Home / Full timeline / The NAACP board of directors names Benjamin Chavis, Jr. as executive director of the nation’s oldest civil rights group.
The NAACP board of directors names Benjamin Chavis, Jr. as executive director of the nation’s oldest civil rights group.
1993 (Apr 9)
After a year-long search, the NAACP board of directors announced that they had chosen forty-five-year-old clergyman and activist Benjamin Chavis, Jr., to replace Benjamin L. Hooks as executive director of the nation's oldest civil rights group. The energetic and progressive Chavis came to the NAACP from Cleveland, Ohio. He had worked there for the United Church of Christ's Commission for Racial Justice for twenty-five years, the last eight as its executive ct director. Originally from North Carolina, he received a bachelor's degree from the University of North Carolina, a master of divinity degree from Duke University, and a doctorate degree from Howard University. A civil rights activist since joining the NAACP at the age of twelve, Chats spent four years in prison during the late 1970s as a member of the socalled Wilmington Ten. This was a group of nine Black men and one white woman who were convicted of firebombing a white-owned store in Wilmington, North Carolina, during a period of unrest over school desegregation. Chats and the others had, in fact, been in town to protest but denied taking part in any bombing. The controversial case prompted Amnesty International to declare the Wilmington Ten political prisoners, making them the first to be identified as such in the United States. A federal appeals court eventually overturned the convictions after witnesses admitted they had lied while giving testimony. Later, Chats made a name for himself as one of the founders of the "environmental racism" movement. This group claims that unusually high amounts of toxic materials are stored in and near Black communities. As the new head of the NAACP, Chavis pledged to make the organization more aggressive and more in tune with young Blacks and Blacks in the inner cities. Describing himself as a Pan-Africanist, he also reached out to Blacks all over the world by announcing plans to set up NAACP branches in Africa and the Caribbean. In addition, he promised to expand the membership of the NAACP to include other minorities.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.