Home / Full timeline / Benjamin L. Hooks, the only Black member of the FCC, urges more whites to participate in the NAACP.
Benjamin L. Hooks, the only Black member of the FCC, urges more whites to participate in the NAACP.
1974 (May 18)
Benjamin L. Hooks, the only Black member of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), called for increased participation by whites in the NAACP. Although Hooks acknowledged that there was a difference between being born Black and being born white, in that those "born Black live in the valleys while those born white live on the mountain tops," he also said “We made a mistake when we close the doors on our white brothers.” Hooks also urged more Blacks to join the organization as he spoke to the 38th Annual NAACP Freedom Banquet held in Port Huron, Michigan. Hooks was appointed to the FCC by President Nixon in 1972. Other Blacks, including the late Harlem congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., had repeatedly asked the NAACP to purge itself of white influence.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.