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Edwin T Pratt

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Name
  
Edwin Pratt


Edwin T. Pratt wwwhistorylinkorgContentMediaPhotosSmallreq


Died
  
January 26, 1969, Shoreline, Washington, United States

Education
  
Clark Atlanta University

My Favorite Places - Edwin T. Pratt Park


Edwin T. Pratt (December 6, 1930 – January 26, 1969) was an American activist during the Civil Rights Movement. At the time of his assassination in 1969, he was Executive Director of the Seattle Urban League.

Contents

Life

Born in Miami, Florida, Pratt received his bachelor's degree from Clark College (Atlanta, Georgia) and his master's in social work from Atlanta University. He worked for the Urban League in Cleveland, Ohio and Kansas City, Missouri before arriving in Seattle in 1956 to be the Seattle league's Community Relations Secretary. In 1961, he became the Executive Director of the Seattle Urban League. Among his achievements was the Triad Plan for the desegregation of the Seattle Public Schools; he also led an initiative for equal housing opportunities.

Pratt was killed outside his home in Shoreline, Washington, a suburb immediately north of Seattle. Two men were involved in the shooting; it is presumed that a third drove the getaway car. It is still unknown who killed him; they were reportedly young men, but not even their race is certain. However, Seattle Weekly reported in May 2011 that the Pratt case was essentially solved, naming the three men involved in the shooting and the person who may have paid for it, a black contractor, although the ex-wife of the getaway driver maintained that the gunman killed Pratt purely for racial motives, not money.

Pratt was survived by his wife, Bettye, his son Bill, and his daughter Miriam Katherine, who was five years old at the time of his death.

He is commemorated today by Seattle's Pratt Park and by the Pratt Fine Arts Center, which is partially in that park.

Archives

  • The Seattle Urban League Records 1930-1997. 103.16 cubic feet. At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.
  • References

    Edwin T. Pratt Wikipedia