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Augustus Hawkins

Augustus Freeman Hawkins (August 31, 1907 – November 10, 2007) was an American politician of the Democratic Party who served in the California State Assembly from 1935 to 1963 and the U.S. House Of Representatives from 1963 to 1991. Over the course of his career, Hawkins authored more than 300 state and federal laws, the most famous of which are Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the 1978 Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act. He was known as the "silent warrior" for his commitment to education and ending unemployment.[1]

Augustus Hawkins
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from California
In office
January 3, 1963 – January 3, 1991
Preceded byEdgar W. Hiestand (redistricted)
Succeeded byMaxine Waters
Constituency21st district (1963–1975)
29th district (1975–1991)
Member of the California State Assembly
from the 62nd district
In office
January 7, 1935 – January 3, 1963
Preceded byFrederick Madison Roberts
Succeeded byTom Waite
Personal details
Born
Augustus Freeman Hawkins

(1907-08-31)August 31, 1907
Shreveport, Louisiana, U.S.
DiedNovember 10, 2007(2007-11-10) (aged 100)
Bethesda, Maryland, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Pegga Smith (1945–1966)
Elsie Hawkins (1977–2007)
EducationUniversity of California, Los Angeles (BA)

Early and personal life edit

Hawkins was born in Shreveport, Louisiana, the youngest of five children, to Nyanza Hawkins and Hattie Freeman. In 1918, the family moved to Los Angeles.[2][3] Hawkins graduated from Jefferson High School in 1926, and received a bachelor's degree in economics from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1931.[4] After graduation, he planned to study civil engineering, but the financial constraints of the Great Depression made this impossible. This contributed towards his interest in politics, and his lifelong devotion to education. After graduating, Hawkins operated a real-estate company with his brother and studied government.[5] While serving in the California State Assembly, Hawkins married Pegga Adeline Smith on August 28, 1945. Smith died in 1966, and Hawkins later married Elsie Taylor in 1977.[6] After retiring from Congress, he stayed in the Washington area because his wife preferred it, living there until his death, which came two months after hers.[2]

An African American of mixed-race ancestry, Hawkins was very light-skinned and reportedly resembled his English grandfather.[5] Throughout his life, he was often assumed to be of solely white ancestry, although he refused to pass as white.[7][2]

Political career edit

State Assembly edit

 
Hawkins in the Assembly

Augustus Hawkins served in California at a time when black representation was so limited that "the black strategy for gaining political power was to exercise influence within the Democratic Party through voting for, and lobbying, white politicians."[8] Aside from Hawkins, "Los Angeles blacks had no other political representative in city, county, state, or federal government."[8]

Hawkins was part of a more general shift by African Americans away from the Republican and towards the Democratic Party.[9] Unlike the majority of African Americans, he supported Franklin D. Roosevelt's campaign for president in 1932. Hawkins favored measures such as the New Deal, which was wildly popular in the United States at large and the African-American community in particular. Roosevelt would go on to be the first Democratic president to win the black vote, in 1936. In 1934, Hawkins supported the more controversial 1934 California gubernatorial election of Upton Sinclair, a socialist. Although Sinclair lost, Hawkins defeated Republican Frederick Madison Roberts, the great-grandson of Sally Hemings and President Thomas Jefferson and the first African American in the California State Assembly. Hawkins would serve as a Democratic member of the Assembly from 1935 until 1963; by the time of his departure, Hawkins was the Assembly's most senior member, as Roberts was before him.

Hawkins's district was primarily Latino American and African American. During his time in the Assembly, he introduced legislation including "a fair housing act, a fair employment practices act, low-cost housing and disability insurance legislation, and workers’ compensation provisions for domestic workers."[2][5] Along with education, fair practices in employment and housing became Hawkins's major causes. He received little support at the time for these measures from the Democratic Party, however.[9] Nevertheless, he was able to get some measures passed, including his fair-housing law, which prohibited discrimination by any builders that received federal funds.[10] Hawkins was also a delegate to the National Conventions of 1940, 1944 and 1960, as well as an electoral college presidential elector from California in 1944. In 1958, Hawkins sought to be Speaker of the California State Assembly, which was the second-most powerful position in the state, after the Governor of California. Hawkins lost to Ralph M. Brown, but was made chairman of the powerful Rules Committee.[11][2] Had Hawkins succeeded, he would have become the first African-American Speaker in California history, a feat that Willie Brown would achieve in 1980. In 1962, Hawkins won a newly created majority-black congressional district encompassing central Los Angeles[12] With an endorsement from John F. Kennedy, Hawkins easily won the primary and the general election. After the election, Hawkins remarked, “It's like shifting gears—from the oldest man in the Assembly in years of service to a freshman in Congress.”[13]

U.S. Congress edit

 
Hawkins with President John F. Kennedy in 1962

From 1963 to 1991, Hawkins represented California's 21st District (1963–1975), and the 29th District (1975–1991), covering southern Los Angeles County, in Congress. Hawkins was consistently elected with over 80% of the vote in his Democratic-friendly district. He was the first black representative to be elected from west of the Mississippi River.[5]

Hawkins was a strong supporter of President Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society. Early in his congressional career, he authored legislation including Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that established the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Hawkins was a strong supporter of civil rights, and he toured the South in 1964 to advocate for African-American voter registration.[14]

Five days after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was signed into law, the Watts Riots occurred in Hawkins's district. It was the first of many race riots in the 1960s. Hawkins urged his colleagues in Congress to increase antipoverty funds, but he did not condone the violence.[15] Due to his light skin and heightened racial tensions, Hawkins had to be careful when he visited his district shortly after the riots.[7] The riots stalled the Great Society, particularly over the fair housing; blacks who benefited from Great Society laws were blamed as being harmful to the "law and order" of America, particularly if they were allowed to live next to whites. Fair housing was still an unpopular issue in America: Democratic Senate nominee Pierre Salinger lost to Republican George Murphy in California over the issue, marking the only Republican pickup amid Lyndon Johnson's crushing presidential victory over anti-Civil Rights Act Barry Goldwater in 1964. Open housing reform seemed next on the Great Society list after the Voting Rights Act was signed, but the Watts Riot put it on hold. It was not passed until after the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.

On the Vietnam War, Hawkins initially agreed with President Johnson. In 1964, both insisted that the war undermined the Great Society and that the United States could not "impose our way of life on other people."[16] When it became clear that South Vietnam was not stable enough to survive without American backing, Hawkins increased his criticism of the war. After touring South Vietnam June 1970, Hawkins and fellow Democratic Representative William Anderson drafted a House Resolution urging Congress to "condemn the cruel and inhumane treatment" of prisoners in South Vietnam.[5] Anderson and Hawkins had visited South Vietnam with nine other congressmen, but they were the only two to visit a civilian South Vietnamese prison on Con Son Island, which they described as being akin to “tiger cages.”[17] The two Representatives also pressured President Nixon to send an independent task force to investigate the prison and “prevent further degradation and death.”[18]

 
Portrait of Hawkins in the Collection of the U.S. House of Representatives

Hawkins was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus, and served as vice chairman during its first term (1971–1973).[5][2] Hawkins did not play a significant role in the CBC, as he preferred to focus on legislation rather than use Congress as a bully pulpit like other African Americans such as Adam Clayton Powell Jr., Bill Clay, and Ron Dellums; Hawkins argued that there needed to be “clearer thinking and fewer exhibitionists in the civil rights movement.”[19] During this time, Hawkins succeeded in restoring honorable discharges to the 170 black soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment who had been falsely accused of a public disturbance in Brownsville, Texas, in 1906, and removed from the Army.[20] Unlike other CBC members, he sought cooperation from organized labor and white ethnics in order to make his agenda more likely to pass into law.[21] In 1980, Hawkins criticized the CBC as "85 percent social and 15 percent business."[22]

Aside from Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, laws that Hawkins was instrumental in passing include: the 1974 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, a law that provided certain protections to young criminal offenders; the 1978 Comprehensive Employment and Training Act; and the 1978 Pregnancy Disability Act, which aimed to prevent discrimination against women on the basis of pregnancy and of which Hawkins said, “we have the opportunity to ensure that genuine equality in the American labor force is more than an illusion and that pregnancy will no longer be the basis of unfavorable treatment of working women."[23][24] Hawkins is known best of all for the 1978 Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act, which Hawkins sponsored in 1977 alongside the legendary Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota. The bill gave the U.S. government the goal of providing full employment; it also ordered that the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board must provide Congress with testimony on the state of the economy. However, by the time that the bill made it to President Jimmy Carter's desk, "the legislation was clearly symbolic."[25][26][27] Hawkins later authored landmark legislation such as the Job Training Partnership Act and the 1988 School Improvement Act. He became chair of the House Education and Labor Committee in 1984.

Hawkins was frustrated from the relative lack of success that he achieved during the 1980s' presidencies of Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush. They were the most conservative presidents since the 1920s, and members of his own party were moving to the right and viewed Hawkins's old-school New Dealer stance as outdated.[5] His greatest setback was George H. W. Bush's veto of the Civil Rights Act of 1990, sometimes called the Hawkins-Kennedy Civil Rights Act. It would have reversed six Supreme Court decisions made in the previous year that had shifted the burden of proof of discriminating hiring practices of minorities or women from the employer to the employee. It remains the only successful veto of a civil rights act in United States history. Hawkins retired in January 1991. Bush would sign a less expansive bill, the Civil Rights Act of 1991, after Hawkins's retirement.[5]

Later life edit

Hawkins retired in 1991 to his Los Angeles home, never having lost an election in 58 years as an elected official. He lived in Washington, D.C., for the remainder of his life. Until his 2007 death at the age of 100, he was the oldest living person to have served in Congress. He was the eighth person to have served in Congress that reached the age of 100. Hawkins's death left the former Alabama Republican Representative Arthur Glenn Andrews (1909–2008) as the oldest living former House member.

Legacy edit

The Augustus F. Hawkins Nature Park was built in 2000 in a highly urbanized area of southern Los Angeles.[28][29] The cost was $4.5 million and was financed largely by city, county, and state bond measures.[28] The park encompasses 8.5 acres and features the Evan Frankel Discovery Center, which includes natural history and environmental interpretive displays.[30] The Augustus F. Hawkins Centers of Excellence Program is a federal grants program supporting diversification of the U.S. teaching force.[31]

Augustus F. Hawkins High School in Los Angeles, which opened in 2012, is named in his honor.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ William L. Clay, Just Permanent Interests: Black Americans in Congress, 1870–1991 (New York: Amistad Press, Inc, 1992): 94.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Claudia Luther and Valerie J. Nelson (November 13, 2007). "A pioneer for black lawmakers in L.A." Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 17, 2021.
  3. ^ Sides, Josh (2003). L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 15.
  4. ^ Shirley Washington, Outstanding African Americans of Congress (Washington, DC: United States Capitol Historical Society, 1998): 39.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Office of the Clerk. . Black Americans in Congress. United States House of Representatives. Archived from the original on August 4, 2010. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  6. ^ Washington, Outstanding African Americans of Congress, 39–40; “Hawkins, Augustus,” Current Biography, 1983: 176–179.
  7. ^ a b May, Lee (September 28, 1989). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on March 5, 2021. Retrieved August 12, 2010.
  8. ^ a b Sides, Josh (2003). L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 154.
  9. ^ a b Sides, Josh (2003). L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 33.
  10. ^ Sides, Josh (2003). L.A. City Limits: African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. p. 107.
  11. ^ “Still Seeks Assembly Post, Hawkins Says,” November 14, 1958, Los Angeles Times: 6
  12. ^ Gladwin Hill, “16 Men Battling in California for Eight New Seats in House,” October 20, 1962, New York Times: 10
  13. ^ “Negro, Congress-Bound, Loath to Leave State,” November 8, 1962, Los Angeles Times: 16.
  14. ^ Drew Pearson, “Negro Congressman Tours South,” August 5, 1964, Los Angeles Times: A6.
  15. ^ Peter Bart, “Officials Divided in Placing Blame,” August 15, 1965, New York Times: 81.
  16. ^ Augustus Hawkins, Oral History Interview: 18.
  17. ^ Gloria Emerson, “Americans Find Brutality in South Vietnamese Jail,” July 7, 1970, New York Times: 3; George C. Wilson, “S. Viet Prison Found 'Shocking',” July 7, 1970, Washington Post: A1.
  18. ^ Felix Belair, Jr., “House Panel Urges U.S. to Investigate 'Tiger Cage' Cells,” July 14, 1970, New York Times: 1.
  19. ^ “Augustus F. Hawkins,” Politics in America, 1989 (Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Inc., 1988): 181.
  20. ^ John Dreyfuss, “Waiting Pays Off,” April 19, 1973, Los Angeles Times: A3.
  21. ^ Augustus Hawkins, Oral History Interview: 20; “Hawkins, Augustus,” Current Biography, 1983: 177.
  22. ^ Jacqueline Trescott, “Caucus Critiques,” September 27, 1980, Washington Post: D1.
  23. ^ Congressional Record, House, 95th Cong., second sess. (18 July 1978): 21435.
  24. ^ Washington, Outstanding African Americans of Congress: 42–43.
  25. ^ Jacqueline Trescott, “The Long Haul of Rep. Gus Hawkins; At 83, the Steady Champion of Civil Rights Is Retiring From a Battle That Won't End,” October 24, 1990, Washington Post: D1
  26. ^ Edward Walsh, “Humphrey–Hawkins Measure Is Signed by the President,” October 28, 1978, Washington Post: A9
  27. ^ “President Signs Symbolic Humphrey–Hawkins Bill,” October 28, 1978, Los Angeles Times: 17.
  28. ^ a b Brown, Patricia Leigh (December 28, 2000). "A Park Offers Nature, Not Just Hoops (Published 2000)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
  29. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 26, 2011.
  30. ^ . Lamountains. Archived from the original on May 10, 2013.
  31. ^ "Augustus F. Hawkins Center of Excellence (Hawkins) Program". www2.ed.gov. August 3, 2022. Retrieved March 14, 2023.

External links edit

California Assembly
Preceded by Member of the California Assembly
from the 62nd district

1935–1963
Succeeded by
Tom Waite
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from California's 21st congressional district

1963–1975
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from California's 29th congressional district

1975–1991
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of House Administration Committee
1981–1984
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of House Education Committee
1984–1991
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Oldest living United States representative
(Sitting or former)

2003–2007
Succeeded by

augustus, hawkins, augustus, freeman, hawkins, august, 1907, november, 2007, american, politician, democratic, party, served, california, state, assembly, from, 1935, 1963, house, representatives, from, 1963, 1991, over, course, career, hawkins, authored, more. Augustus Freeman Hawkins August 31 1907 November 10 2007 was an American politician of the Democratic Party who served in the California State Assembly from 1935 to 1963 and the U S House Of Representatives from 1963 to 1991 Over the course of his career Hawkins authored more than 300 state and federal laws the most famous of which are Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the 1978 Humphrey Hawkins Full Employment Act He was known as the silent warrior for his commitment to education and ending unemployment 1 Augustus HawkinsMember of theU S House of Representativesfrom CaliforniaIn office January 3 1963 January 3 1991Preceded byEdgar W Hiestand redistricted Succeeded byMaxine WatersConstituency21st district 1963 1975 29th district 1975 1991 Member of the California State Assembly from the 62nd districtIn office January 7 1935 January 3 1963Preceded byFrederick Madison RobertsSucceeded byTom WaitePersonal detailsBornAugustus Freeman Hawkins 1907 08 31 August 31 1907Shreveport Louisiana U S DiedNovember 10 2007 2007 11 10 aged 100 Bethesda Maryland U S Political partyDemocraticSpouse s Pegga Smith 1945 1966 Elsie Hawkins 1977 2007 EducationUniversity of California Los Angeles BA Contents 1 Early and personal life 2 Political career 2 1 State Assembly 2 2 U S Congress 3 Later life 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly and personal life editHawkins was born in Shreveport Louisiana the youngest of five children to Nyanza Hawkins and Hattie Freeman In 1918 the family moved to Los Angeles 2 3 Hawkins graduated from Jefferson High School in 1926 and received a bachelor s degree in economics from the University of California Los Angeles in 1931 4 After graduation he planned to study civil engineering but the financial constraints of the Great Depression made this impossible This contributed towards his interest in politics and his lifelong devotion to education After graduating Hawkins operated a real estate company with his brother and studied government 5 While serving in the California State Assembly Hawkins married Pegga Adeline Smith on August 28 1945 Smith died in 1966 and Hawkins later married Elsie Taylor in 1977 6 After retiring from Congress he stayed in the Washington area because his wife preferred it living there until his death which came two months after hers 2 An African American of mixed race ancestry Hawkins was very light skinned and reportedly resembled his English grandfather 5 Throughout his life he was often assumed to be of solely white ancestry although he refused to pass as white 7 2 Political career editState Assembly edit nbsp Hawkins in the AssemblyAugustus Hawkins served in California at a time when black representation was so limited that the black strategy for gaining political power was to exercise influence within the Democratic Party through voting for and lobbying white politicians 8 Aside from Hawkins Los Angeles blacks had no other political representative in city county state or federal government 8 Hawkins was part of a more general shift by African Americans away from the Republican and towards the Democratic Party 9 Unlike the majority of African Americans he supported Franklin D Roosevelt s campaign for president in 1932 Hawkins favored measures such as the New Deal which was wildly popular in the United States at large and the African American community in particular Roosevelt would go on to be the first Democratic president to win the black vote in 1936 In 1934 Hawkins supported the more controversial 1934 California gubernatorial election of Upton Sinclair a socialist Although Sinclair lost Hawkins defeated Republican Frederick Madison Roberts the great grandson of Sally Hemings and President Thomas Jefferson and the first African American in the California State Assembly Hawkins would serve as a Democratic member of the Assembly from 1935 until 1963 by the time of his departure Hawkins was the Assembly s most senior member as Roberts was before him Hawkins s district was primarily Latino American and African American During his time in the Assembly he introduced legislation including a fair housing act a fair employment practices act low cost housing and disability insurance legislation and workers compensation provisions for domestic workers 2 5 Along with education fair practices in employment and housing became Hawkins s major causes He received little support at the time for these measures from the Democratic Party however 9 Nevertheless he was able to get some measures passed including his fair housing law which prohibited discrimination by any builders that received federal funds 10 Hawkins was also a delegate to the National Conventions of 1940 1944 and 1960 as well as an electoral college presidential elector from California in 1944 In 1958 Hawkins sought to be Speaker of the California State Assembly which was the second most powerful position in the state after the Governor of California Hawkins lost to Ralph M Brown but was made chairman of the powerful Rules Committee 11 2 Had Hawkins succeeded he would have become the first African American Speaker in California history a feat that Willie Brown would achieve in 1980 In 1962 Hawkins won a newly created majority black congressional district encompassing central Los Angeles 12 With an endorsement from John F Kennedy Hawkins easily won the primary and the general election After the election Hawkins remarked It s like shifting gears from the oldest man in the Assembly in years of service to a freshman in Congress 13 U S Congress edit nbsp Hawkins with President John F Kennedy in 1962From 1963 to 1991 Hawkins represented California s 21st District 1963 1975 and the 29th District 1975 1991 covering southern Los Angeles County in Congress Hawkins was consistently elected with over 80 of the vote in his Democratic friendly district He was the first black representative to be elected from west of the Mississippi River 5 Hawkins was a strong supporter of President Lyndon B Johnson s Great Society Early in his congressional career he authored legislation including Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that established the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Hawkins was a strong supporter of civil rights and he toured the South in 1964 to advocate for African American voter registration 14 Five days after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was signed into law the Watts Riots occurred in Hawkins s district It was the first of many race riots in the 1960s Hawkins urged his colleagues in Congress to increase antipoverty funds but he did not condone the violence 15 Due to his light skin and heightened racial tensions Hawkins had to be careful when he visited his district shortly after the riots 7 The riots stalled the Great Society particularly over the fair housing blacks who benefited from Great Society laws were blamed as being harmful to the law and order of America particularly if they were allowed to live next to whites Fair housing was still an unpopular issue in America Democratic Senate nominee Pierre Salinger lost to Republican George Murphy in California over the issue marking the only Republican pickup amid Lyndon Johnson s crushing presidential victory over anti Civil Rights Act Barry Goldwater in 1964 Open housing reform seemed next on the Great Society list after the Voting Rights Act was signed but the Watts Riot put it on hold It was not passed until after the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr On the Vietnam War Hawkins initially agreed with President Johnson In 1964 both insisted that the war undermined the Great Society and that the United States could not impose our way of life on other people 16 When it became clear that South Vietnam was not stable enough to survive without American backing Hawkins increased his criticism of the war After touring South Vietnam June 1970 Hawkins and fellow Democratic Representative William Anderson drafted a House Resolution urging Congress to condemn the cruel and inhumane treatment of prisoners in South Vietnam 5 Anderson and Hawkins had visited South Vietnam with nine other congressmen but they were the only two to visit a civilian South Vietnamese prison on Con Son Island which they described as being akin to tiger cages 17 The two Representatives also pressured President Nixon to send an independent task force to investigate the prison and prevent further degradation and death 18 nbsp Portrait of Hawkins in the Collection of the U S House of RepresentativesHawkins was a founding member of the Congressional Black Caucus and served as vice chairman during its first term 1971 1973 5 2 Hawkins did not play a significant role in the CBC as he preferred to focus on legislation rather than use Congress as a bully pulpit like other African Americans such as Adam Clayton Powell Jr Bill Clay and Ron Dellums Hawkins argued that there needed to be clearer thinking and fewer exhibitionists in the civil rights movement 19 During this time Hawkins succeeded in restoring honorable discharges to the 170 black soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment who had been falsely accused of a public disturbance in Brownsville Texas in 1906 and removed from the Army 20 Unlike other CBC members he sought cooperation from organized labor and white ethnics in order to make his agenda more likely to pass into law 21 In 1980 Hawkins criticized the CBC as 85 percent social and 15 percent business 22 Aside from Title VII of the Civil Rights Act laws that Hawkins was instrumental in passing include the 1974 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act a law that provided certain protections to young criminal offenders the 1978 Comprehensive Employment and Training Act and the 1978 Pregnancy Disability Act which aimed to prevent discrimination against women on the basis of pregnancy and of which Hawkins said we have the opportunity to ensure that genuine equality in the American labor force is more than an illusion and that pregnancy will no longer be the basis of unfavorable treatment of working women 23 24 Hawkins is known best of all for the 1978 Humphrey Hawkins Full Employment Act which Hawkins sponsored in 1977 alongside the legendary Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota The bill gave the U S government the goal of providing full employment it also ordered that the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board must provide Congress with testimony on the state of the economy However by the time that the bill made it to President Jimmy Carter s desk the legislation was clearly symbolic 25 26 27 Hawkins later authored landmark legislation such as the Job Training Partnership Act and the 1988 School Improvement Act He became chair of the House Education and Labor Committee in 1984 Hawkins was frustrated from the relative lack of success that he achieved during the 1980s presidencies of Ronald Reagan and George H W Bush They were the most conservative presidents since the 1920s and members of his own party were moving to the right and viewed Hawkins s old school New Dealer stance as outdated 5 His greatest setback was George H W Bush s veto of the Civil Rights Act of 1990 sometimes called the Hawkins Kennedy Civil Rights Act It would have reversed six Supreme Court decisions made in the previous year that had shifted the burden of proof of discriminating hiring practices of minorities or women from the employer to the employee It remains the only successful veto of a civil rights act in United States history Hawkins retired in January 1991 Bush would sign a less expansive bill the Civil Rights Act of 1991 after Hawkins s retirement 5 Later life editHawkins retired in 1991 to his Los Angeles home never having lost an election in 58 years as an elected official He lived in Washington D C for the remainder of his life Until his 2007 death at the age of 100 he was the oldest living person to have served in Congress He was the eighth person to have served in Congress that reached the age of 100 Hawkins s death left the former Alabama Republican Representative Arthur Glenn Andrews 1909 2008 as the oldest living former House member Legacy editThe Augustus F Hawkins Nature Park was built in 2000 in a highly urbanized area of southern Los Angeles 28 29 The cost was 4 5 million and was financed largely by city county and state bond measures 28 The park encompasses 8 5 acres and features the Evan Frankel Discovery Center which includes natural history and environmental interpretive displays 30 The Augustus F Hawkins Centers of Excellence Program is a federal grants program supporting diversification of the U S teaching force 31 Augustus F Hawkins High School in Los Angeles which opened in 2012 is named in his honor See also editList of African American United States representativesReferences edit William L Clay Just Permanent Interests Black Americans in Congress 1870 1991 New York Amistad Press Inc 1992 94 a b c d e f Claudia Luther and Valerie J Nelson November 13 2007 A pioneer for black lawmakers in L A Los Angeles Times Retrieved September 17 2021 Sides Josh 2003 L A City Limits African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 15 Shirley Washington Outstanding African Americans of Congress Washington DC United States Capitol Historical Society 1998 39 a b c d e f g h Office of the Clerk Augustus Freeman Gus Hawkins Black Americans in Congress United States House of Representatives Archived from the original on August 4 2010 Retrieved August 11 2010 Washington Outstanding African Americans of Congress 39 40 Hawkins Augustus Current Biography 1983 176 179 a b May Lee September 28 1989 Mistaken Identities And in America Light Skinned Blacks Are Acutely Aware That Race Still Matters to Many People Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on March 5 2021 Retrieved August 12 2010 a b Sides Josh 2003 L A City Limits African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 154 a b Sides Josh 2003 L A City Limits African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 33 Sides Josh 2003 L A City Limits African American Los Angeles from the Great Depression to the Present Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press p 107 Still Seeks Assembly Post Hawkins Says November 14 1958 Los Angeles Times 6 Gladwin Hill 16 Men Battling in California for Eight New Seats in House October 20 1962 New York Times 10 Negro Congress Bound Loath to Leave State November 8 1962 Los Angeles Times 16 Drew Pearson Negro Congressman Tours South August 5 1964 Los Angeles Times A6 Peter Bart Officials Divided in Placing Blame August 15 1965 New York Times 81 Augustus Hawkins Oral History Interview 18 Gloria Emerson Americans Find Brutality in South Vietnamese Jail July 7 1970 New York Times 3 George C Wilson S Viet Prison Found Shocking July 7 1970 Washington Post A1 Felix Belair Jr House Panel Urges U S to Investigate Tiger Cage Cells July 14 1970 New York Times 1 Augustus F Hawkins Politics in America 1989 Washington DC Congressional Quarterly Inc 1988 181 John Dreyfuss Waiting Pays Off April 19 1973 Los Angeles Times A3 Augustus Hawkins Oral History Interview 20 Hawkins Augustus Current Biography 1983 177 Jacqueline Trescott Caucus Critiques September 27 1980 Washington Post D1 Congressional Record House 95th Cong second sess 18 July 1978 21435 Washington Outstanding African Americans of Congress 42 43 Jacqueline Trescott The Long Haul of Rep Gus Hawkins At 83 the Steady Champion of Civil Rights Is Retiring From a Battle That Won t End October 24 1990 Washington Post D1 Edward Walsh Humphrey Hawkins Measure Is Signed by the President October 28 1978 Washington Post A9 President Signs Symbolic Humphrey Hawkins Bill October 28 1978 Los Angeles Times 17 a b Brown Patricia Leigh December 28 2000 A Park Offers Nature Not Just Hoops Published 2000 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 28 2020 Proposition O Call for Projects City of Los Angeles Proposition O Citizens Oversight Advisory Committee p 3 2005 PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 26 2011 Lamountains Lamountains Archived from the original on May 10 2013 Augustus F Hawkins Center of Excellence Hawkins Program www2 ed gov August 3 2022 Retrieved March 14 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Augustus F Hawkins United States Congress Augustus Hawkins id H000367 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Appearances on C SPAN Obituary from the Los Angeles Times Obituary from The Baltimore Sun Augustus Hawkins at Find a Grave Join California Augustus F Gus HawkinsCalifornia AssemblyPreceded byFrederick Madison Roberts Member of the California Assemblyfrom the 62nd district1935 1963 Succeeded byTom WaiteU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byEdgar W Hiestand Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom California s 21st congressional district1963 1975 Succeeded byJames C CormanPreceded byGeorge E Danielson Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom California s 29th congressional district1975 1991 Succeeded byMaxine WatersPreceded byLucien Nedzi Chair of House Administration Committee1981 1984 Succeeded byFrank AnnunzioPreceded byCarl D Perkins Chair of House Education Committee1984 1991 Succeeded byWilliam D FordHonorary titlesPreceded byJohn G Dow Oldest living United States representative Sitting or former 2003 2007 Succeeded byGlenn Andrews Portals nbsp United States nbsp Politics nbsp California Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Augustus Hawkins amp oldid 1184201825, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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