. Six years later, in 1988, he became vice president of the Rockefeller Foundation, which funded projects to better communities and lives of disadvantaged people. Price worked heavily with the Special Initiatives and Explorations grant fund to improve the welfare of people of color through school reform and equal opportunity projects. His experience at the Rockefeller Foundation led the National Urban League to recruit him as president.
In 1994, when Price became president and CEO of the National Urban League, the 84-year-old organization was on the decline. Price played a crucial role in reviving the League, making it, once again, a leading organization in social justice activism. Up until Price’s presidency, the League had focused primarily on preparing rural African Americans for life in the cities. Recognizing that the great migration of southern blacks to northern cities was over, Price reoriented the goals of the organization. He focused on three principle initiatives: education and youth development programs, economic empowerment, and inclusionary programs. These initiatives, in turn, promoted the League’s new priority, addressing intergenerational urban poverty and the growing urban underclass. While at the League, Price also created related programs, most notably the Campaign for African American Achievement and the Institute of Opportunity and Equality. Hugh Price left the National Urban League in 2003 and retired in 2005. Price is a member of Sigma Pi Phi and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternities.
88888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888
Long in the Shadows, the Latimer House Museum Gets a Glow-Up
The Queens home of the Black inventor who contributed to the invention of the lightbulb gets an overdue makeover.
In an episode of HBO’s “The Gilded Age,” Peggy Scott, the budding journalist, and T. Thomas Fortune, her discerning editor, expectantly await the illumination of the New York Times building in Lower Manhattan.
“Tell me, what are your thoughts on electricity?” Fortune says.
“Are you talking about Mr. Edison’s lights?”
“Well, Mr. Edison is not solely responsible,” Fortune says, correcting her.
“Who else was involved?” Scott asks.
Lewis Latimer, Fortune responds, a Black inventor: “He created a better carbon filament. That’s the thing in the bulb that helps keep the lights on, so to speak.”
Advertisement
“Well, I’m sure that Mr. Edison will give Mr. Latimer his due credit at the ceremony."
To which Fortune laughs and says, “I admire your wit, Miss Scott.”
Lewis H. Latimer did not get all the credit due him. His invention of a method to manufacture carbon filament to make lightbulbs mass-producible was patented in 1882, but he had been working at that time for Thomas Edison’s rival. (Latimer was generally recognized earlier, when the Equitable Building and the Union League Club in Manhattan were illuminated, but didn’t join Edison’s company until 1884.)
When Latimer died in 1928, he was described in a two-paragraph obituary in The Times as “an electrical engineer widely known throughout the United States.” Today, though, he is perhaps best known as the namesake of a public housing development in the Flushing neighborhood of Queens and an elementary school in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn.
Beyond those markers, Latimer, who never got beyond elementary school himself, has been largely forgotten. Historians and civic leaders hope to rectify that with the reopening of the Lewis Latimer House Museum in Queens.
Advertisement
Latimer’s yellow-frame Queen Anne-style clapboard home with coral trim at the corner of 137th and Leavitt Streets near the Flushing High School athletic field has been restored and rejuvenated into a 21st-century kinetic tribute to the self-taught inventor, draftsman and patent expert.
Starting June 15, it will be open to the public Friday through Sunday, 11 a. m. to 5 p.m., and during the week to school groups.
Latimer figured profoundly, if not prominently, in the introduction of transformational scientific ventures like Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone, the commercialization of Edison’s lightbulb and social movements like abolitionism (his father, George, was an early hero of the movement). He was also an artist, poet and flutist who presaged the Harlem Renaissance.
“It’s certainly not ‘our grandfather’s historic-house museum,’” said Hugh B. Price, the former president of the National Urban League, who becomes the museum’s chairman next month.
Latimer was Price’s great-granduncle and Price recalls visiting his great-aunt, one of Latimer’s two daughters, at the house in Flushing as a college student.
Advertisement
“Lewis Latimer was one of the very first African Americans to break the corporate glass ceiling and ascend the ladder of major American businesses,” said Price, a former member of the editorial board of The New York Times.
“He was an early trailblazer for the traditionally marginalized by demonstrating that qualified people who all too often are victims of discrimination and denied opportunity can compete and excel, produce and perform, create and contribute as capably as anyone else,” Price said.
In what seems like a striking omission in retrospect, the Times obituary didn’t mention that Latimer was Black — a pioneer, like Benjamin Banneker in the 18th century and Thomas Jennings in the 19th, who overcame racial discrimination to advance science and social justice movements.
Latimer’s neighborhood of Flushing has a rich Native American heritage, and it is also famous for a foundational document of American freedom: the Flushing Remonstrance, in which neighbors petitioned Peter Stuyvesant in 1657 to stop discriminating against Quakers.
Latimer was an early disciple of two nascent causes that blossomed long after his death: the integral link between science and art (now known at STEAM, for curriculums that stress science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) and the Black Is Beautiful assertion of self-respect.
Advertisement
The house at 64 Holly Street (now 137-53 Holly Avenue) was scheduled to be razed in the 1980s to make way for new homes. But an article in The Times about the proposed demolition prompted the Queens Historical Society, the General Electric Foundation and Latimer’s granddaughter Winifred Latimer Norman to have it moved about a mile away to 137th Street.
Latimer lived and worked in the house from 1903 to 1928, and it was owned by the family until 1963. In 1995, it was designated a New York City landmark. Three years later, a modest museum opened, operated by the nonprofit Lewis H. Latimer Fund under an agreement with the city’s Parks and Recreation Department, which owns the building and land.
The museum struggled, though. It was underfunded; its exhibits were static. Its location, Flushing, had become heavily Chinese American, and the new leadership wants the museum to be more relevant to the neighborhood. One of those who had major say in the reimagining is Ran Yan, who came to the United States from China to pursue a master’s degree in historic preservation at Cornell University.
After graduation, Yan and Monica O. Montgomery received fellowships from the Historic House Trust of New York City to make Latimer House more contemporary, and Yan was ultimately appointed as the museum’s executive director.
With a $750,000 grant from the Mellon Foundation, the first floor has been restored to its early-20th-century appearance and divided into galleries that illustrate and celebrate Latimer’s life: his biography as a Civil War soldier and civil rights activist whose mother and father were enslaved, before escaping; his connections with fellow scientists and the family’s roots in the neighborhood; his inventions, including a more efficient toilet for railroad trains and the improved carbon filament for lightbulbs; and the endurance of his drafting and patents and his legacy.
Advertisement
The galleries have video devices, touch screens, 3-D models and a machine that recites Latimer’s poems. His Civil War uniform is also on display, along with blueprints, drafting tools and other exhibits designed by Isometric Studio and memorabilia borrowed from the Queens Public Library.
“In the spirit of Lewis Latimer’s penchant for technology and thirst for discovery, it has been transformed into a highly interactive, tech-forward experience,” Price said.
This week, the Latimer House received a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services to digitize its collection.
Latimer was born in 1848 in Chelsea, Mass. At 16, he lied about his age to join the Union Navy. He worked his way up from an office boy at a firm of patent lawyers in Boston and was awarded his first patent in 1874 — an improved toilet on railroad trains, designed with Charles W. Brown.
In 1876, Bell hired him to draft drawings that secured his patent for the telephone ahead of a rival and technical illustrations that helped bring the telephone into production.
Advertisement
In 1881, Latimer was named superintendent of the incandescent lamp department of Hiram Maxim’s U.S. Electric Lighting Company. A year later he patented a transcendent process to make the carbon filament that gives off light in glass bulbs, and also found a better way to manufacture the bulbs.
In 1884, he began defending Thomas Edison’s patents as an expert witness and later wrote a seminal book, “Incandescent Electric Lighting: A Practical Description of the Edison System.”
From 1896 until 1911, he was the chief draftsman and a patent consultant for the Board of Patent Control, formed by General Electric and Westinghouse to coordinate patent licensing and litigation.
In 1918, he helped found the stellar alumni association of Edison Pioneers and was the only African American among its 37 members.
Yan said she hopes visitors will leave the museum inspired by Latimer’s perseverance in overcoming the barriers a Black man faced in the 19th century, his self-education and his collaboration with fellow inventors, his spirit of community that led him to teach drawing to European immigrants at the Henry Street Settlement House and to found the interracial First Unitarian Church of Flushing. She noted, too, the sensitivity and grace that defined his poetry and celebration of Black culture as reflected in an ode to his wife, which ends:
O’er marble Venus let them rage
Who set the fashions of the Age,
Each to his taste; but as for me
My Venus shall be ebony.
Lewis Latimer House Museum
34-41 137th Street, Flushing, Queens; 718-961-8585, lewislatimerhouse.org.
Guichard Parris, 87, Urban League Officer
Guichard Parris, a former officer of the National Urban League, died on Wednesday at his home in Manhattan. He was 87 years old.
He died of a heart attack, a spokeswoman for the league said.
Mr. Parris, an adviser to two former league executive directors, Lester Granger and Whitney Young, joined the organization in 1944. In 1946, he started the league's public relations program. At his retirement in 1988, he had built it into a department employing 16 people who produced and distributed three million pieces of literature yearly, in addition to films for schools, television and civic organizations.
With Lester Brooks, he put together a book, "Blacks in the City," in 1950, commemorating the league's 40th anniversary.
He was born on the island of Guadeloupe in the French West Indies, and graduated from DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx. He graduated from Amherst College, magna cum laude, and received an M.A. from Columbia University. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Advertisement
He is survived by his wife, the former Willie Ferron; two daughters, Mary Jacobs and Louise Manley, and a son Frederick, all of Manhattan; three grandchildren, and eight great-grandchildren.
888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888
No comments:
Post a Comment