Profile -- Week 2
Patricia Roberts Harris (1924 - 1985)
Patricia Roberts Harris was the
first African American woman to serve as a cabinet member, as an ambassador to a European
country, and as dean of a law school.
Patricia Roberts Harris was a woman who distinguished herself throughout her legal
career, and yet never forgot her roots or the importance of advocating on behalf of the
poor.
She was born to Bert Fitzgerald and Hildren Brodie Roberts on May 31, 1924 in Mattoon,
Illinois, and soon moved with her parents and brother to Chicago. After graduating from
Englewood High School on Chicagos Southside, she worked for a year to save money for
college. From 1942 to 1945, she attended college at Howard University in Washington, D.C.,
graduating summa cum laude a year ahead of schedule.
Mrs. Harris returned to Chicago where she was a graduate student at the University of
Chicago and worked as a program director for the Chicago Young Womens Christian
Association (YWCA.) In 1949, she was hired by the American Council on Human Rights, a
civil rights agency, as assistant director, and moved to D.C. to manage the agencys
political action and legislative programs. When Delta Sigma Theta Sorority created a
national headquarters in 1953, the 29-year-old Patricia Roberts Harris was hired as its
first executive director. Soon afterwards, she met her future husband, William Beasley
Harris, an attorney who encouraged her to enroll in law school. She continued to work full
time while attending George Washington University Law School and graduated first in her
class in 1960.
Mrs. Harris was a trial attorney in the U.S. Department of Justice criminal division
for a year before joining the staff of Howard University as associate dean of students and
lecturer in law, later becoming professor of law. In 1965, her teaching career was
interrupted when President Lyndon Johnson appointed her ambassador to Luxembourg, the
first African-American to be named an ambassador to a European nation. She served in this
capacity for two years before returning to teach at Howard, where she was appointed dean
of the law school in 1969. In 1970, Mrs. Harris joined a D.C. law firm and began
practicing corporate law.
In 1977, she was appointed U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) by
President Jimmy Carter, the first African American woman to serve in a presidential
cabinet. Two years later, President Carter named her Secretary of Health, Education and
Welfare (HEW.) As head of HEW, Mrs. Harris was responsible for managing a budget that was
surpassed in size only by those of Russia and the United States. Under her leadership, HEW
was reorganized into two separate departments, the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) and the Department of Education.
In 1981, Mrs. Harris returned to private life as a professor at George Washington
National Law Center. Soon afterwards, she was to run against first term Washington Mayor
Marion Barry, but was defeated in a divisive election campaign. On March 23, 1985, she
succumbed to cancer, just months after her husband died unexpectedly of a stroke in
November, 1984.
From her student days at Howard University, Mrs. Harris was interested in politics and
continued to be a political activist throughout her career. When passage of the
twenty-third amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1961 gave District of Columbia
residents the right to vote in national elections for the first time, Mrs. Harris was one
of three of the Districts first presidential electors. President John F. Kennedy
appointed her in 1963 to co-chair the National Womens Committee for Civil Rights. In
1964, she was elected a delegate to the Democratic National Convention, and was selected
to second Lyndon Johnsons presidential nomination at the convention. In 1972, she
was appointed chair of the credentials committee and a member-at-large of the Democratic
National Committee in 1973. She also served as a member of several national policy
committees, including the National Advisory Committee on Reform of Federal Criminal Law in
1967 and the Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence from 1968 to 1969.
With her financial skills and business expertise, Mrs. Harris was invited to sit on
several major corporate boards of directors in the 1970s. She was the first African
American woman to serve on the boards of International Business Machine (IBM), Scott Paper
Company, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Georgetown University.
Despite her prominence and success, however, Mrs. Harris never forgot her humble
beginnings. At the Senate confirmation committee hearings to approve her appointment as
head of Housing and Urban Development, a U.S. senator tried to suggest that Mrs.
Harriss position might make her ill-qualified to represent the underclass. She shot
back her no-nonsense reply:
I am one of them. You do not seem to understand who I am. I am a Black woman, the
daughter of a dining-car worker. I am a Black woman who could not buy a house eight years
ago in parts of the District of Columbia!
Sources:
The website for the successful campaign to have a commemorative stamp issued in Ms.
Harriss honor, www.prh2000.org/,
Afro-American Almanac at www.toptags.com/aama/bio/women/pharris.htm, Social Security
Administration website at www.ssa.gov/history/harris.html
The art used on this page was adapted from the commemorative stamp issued in Ms. Harris's
honor.
Next week: (Week 3)
He was a legal scholar, a federal appeals court judge, and the first African American
to serve on the Federal Trade Commission, as well as the youngest person ever appointed to
head the FTC. However, he faced one of the greatest challenges of his career when asked to
serve as mediator for South Africa's first free elections in 1994. Who was he?
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