Home / Full timeline / Lieutenant Edward Kerr, a Black police officer with fifteen years of service, is nominated director of the Newark Police Department, after the previous white police officer resigned over a Black housing controversy.
Lieutenant Edward Kerr, a Black police officer with fifteen years of service, is nominated director of the Newark Police Department, after the previous white police officer resigned over a Black housing controversy.
1972 (Dec 9)
Lieutenant Edward Kerr, a Black police officer with fifteen years of service, was nominated director of the Newark Police Department, the largest in the state of New Jersey. Kerr, a native of Willacoochee, Georgia, and a student at Rutgers University, was slated to succeed John Redden, a white police officer who resigned after becoming embroiled in a controversy over whether a Black sponsored housing project ought to be built in a white community. The white members of Newark's biracial city council asked Black Mayor Kenneth Gibson not to accept Redden's resignation. Gibson refused to heed their plea.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.