Asa Philip Randolph
by Dominique Butler
A. Philip Randolph was born April 15,1889 in
Crescent City, Florida. He was one of two sons. His parent's names were
Reverend James Williams and Elizabeth Robinson Randolph, who were both
dependents of slaves.
He and his family moved to Jacksonville in
1891. This was the place where he and his brother attended school. They
both excelled by being the top in their classes at the Cookman Institute.
After school, he was reduced to menial work. In the spring of 1911, he
traveled to New York with a friend, secretly hoping to become an actor.
He took classes at City College, and bowing to his parents objections to
an acting career, switched from drama to politics and economics, soon joining
the socialist party. During this time Randolph met his future wife, Lucille
Green, a 31 year old widow from Christianburg, Virginia.
Randolph soon met another friend from North
Carolina. His name was Chandler Owen. He was studying sociology and political
science at Columbia University. They both shared the same ideas and would
soon become soap box orators and establish THE MESSENGER, a radical Harlem
magazine, in 1917.
He organized The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car
Porters which was considered the first serious effort of unionizing the
Pullman company. The Pullman company was the most powerful business organization
in the country, and it viciously resisted efforts to unionize.
Randolph struggled with his company for 12
years. He was a very strong fighter and he never gave up. The brotherhood's
courageous battles won the admiration of many labor and liberal leaders.
Even the American Federation of Labor leadership saw the bitterly anti-Communist
Brotherhood as a bastion against the influence of communism among the black
working class. His organization had this effect on many people.
They had many setbacks, but the Brotherhood
prevailed. President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal guaranteed workers
the right to organize and required corporations to negotiate with unions.
In 1935, the Pullman company was forced to sit down with the Brotherhood.
Randolph moved to secure formal affiliation with the AFL and was finally
granted an international charter. At their convention, there were many
disagreements over whether to organize by craft or industry. The conflict
led to the expulsion of unions that wanted to organize by industry. Those
unions soon formed the Congress of Industrial Organization. In 1937, the
Brotherhood, which remained in the AFL, finally obtained a contract with
the Pullman Company, the first contract ever between a company and a black
union. Randolph emerged as one of the first major black labor leaders in
the country.
One really good thing about Asa Randolph was
that he was also a spokesperson for African-American rights in the 1940s
and 1950s. He is hailed as the dean of American civil rights leaders. He
mainly focused his attention on the rising number of blacks on relief and
the number of defense industry jobs that were increasing with the war effort
heating up. These jobs traditionally excluded blacks. Randolph proposed
the march on Washington - a mass action protest to demand change.
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Asa Philip Randolph (April 15, 1889 - May 16, 1979)
The African -American community embraced the
plan, and a band of militants threw themselves into the project with fervor.
Under pressure, President Roosevelt finally signed an executive order banning
discrimination within the government and among the defense industries that
won government contracts. Randolph called off the march. The young militants
felt betrayed, even though Randolph reminded them that the executive order
was what they had sought.
In 1947, Randolph spoke with the president
over civil rights for African Americans. President Harry S. Truman called
for a peacetime draft, but failed to include a provision against segregation.
Randolph also founded the committee against Jim Crow in military service
and training. Within a year the group became the League for Non Violent
Civil Disobedience Against Military Segregation and called for blacks to
refuse to register for the draft or to serve if called. Truman met with
Randolph and other African American leaders, but refused to be persuaded.
Randolph testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee and continued
to pressure Truman. At last the president gave in. The date was July 26,
1948. Truman issued an executive order barring discrimination in the Military.
Believing they had achieved their purpose, Randolph called off the non-
violent civil disobedience campaign, again angering the young militants
who were hungry for action.
Randolph's fights inside the AFL-CIO were
taking place in the 1950's during a time of harsh economic recession that
affected blacks. Randolph called for a March on Washington for freedom
and jobs. A militant named Bayard Rustin made peace with Randolph by the
50's and became the chief organizer. Trade unions gave Randolph financial
support.
The march took place in August. It was an
emotional event for Randolph whose wife Lucille had died a few months before.
A crowd of 250,000 participated in a peaceful demonstration. Randolph,
Martin Luther king Jr., and other leaders met with President John F. Kennedy
afterward. Within a year the civil rights act of 1964 was signed.
Randolph died in 1979. His funeral was attended
by a host of luminaries led by President Jimmy Carter. Randolph left this
world with many memories to carry on with many people. Whatever he believed
in he took action and he fought, even at hard times when he probably thought
that he could not succeed. He had enough strength for everybody and made
this world a better place. |