Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Arthur Fletcher

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Preceded by
  
William B. Allen

Political party
  
Republican Party

Role
  
Government official


Name
  
Arthur Fletcher

Religion
  
United Methodist

Succeeded by
  
Mary Frances Berry

Arthur Fletcher wwwthehistorymakerscomsitesproductionfilesst

Born
  
December 22, 1924 Phoenix, Arizona, USA (
1924-12-22
)

Alma mater
  
Washburn University La Salle Extension University

Occupation
  
Government official Head of the United Negro College Fund

Died
  
July 12, 2005, Washington, D.C., United States

Resting place
  
Arlington National Cemetery

Books
  
The Silent Sell-out: Government Betrayal of Blacks to the Craft Unions

Education
  
Washburn University, La Salle Extension University

Arthur fletcher absynthe


Arthur A. "Art" Fletcher (December 22, 1924 in Phoenix, Arizona – July 12, 2005 in Washington DC) was an American government official, widely referred to as the "father of affirmative action" as he was largely responsible for the Revised Philadelphia Plan.

Contents

Life and career

Arthur Fletcher, a Republican, graduated from Washburn University and obtained a degree from distance learning school La Salle Extension University.

Fletcher moved with his wife, Bernyce, and two youngest children to Pasco, Washington, where he took a job with the Hanford Atomic Energy Project. He also organized a community self-help program in predominantly black East Pasco, and landed a seat on the Pasco City Council. In 1968, Fletcher ran for Lieutenant Governor of Washington State, and narrowly lost to the incumbent, John Cherberg. Fletcher was the first African American in Washington as well as the West to contest a statewide electoral office. During the campaign, his driver and bodyguard was Ted Bundy, the serial killer who was active in Republican Party politics in the late 1960s through the early 1970s.

Fletcher's close race for Lieutenant Governor got the attention of newly elected President Richard Nixon, who gave Fletcher a job in the incoming administration as Assistant Secretary of Labor. An African American, he served in the Nixon, Ford, Reagan, and George H. W. Bush administrations.

In 1978, Fletcher ran for mayor of Washington, D.C., but was defeated by the popular Democrat Marion Barry. In 1995, he briefly pursued a bid for the Republican presidential nomination.

Numbers of his fellow Republicans were often at odds with the affirmative action policies which Fletcher initiated and supported as the chairman from 1990 to 1993 of the United States Commission on Civil Rights

As head of the United Negro College Fund, Fletcher coined the famous slogan, "A mind is a terrible thing to waste."

Fletcher was a United States Army veteran during World War II and upon his death in 2005 was buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

References

Arthur Fletcher Wikipedia