Miami Herald

First Black secretary of Army also achieved other firsts

- BY ALEXA MILLS

Clifford L. Alexander Jr. — a Harlem-raised, Ivy League-educated lawyer who was a crusading chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission in the late 1960s and later served as the first Black secretary of the Army — died July 3 at his home in Manhattan. He was 88.

His wife, Adele Logan Alexander, confirmed the death but did not provide a specific cause.

Guided by powerful mentors in academia, law and government, Alexander was the first Black student-body president at Harvard University, the first Black partner at the elite Washington law firm Arnold & Porter and spent his career seeking to shatter racial boundaries with statesmanl­ike calm. He seemed destined for elective office but lost a close race for D.C. mayor in 1974, shortly after the city won home rule.

Alexander came to Washington in 1963 on the recommenda­tion of McGeorge Bundy, a former Harvard dean who served in the Kennedy and Johnson administra­tions as national security adviser. Alexander helped shepherd the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965 and became Lyndon B. Johnson’s personal consultant on civil rights before he became EEOC chairman in 1967.

The EEOC, created under the Civil Rights Act of 1964, had no mandate for legal action but could make recommenda­tions based on its investigat­ions of employment discrimina­tion aimed at racial and religious miWilliam norities. Alexander was the third chairman and first Black official to hold the post.

He immediatel­y launched investigat­ions into the textile and drug industries as well as utility companies and labor unions, and demonstrat­ed the minuscule numbers of minorities in the white-collar ranks of major corporatio­ns.

At a congressio­nal hearing in March 1969, Alexander testified about rampant discrimina­tion against Blacks and Mexican Americans in Hollywood. Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen, R-Ill., called the hearing “a carnival” and lambasted the EEOC for using its power to target an industry that had “given employment to hundreds of Negroes.”

“We didn’t intend for the work-givers of this nation — business and industry — to be harassed,” Dirksen said.

Alexander was unflappabl­e in his response. “It’s important that the law be enforced,” he said, adding that the harassment of African Americans far exceeded that of business executives.

Irked, the veteran lawmaker replied that “this punitive harassment has got to stop, or I’ll go to the highest authority in this government to get somebody fired.”

Shortly thereafter, the Nixon administra­tion announced its intention to install a Republican commission chairman. Alexander resigned, citing a “crippling lack of administra­tion support” and a Justice Department unresponsi­ve to his requests for help in enforcing racial discrimina­tion. EEOC member Brown, also African American, succeeded him.

Edward Sylvester, an African American who became the first director of the Labor Department’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance, told The Washington Post at the time that Alexander “gave the commission some life and the legislatio­n some meaning. He grabbed the only thing they had at the time, which was the right to hold hearings, and he did an extraordin­ary job.”

After leaving government, Alexander joined Arnold & Porter, where he practiced corporate and discrimina­tion law and recruited new hires from Howard University’s law school. He also hosted a syndicated TV public affairs show, “Cliff Alexander: Black on White.”

In his mayoral race, his opponent in the Democratic primary was Walter Washington, the District’s presidenti­ally appointed mayorcommi­ssioner since 1967 and the first Black chief executive of a major U.S. city. Alexander, who had worked on a home rule bill when he served under Johnson, ran on his civil rights and public service records and garnered 47 percent of the vote, but Washington bested him and became the first directly elected mayor of the city in more than a century.

Alexander returned to legal work until President Jimmy Carter tapped him in 1977 as Army secretary. His military experience was scant — he had served briefly as a private after law school — but his appointmen­t as the first Black civilian head of a U.S. military branch was hailed as a milestone.

He took charge of the Army at a politicall­y sensitive time, with treaties returning control of the Panama Canal to the Panamanian government and the unconditio­nal pardoning of Vietnam War draft dodgers. In the aftermath of the war, Alexander defended increases in soldier pay and the military budget. “This is a quality Army,” he told Ebony magazine at the time. “They work hard — often on lonely, sometimes foreign fields. They take their training and their missions seriously.”

At a time when the Army was disproport­ionately African American, he was dismayed by a list of candidates for promotion to general that included few women or nonwhites.

He sent the list back to the review board, with a special instructio­n to look for “any factors that may have held back performanc­e ratings of any candidates,” Chicago Tribune columnist Clarence Page reported. On the updated list that was returned to him, Alexander said, was a Vietnam veteran who had been second in his class at the Command and General Staff College: Colin Powell.

Clifford Leopold Alexander Jr. was born in Manhattan on Sept. 21, 1933, to a middle-class family. His father, a Jamaican immigrant, worked in building management and eventually oversaw the Metropolit­an Life Insurance Co.’s Riverton housing developmen­t in Manhattan.

His mother was a Harlem community leader who became executive director of Mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia’s Committee on

Unity, formed after racerelate­d riots in 1943. Five years later, she was the first Black woman selected as a Democratic representa­tive to the electoral college from New York.

His parents surrounded their only child with accomplish­ed family friends — including one of the first Black judges in New York City — and imbued him with abundant self-confidence. Once, he recalled, when a doorman asked his parents to use a servants’ entrance rather than the main entrance to a building, “My mother raised all kinds of Cain and straighten­ed him out pretty quick.”

Alexander earned a scholarshi­p to the Ethical Culture Fieldston School, a private school in New York. He graduated from Harvard in 1955 and from Yale Law School in 1958.

He spent his early career in Manhattan as an assistant district attorney under Frank Hogan; as leader of a neighborho­od agency that enforced city housing codes; and was executive director of psychologi­st and

educator Kenneth Clark’s Harlem Youth Opportunit­ies Unlimited program to improve schools and reduce dropout rates.

In 1959, he married

Adele Logan, a Fieldston and Radcliffe College graduate. In addition to his wife, who taught history at George Washington University, survivors include two children, Elizabeth Alexander of Manhattan, a poet who chaired Yale’s African American studies department and is now president of the arts-supporting Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and Mark

Alexander, who became the first Black dean of Villanova University law school, of Radnor, Pa.; and seven grandchild­ren.

Alexander left government when Ronald Reagan became president in 1981. He then founded Alexander & Associates, a consulting firm in Washington that advised entities including Major League Baseball on minority recruiting, and served on corporate boards. He moved to Manhattan from the District in 2013.

 ?? AP | 1978 ?? Clifford L. Alexander Jr. also served as chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission.
AP | 1978 Clifford L. Alexander Jr. also served as chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission.

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