Home / Full timeline / Reverend W. Sterling Cary is unanimously elected president of the National Council of Churches, becoming the first Black to head the group. He tells his fellow delegates that American churches preach, but do not practice integration.
Reverend W. Sterling Cary is unanimously elected president of the National Council of Churches, becoming the first Black to head the group. He tells his fellow delegates that American churches preach, but do not practice integration.
1972 (Dec 7)
The Reverend W. Sterling Cary, the administrative officer for approximately ninety United Church of Christ congregations in New York City, was unanimously elected president of the National Council of Churches at the group's annual meeting in Dallas, Texas. Cary, the first Black American to head the group, was originally a Baptist minister before he began preaching at Presbyterian, Congregational, and interdenominational churches in a ministerial career spanning twenty-four years. The newly elected president of the liberal religious group told his fellow delegates at Dallas that American churches preach but do not practice integration. He said that as president of the National Council of Churches he would promote efforts to achieve decent housing for the poor, better employment opportunities for racial minorities, and an overhaul of the welfare system.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.