People, Locations, Episodes

Tue, 06.21.1927

Carl Stokes, Politician born

Carl Stokes

Carl Stokes was born on this date in 1927. He was a Black lawyer and politician.

Born in Cleveland, Carl Burton Stokes was only two years old when his father, a laundry worker, died.  His widowed mother supported him and his older brother Louis Stokes by working as a domestic, although the family was on welfare at one time.  He helped support his family by working as a newspaper carrier and in neighborhood stores.  He dropped out of high school and went to work in a foundry.  At 18, he entered the Army; he received an honorable discharge as a corporal and returned to school.  Stokes got his high school diploma in 1947.

After graduating, he supported himself by working as a dining car waiter. He earned a B.S. in law at the University of Minnesota in 1954. Two years later, as a Cleveland Marshall School of Law graduate, he received his L.L.B. degree from night law school in 1956.  In 1962, he became the first Black elected to the Ohio Legislature as a Democrat until 1967. During that time (1965), he narrowly lost a race for mayor of Cleveland.

In 1967, he ran again and became the first Black to be elected mayor of a major American city. He was reelected in 1969, but after his second term, he left politics to become a news broadcaster in New York City. He returned to Cleveland in 1980 as general counsel to the United Auto Workers. Three years later, Stokes was elected municipal court judge, serving two terms as head of the court.  He then served (1994–95) as ambassador to Seychelles. Carl Stokes died in 1996.

To Become a Political Scientist

Reference:

Ohio History Central.org

Britannica.com

Reference Library of Black America Volumes 1 through 5
Edited by Mpho Mabunda
Copyright 1998, Gale Research, Detroit, MI

New Poem Each Day

Poetry Corner

Sex fingers toes in the marketplace near your father's church in hamlet , North Carolina- witness to this love in this calm fallow of these minds, there is no substitute for... DEAR JOHN, DEAR COLTRANE by Michael S. Harper.
Read More