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The Black Cabinet - The Untold Story of African Americans and Politics During the Age of Roosevelt (Hardcover)
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The Black Cabinet - The Untold Story of African Americans and Politics During the Age of Roosevelt (Hardcover)
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A magnificently researched, dramatically told work of narrative
nonfiction about the history, evolution, impact, and ultimate
demise of what was known in the 1930s and 1940s as President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Black Cabinet. In 1932 in the midst of
the Great Depression, Franklin Delano Roosevelt won the presidency
with the help of key African American defectors from the Republican
Party. At the time, most African Americans lived in poverty, denied
citizenship rights and terrorized by white violence. As the New
Deal began, a "black Brain Trust" joined the administration and
began documenting and addressing the economic hardship and systemic
inequalities African Americans faced. They became known as the
Black Cabinet, but the environment they faced was reluctant, often
hostile, to change. "Will the New Deal be a square deal for the
Negro?" The black press wondered. The Black Cabinet set out to
devise solutions to the widespread exclusion of black people from
its programs, whether by inventing tools to measure discrimination
or by calling attention to the administration's failures. Led by
Mary McLeod Bethune, an educator and friend of Eleanor Roosevelt,
they were instrumental to Roosevelt's continued success with black
voters. Operating mostly behind the scenes, they helped push
Roosevelt to sign an executive order that outlawed discrimination
in the defense industry. They saw victories--jobs and collective
agriculture programs that lifted many from poverty--and
defeats--the bulldozing of black neighborhoods to build public
housing reserved only for whites; Roosevelt's refusal to get behind
federal anti-lynching legislation. The Black Cabinet never won
official recognition from the president, and with his death, it
disappeared from view. But it had changed history. Eventually, one
of its members would go on to be the first African American Cabinet
secretary; another, the first African American federal judge and
mentor to Thurgood Marshall. Masterfully researched and
dramatically told, The Black Cabinet brings to life a forgotten
generation of leaders who fought post-Reconstruction racial
apartheid and whose work served as a bridge that Civil Rights
activists traveled to achieve the victories of the 1950s and '60s.
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