Home / Full timeline / President-elect Ronald Reagan names Samuel Riley Pierce, Jr., a Black American lawyer, secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
President-elect Ronald Reagan names Samuel Riley Pierce, Jr., a Black American lawyer, secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
1980 (Dec 22)
President-elect Ronald Reagan named Samuel Riley Pierce, Jr., a Black American lawyer, secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). He was the only minority person selected to join the new president's cabinet. Pierce was born on September 6, 1922, in Glen Cove, Long Island, New York. He played football at Cornell University and graduated with Phi Beta Kappa honors. After service in World War II, Pierce obtained a law degree from Cornell and began working as an assistant district attorney in New York City. In later years, he was appointed, on two separate occasions, to court vacancies in Manhattan borough by then-Governor Nelson Rockefeller, yet in 1959 he was defeated in a bid for election to a Manhattan judgeship. Pierce entered governmental service at the federal level in 1955 when President Dwight Eisenhower named him an assistant to the undersecretary of labor. He was the first Black American appointed to this position. In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon made him the first Black to serve as a general counsel to the Treasury Department. At the time of his appointment to the Reagan cabinet, however, Pierce had left government and was serving as a partner in a prestigious New York law firm. Of Pierce's cabinet appointment, Barbara Penn Wright, Pierce's wife and a physician with the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, remarked, "He's never been adverse to accepting a challenge. And he's always been able to handle them."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.