Home / Full timeline / Reverend Leon Howard Sullivan, a 48 year-old Philadelphia Black minister, was elected to the Board of Directors of the General Motors Corporation (GM). At GM’s annual stockholders meeting the year before, a reform group had criticized GM for not having a Black director on its board.
Reverend Leon Howard Sullivan, a 48 year-old Philadelphia Black minister, was elected to the Board of Directors of the General Motors Corporation (GM). At GM’s annual stockholders meeting the year before, a reform group had criticized GM for not having a Black director on its board.
1971 (Jan 4)
The Reverend Leon Howard Sullivan, a forty-eight-year-old Philadelphia Black minister, was elected to the Board of Directors of the General Motors corporation (GM). Sullivan, pastor of Zion Baptist, Philadelphia's largest Protestant church, was the founder of Opportunities Industrialization Centers of America, a job-training program for Blacks and other minorities, and a director of the Girard Trust Bank in Philadelphia. His election to the GM board was interpreted as a move to placate demands that the company, the world's largest industrial corporation, give the public and minority groups a voice in corporate decision-making. At GM's annual stockholders meeting in May 1970, a reform group, The Project on Corporate Responsibility, had criticized GM for not having a Black director on its board.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.