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Floyd McKissick

Floyd Bixler McKissick (March 9, 1922 – April 28, 1991) was an American lawyer and civil rights activist. He became the first African-American student at the University of North Carolina School of Law. In 1966 he became leader of CORE, the Congress of Racial Equality, taking over from James Farmer. A supporter of Black Power, he turned CORE into a more radical movement. In 1968, McKissick left CORE to found Soul City in Warren County, North Carolina. He was an active Republican and endorsed Richard Nixon for president that year, and the federal government, under President Nixon, supported Soul City. He became a state district court judge in 1990 and died on April 28, 1991.

Floyd McKissick
McKissick in 1963
2nd National Director of the Congress of Racial Equality
In office
1966–1968
Preceded byJames Farmer
Succeeded byWilfred Ussery
Personal details
Born(1922-03-09)March 9, 1922
Asheville, North Carolina
DiedApril 28, 1991(1991-04-28) (aged 69)
Soul City, North Carolina
SpouseEvelyn Williams
ChildrenFloyd McKissick Jr.
Joycelyn
Andree
Charmaine
Alma materMorehouse College

Politician and attorney Floyd McKissick Jr., is his son.

Early life and education edit

Floyd Bixler McKissick Sr. was born in Asheville, North Carolina, on March 9, 1922.[1] He was the only son and one of four children of Ernest Boyce and Magnolia Thompson McKissick.[2][3] He was named for a friend of his father, Floyd S. Bixler.[4]

When he was 13 years of age, McKissick was a member of a Boy Scout troop. The troop sponsored a skating tournament on a street in Asheville, and McKissick was assigned to look after the younger participants. When one of the children strayed into an adjacent street, McKissick followed him and brought him back to the starting line. Two police officers who had witnessed this began chastising McKissick. When he tried to explain what had happened, one of the officers slapped him.[5] He continued trying to explain what had occurred, and when the officer attempted to strike him with his nightstick, McKissick deflected the blow with his skates, knocking the stick out of the officers' hands. McKissick was arrested and put on trial two weeks later. McKissick's father lied to the judge, telling him he had punished his son for his behavior, and the case was dismissed.[6] As a result of the incident, McKissick resolved to become a lawyer, and shortly thereafter joined the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.[7]

McKissick stated, "I've been active in North Carolina politics I think since I was about sixteen or seventeen, in high school." One of his early protests was in his hometown, Asheville, because the city refused to permit actor Paul Robeson to speak in the city auditorium in the 1930s. He graduated from high school in 1939, and in 1940 went to Atlanta to attend Morehouse College.[8] After enrolling at Morehouse, McKissick joined the U.S. Army and during World War II he served in the European Theater as a sergeant. After the war, he returned to Morehouse College where he graduated in 1948.[9]

Early protest and political involvement edit

McKissick returned home from his service oversees inspired by postwar reconstruction efforts in Europe and increasingly aggrieved by blacks' lack of standing in American society, despite their contribution to the war effort.[10] He participated in the 1947 Journey of Reconciliation, an attempt by activists to integrate interstate bus travel in the South. The following year he joined the Progressive Party supported Henry Wallace's 1948 presidential campaign.[11]

In 1957, McKissick along with Nathan White Sr. headed the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs' Economic Committee, developed plans to boycott the Royal Ice Cream Parlor in Durham. Under the leadership of McKissick, twenty high school NAACP members acted in regular pickets outside of the Royal Ice Cream Parlor.[8]

Admittance to UNC Law School edit

After graduating from Morehouse in 1948, McKissick decided to pursue a career in law. He returned to his native state North Carolina, and applied to the University of North Carolina (UNC) School of Law. He was subsequently denied admission because of his race. After his denial, he enrolled in North Carolina College (NCC) School of Law, now North Carolina Central University (NCCU), in Durham, North Carolina, which was the law school for blacks. While in NCC's Law School, the NAACP accepted McKissick's case, and filed a lawsuit against UNC School of Law. Thurgood Marshall led the NAACP defense.[12][13] In 1951, a ruling by the United States Court of Appeals allowed McKissick and three other students admission to UNC's School of Law.[9] At the time of the ruling, McKissick had nearly finished his law degree from NCC, but he took courses at UNC School of Law during the summer of 1951. McKissick was in the first group of black students to be admitted at UNC School of Law.

Law efforts edit

In 1955, McKissick established a law firm in Durham.[14] He handled a variety of cases, including property and insurance disputes and criminal law, but focused on civil rights litigation.[15] His clients included the first black undergraduates to attend UNC-Chapel Hill in 1955. He successfully defended sit-in protesters of the Durham's Royal Ice Cream Parlor in 1957, and the families who integrated Durham's city school system in 1959. The lead plaintiffs in the 1959 school desegregation case were his daughter, Joycelyn, and his wife, Evelyn.[14] As a lawyer, McKissick's most publicized efforts involved a segregated black local in the Tobacco Workers International, an AFL-CIO member. McKissick pressed to have black workers admitted to the skilled scale without loss of their seniority rating.

Involvement with CORE edit

 
Civil rights leaders meeting with President John F. Kennedy in 1963. McKissick stands at the far left.

After the Greensboro sit-in at Woolworth's lunch counter on February 1, 1960, Gordon Carey and James T. McCain, CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) field secretaries, were sent to the Carolinas to help with the negotiating of department store owners and to spark interest in more sit-ins. Carey was introduced to McKissick during this time. "Carey helped McKissick and students organize the demonstrations that broke out on February 8 in Durham, and in the course of the next few weeks the two men travelled over the state setting up non-violent workshops." McKissick handled legal affairs for both the NAACP and CORE, but he withdrew from the NAACP. After leaving the NAACP and showing loyalty to CORE, he was elected to the CORE national chairmanship at the 1963 Convention.[16][17]

CORE executive director James Farmer was under arrest at the time of the 1963 civil rights March on Washington for participating in protests in Louisiana, so McKissick attended the demonstration on his behalf.[18] He delivered an address to the attendees originally prepared for Farmer, exhorting the audience to "play well your roles in your struggle for freedom. In the thousands of communities in which you have come throughout the land, act with valor and dignity, and act without fear."[19] He also participated in a meeting between national civil rights leaders and President John F. Kennedy that day on Farmer's behalf.[20]

McKissick replaced Farmer as head of CORE on January 3, 1966.[1] The organization transformed from an interracial integrationist civil rights group pledged to uphold nonviolence into a militant and uncompromising group of the ideology of black power.

In 1966, James Meredith challenged America's social system of poverty, racial segregation, and white supremacy by vowing to walk alone from Memphis, Tennessee to Jackson, Mississippi. McKissick who had recently been elected head of CORE, promised to support Meredith in his journey. Along with Martin Luther King Jr. and Stokely Carmichael, McKissick assisted in leading a group of demonstrators the remaining 194 miles to Jackson, Mississippi.[21] McKissick stated, "We issued the call to bring all the organizations together to continue the march at the spot where he fell."[22][23] On the 17th day of their march, the protestors stopped in Canton, Mississippi and attempted to establish a camp for the night at a school. Local officials objected to their attempt to camp at the school, and dozens of state police officers were dispatched to confront the crowd.[24] McKissick stood aboard a truck and attempted to rally the protestors to continue their demonstration, the police attacked, firing tear gas canisters and striking the protestors as they fled. Struck by a gas canister, McKissick lost his balance and fell off the truck, injuring his back.[25] Following the incident, McKissick became a vocal supporter of black power, declaring that nonviolence had "outlived its usefulness" and that the civil rights movement was "dead".[26]

McKissick's embrace of the black power movement and the subsequent perceived radicalization of CORE led to the resignation of many of the organization's white members and caused the Federal Bureau of Investigation to monitor McKissick.[27] McKissick and Roy Innis, who at that time was the head of the Harlem chapter of CORE, appeared to be close allies, but there were underlying tensions. When McKissick left CORE in 1968, Innis took over.[28][29] He became more strident in his rejection of nonviolence after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, telling a journalist, "The next Negro to advocate nonviolence should be torn to bits by black people."[30] In 1969, he published a book, 3/5ths of a man,[31] which urged white people to accept political equality with minorities at the threat of violent revolution.[32] He also stressed the importance of black economic autonomy from white society, arguing that, "Unless the Black Man attains economic independence, any 'political independence' will be an illusion".[31] He promoted involvement in business as a means of enriching American blacks, which he termed "black entrepreneurship" and "black socialism".[33]

Soul City edit

 
Soul City, 1975

Following his departure from CORE, McKissick founded McKissick Enterprises in August 1968, a company which was supposed to "create and distribute profits to millions of black Americans" by investing in and providing technical advice to black-run businesses.[34] It invested in a variety of projects.[35] Following the promulgation of the New Communities Act, McKissick tasked his staff with drafting a plan for a new city in the South,[36] figuring that new planned community there would attract more interest.[37]

McKissick launched a plan to build a new community, Soul City, in Warren County, North Carolina, on 500 acres of farmland. McKissick stated, "Soul City was an idea before the movement. Soul City actually started after World War II, in my mind. And it was first talked about when we saw the use of the Marshall Plan, and all like that. See, I've always been in real estate and I've always been a businessman."[22] Soul City was supposed to reverse out-migration of minorities and the poor to urban areas. Soul City was a town intended for all, but placed emphasis on providing opportunities for minorities and the poor.

The venture received a $14 million bond issue guarantee from the Department of Housing and Urban Development through the New Communities Act of 1970 and a loan of $500,000 from the First Pennsylvania Bank. The state of North Carolina also gave $1.7 million and private donors gave about $1 million. With this funding, McKissick built a state-of-the art water system, a health care clinic, and a massive steel-and-glass factory named Soultech I. Soul City was projected to have 24,000 jobs and 44,000 inhabitants by the year 2004.[38]

Soul City, however, ran into difficulties and the project never developed as McKissick had hoped. In June 1980, the Soul City Corporation and the federal government reached an agreement that allowed the government to assume control the following January. Under the agreement, the company retained 88 acres of the project, including the site of a mobile home park and a 60,000-square-foot building that had served as the project's headquarters.

The Department of Housing & Urban Development paid off $10 million in loans and agreed to pay an additional $175,000 of the project's debts. In exchange, McKissick agreed to drop a lawsuit brought to block HUD from shutting down the project.

Later life and death edit

In June 1990, Floyd McKissick was appointed a state district court judge in the Ninth Judicial District in North Carolina, by Republican Governor James G. Martin. Less than a year after being appointed, while also working as pastor of the First Baptist Church of Soul City, McKissick died of lung cancer at the age 69 on April 28, 1991. He was buried in Soul City. He was survived by his wife, the former Evelyn Williams, whom he married in 1942; a son, Floyd McKissick, Jr; and three daughters, Joycelyn, Andree, and Charmaine.[39]

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Civil Rights Greensboro. UNCG University Libraries. Archived from the original on March 26, 2012. Retrieved June 19, 2023.
  2. ^ Floyd B. McKissick Papers #4930, Southern Historical Collection of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the African American Resources Collection of North Carolina Central University.
  3. ^ Healy 2021, p. 30.
  4. ^ Healy 2021, p. 29.
  5. ^ Healy 2021, p. 31.
  6. ^ Healy 2021, p. 32.
  7. ^ Healy 2021, pp. 32–33.
  8. ^ a b Greene, Christina. Our Separate Ways: Women and the Black Freedom Movement in Durham, North Carolina. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina, 2005. Print.
  9. ^ a b Goodloe, Trevor. "McKissick, Floyd B. (1922-1991) | The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed." McKissick, Floyd B. (1922-1991) |BlackPast, n.d. Web. 5 March 2013.
  10. ^ Healy 2021, pp. 33–34.
  11. ^ Healy 2021, pp. 34–35.
  12. ^ Mckissick et al. v. Carmichael et al, 187 F.2d 949 (4th Cir. March 27, 1951).
  13. ^ "Learn more about the founder of the North Carolina law firm | McKissick & McKissick". www.floydmckissicklaw.com. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
  14. ^ a b "Floyd B. McKissick, Lawyer and Nationally Recognized Civil Rights Activist". And Justice for All. Durham County Library. Retrieved January 4, 2024.
  15. ^ Healy 2021, p. 35.
  16. ^ Meier, August, and Elliott M. Rudwick. CORE: A Study in the Civil Rights Movement, 1942-1968. New York: Oxford UP, 1973. Print.
  17. ^ Nishani, Frazier (2017). Harambee City : the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. pp. 135–140, 190–193. ISBN 9781610756013. OCLC 973832475.
  18. ^ Suttell 2023, p. 210.
  19. ^ Suttell 2023, pp. 210–211.
  20. ^ Suttell 2023, pp. 167, 2010.
  21. ^ Joseph, Peniel E. Waiting 'til the Midnight Hour: A Narrative History of Black Power in America. New York: Henry Holt and, 2006. Print.
  22. ^ a b Interview by Jack Bas and Walter Devries. Documenting the American South: Oral Histories of the American South. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, December 6, 1973. Web. 06 Mar. 2013.
  23. ^ Nishani, Frazier (2017). Harambee City : the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. pp. 139–166. ISBN 9781610756013. OCLC 973832475.
  24. ^ Healy 2021, p. 46.
  25. ^ Healy 2021, pp. 46–47.
  26. ^ Healy 2021, p. 47.
  27. ^ Healy 2021, pp. 47–48.
  28. ^ Nishani, Frazier (2017). Harambee City : the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. pp. 139–140, 207, 212. ISBN 9781610756013. OCLC 973832475.
  29. ^ Nishani, Frazier (2017). Harambee City : the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. pp. 207, 212. ISBN 9781610756013. OCLC 973832475.
  30. ^ Healy 2021, p. 57.
  31. ^ a b Healy 2021, p. 50.
  32. ^ "State's newest judge is a veteran of civil rights movement". Durham Morning Herald. Associated Press. July 9, 1990. p. B6.
  33. ^ Healy 2021, p. 52.
  34. ^ Healy 2021, pp. 61, 70.
  35. ^ Healy 2021, p. 63.
  36. ^ Healy 2021, pp. 70–71.
  37. ^ Healy 2021, p. 81.
  38. ^ McKissick, Floyd B. Soul City North Carolina. Soul City, NC, 1974. Print.
  39. ^ Fowler, Glenn. "Floyd McKissick, Civil Rights Maverick, Dies at 69." The New York Times, 30 April 1991. Web. 8 March 2013.

Works cited edit

  • Healy, Thomas (2021). Soul City: Race, Equality, and the Lost Dream of an American Utopia. New York City: Metropolitan Books. ISBN 9781627798624.
  • Suttell, Brian (2023). Campus to Counter : Civil Rights Activism in Raleigh and Durham, North Carolina 1960–1963. Macon: Mercer University Press. ISBN 978-0-88146-877-9.

External links edit

  • Inventory of the Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s, in the Southern Historical Collection, UNC-Chapel Hill
  • Oral History Interviews with Floyd B. McKissick Sr. [1], [2] from Oral Histories of the American South
  • CORE History
  • King Encyclopedia
  • Harambee City: Archival site incorporating documents, maps, audio/visual materials related to CORE's work in black power and black economic development.

floyd, mckissick, floyd, bixler, mckissick, march, 1922, april, 1991, american, lawyer, civil, rights, activist, became, first, african, american, student, university, north, carolina, school, 1966, became, leader, core, congress, racial, equality, taking, ove. Floyd Bixler McKissick March 9 1922 April 28 1991 was an American lawyer and civil rights activist He became the first African American student at the University of North Carolina School of Law In 1966 he became leader of CORE the Congress of Racial Equality taking over from James Farmer A supporter of Black Power he turned CORE into a more radical movement In 1968 McKissick left CORE to found Soul City in Warren County North Carolina He was an active Republican and endorsed Richard Nixon for president that year and the federal government under President Nixon supported Soul City He became a state district court judge in 1990 and died on April 28 1991 Floyd McKissickMcKissick in 19632nd National Director of the Congress of Racial EqualityIn office 1966 1968Preceded byJames FarmerSucceeded byWilfred UsseryPersonal detailsBorn 1922 03 09 March 9 1922Asheville North CarolinaDiedApril 28 1991 1991 04 28 aged 69 Soul City North CarolinaSpouseEvelyn WilliamsChildrenFloyd McKissick Jr JoycelynAndreeCharmaineAlma materMorehouse CollegePolitician and attorney Floyd McKissick Jr is his son Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early protest and political involvement 3 Admittance to UNC Law School 4 Law efforts 5 Involvement with CORE 6 Soul City 7 Later life and death 8 References 9 Works cited 10 External linksEarly life and education editFloyd Bixler McKissick Sr was born in Asheville North Carolina on March 9 1922 1 He was the only son and one of four children of Ernest Boyce and Magnolia Thompson McKissick 2 3 He was named for a friend of his father Floyd S Bixler 4 When he was 13 years of age McKissick was a member of a Boy Scout troop The troop sponsored a skating tournament on a street in Asheville and McKissick was assigned to look after the younger participants When one of the children strayed into an adjacent street McKissick followed him and brought him back to the starting line Two police officers who had witnessed this began chastising McKissick When he tried to explain what had happened one of the officers slapped him 5 He continued trying to explain what had occurred and when the officer attempted to strike him with his nightstick McKissick deflected the blow with his skates knocking the stick out of the officers hands McKissick was arrested and put on trial two weeks later McKissick s father lied to the judge telling him he had punished his son for his behavior and the case was dismissed 6 As a result of the incident McKissick resolved to become a lawyer and shortly thereafter joined the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 7 McKissick stated I ve been active in North Carolina politics I think since I was about sixteen or seventeen in high school One of his early protests was in his hometown Asheville because the city refused to permit actor Paul Robeson to speak in the city auditorium in the 1930s He graduated from high school in 1939 and in 1940 went to Atlanta to attend Morehouse College 8 After enrolling at Morehouse McKissick joined the U S Army and during World War II he served in the European Theater as a sergeant After the war he returned to Morehouse College where he graduated in 1948 9 Early protest and political involvement editMcKissick returned home from his service oversees inspired by postwar reconstruction efforts in Europe and increasingly aggrieved by blacks lack of standing in American society despite their contribution to the war effort 10 He participated in the 1947 Journey of Reconciliation an attempt by activists to integrate interstate bus travel in the South The following year he joined the Progressive Party supported Henry Wallace s 1948 presidential campaign 11 In 1957 McKissick along with Nathan White Sr headed the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs Economic Committee developed plans to boycott the Royal Ice Cream Parlor in Durham Under the leadership of McKissick twenty high school NAACP members acted in regular pickets outside of the Royal Ice Cream Parlor 8 Admittance to UNC Law School editAfter graduating from Morehouse in 1948 McKissick decided to pursue a career in law He returned to his native state North Carolina and applied to the University of North Carolina UNC School of Law He was subsequently denied admission because of his race After his denial he enrolled in North Carolina College NCC School of Law now North Carolina Central University NCCU in Durham North Carolina which was the law school for blacks While in NCC s Law School the NAACP accepted McKissick s case and filed a lawsuit against UNC School of Law Thurgood Marshall led the NAACP defense 12 13 In 1951 a ruling by the United States Court of Appeals allowed McKissick and three other students admission to UNC s School of Law 9 At the time of the ruling McKissick had nearly finished his law degree from NCC but he took courses at UNC School of Law during the summer of 1951 McKissick was in the first group of black students to be admitted at UNC School of Law Law efforts editIn 1955 McKissick established a law firm in Durham 14 He handled a variety of cases including property and insurance disputes and criminal law but focused on civil rights litigation 15 His clients included the first black undergraduates to attend UNC Chapel Hill in 1955 He successfully defended sit in protesters of the Durham s Royal Ice Cream Parlor in 1957 and the families who integrated Durham s city school system in 1959 The lead plaintiffs in the 1959 school desegregation case were his daughter Joycelyn and his wife Evelyn 14 As a lawyer McKissick s most publicized efforts involved a segregated black local in the Tobacco Workers International an AFL CIO member McKissick pressed to have black workers admitted to the skilled scale without loss of their seniority rating Involvement with CORE edit nbsp Civil rights leaders meeting with President John F Kennedy in 1963 McKissick stands at the far left After the Greensboro sit in at Woolworth s lunch counter on February 1 1960 Gordon Carey and James T McCain CORE Congress of Racial Equality field secretaries were sent to the Carolinas to help with the negotiating of department store owners and to spark interest in more sit ins Carey was introduced to McKissick during this time Carey helped McKissick and students organize the demonstrations that broke out on February 8 in Durham and in the course of the next few weeks the two men travelled over the state setting up non violent workshops McKissick handled legal affairs for both the NAACP and CORE but he withdrew from the NAACP After leaving the NAACP and showing loyalty to CORE he was elected to the CORE national chairmanship at the 1963 Convention 16 17 CORE executive director James Farmer was under arrest at the time of the 1963 civil rights March on Washington for participating in protests in Louisiana so McKissick attended the demonstration on his behalf 18 He delivered an address to the attendees originally prepared for Farmer exhorting the audience to play well your roles in your struggle for freedom In the thousands of communities in which you have come throughout the land act with valor and dignity and act without fear 19 He also participated in a meeting between national civil rights leaders and President John F Kennedy that day on Farmer s behalf 20 McKissick replaced Farmer as head of CORE on January 3 1966 1 The organization transformed from an interracial integrationist civil rights group pledged to uphold nonviolence into a militant and uncompromising group of the ideology of black power In 1966 James Meredith challenged America s social system of poverty racial segregation and white supremacy by vowing to walk alone from Memphis Tennessee to Jackson Mississippi McKissick who had recently been elected head of CORE promised to support Meredith in his journey Along with Martin Luther King Jr and Stokely Carmichael McKissick assisted in leading a group of demonstrators the remaining 194 miles to Jackson Mississippi 21 McKissick stated We issued the call to bring all the organizations together to continue the march at the spot where he fell 22 23 On the 17th day of their march the protestors stopped in Canton Mississippi and attempted to establish a camp for the night at a school Local officials objected to their attempt to camp at the school and dozens of state police officers were dispatched to confront the crowd 24 McKissick stood aboard a truck and attempted to rally the protestors to continue their demonstration the police attacked firing tear gas canisters and striking the protestors as they fled Struck by a gas canister McKissick lost his balance and fell off the truck injuring his back 25 Following the incident McKissick became a vocal supporter of black power declaring that nonviolence had outlived its usefulness and that the civil rights movement was dead 26 McKissick s embrace of the black power movement and the subsequent perceived radicalization of CORE led to the resignation of many of the organization s white members and caused the Federal Bureau of Investigation to monitor McKissick 27 McKissick and Roy Innis who at that time was the head of the Harlem chapter of CORE appeared to be close allies but there were underlying tensions When McKissick left CORE in 1968 Innis took over 28 29 He became more strident in his rejection of nonviolence after Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated telling a journalist The next Negro to advocate nonviolence should be torn to bits by black people 30 In 1969 he published a book 3 5ths of a man 31 which urged white people to accept political equality with minorities at the threat of violent revolution 32 He also stressed the importance of black economic autonomy from white society arguing that Unless the Black Man attains economic independence any political independence will be an illusion 31 He promoted involvement in business as a means of enriching American blacks which he termed black entrepreneurship and black socialism 33 Soul City edit nbsp Soul City 1975Following his departure from CORE McKissick founded McKissick Enterprises in August 1968 a company which was supposed to create and distribute profits to millions of black Americans by investing in and providing technical advice to black run businesses 34 It invested in a variety of projects 35 Following the promulgation of the New Communities Act McKissick tasked his staff with drafting a plan for a new city in the South 36 figuring that new planned community there would attract more interest 37 McKissick launched a plan to build a new community Soul City in Warren County North Carolina on 500 acres of farmland McKissick stated Soul City was an idea before the movement Soul City actually started after World War II in my mind And it was first talked about when we saw the use of the Marshall Plan and all like that See I ve always been in real estate and I ve always been a businessman 22 Soul City was supposed to reverse out migration of minorities and the poor to urban areas Soul City was a town intended for all but placed emphasis on providing opportunities for minorities and the poor The venture received a 14 million bond issue guarantee from the Department of Housing and Urban Development through the New Communities Act of 1970 and a loan of 500 000 from the First Pennsylvania Bank The state of North Carolina also gave 1 7 million and private donors gave about 1 million With this funding McKissick built a state of the art water system a health care clinic and a massive steel and glass factory named Soultech I Soul City was projected to have 24 000 jobs and 44 000 inhabitants by the year 2004 38 Soul City however ran into difficulties and the project never developed as McKissick had hoped In June 1980 the Soul City Corporation and the federal government reached an agreement that allowed the government to assume control the following January Under the agreement the company retained 88 acres of the project including the site of a mobile home park and a 60 000 square foot building that had served as the project s headquarters The Department of Housing amp Urban Development paid off 10 million in loans and agreed to pay an additional 175 000 of the project s debts In exchange McKissick agreed to drop a lawsuit brought to block HUD from shutting down the project Later life and death editIn June 1990 Floyd McKissick was appointed a state district court judge in the Ninth Judicial District in North Carolina by Republican Governor James G Martin Less than a year after being appointed while also working as pastor of the First Baptist Church of Soul City McKissick died of lung cancer at the age 69 on April 28 1991 He was buried in Soul City He was survived by his wife the former Evelyn Williams whom he married in 1942 a son Floyd McKissick Jr and three daughters Joycelyn Andree and Charmaine 39 References edit a b Floyd B McKissick Civil Rights Greensboro UNCG University Libraries Archived from the original on March 26 2012 Retrieved June 19 2023 Floyd B McKissick Papers 4930 Southern Historical Collection of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the African American Resources Collection of North Carolina Central University Healy 2021 p 30 Healy 2021 p 29 Healy 2021 p 31 Healy 2021 p 32 Healy 2021 pp 32 33 a b Greene Christina Our Separate Ways Women and the Black Freedom Movement in Durham North Carolina Chapel Hill University of North Carolina 2005 Print a b Goodloe Trevor McKissick Floyd B 1922 1991 The Black Past Remembered and Reclaimed McKissick Floyd B 1922 1991 BlackPast n d Web 5 March 2013 Healy 2021 pp 33 34 Healy 2021 pp 34 35 Mckissick et al v Carmichael et al 187 F 2d 949 4th Cir March 27 1951 Learn more about the founder of the North Carolina law firm McKissick amp McKissick www floydmckissicklaw com Retrieved 2019 10 28 a b Floyd B McKissick Lawyer and Nationally Recognized Civil Rights Activist And Justice for All Durham County Library Retrieved January 4 2024 Healy 2021 p 35 Meier August and Elliott M Rudwick CORE A Study in the Civil Rights Movement 1942 1968 New York Oxford UP 1973 Print Nishani Frazier 2017 Harambee City the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press pp 135 140 190 193 ISBN 9781610756013 OCLC 973832475 Suttell 2023 p 210 Suttell 2023 pp 210 211 Suttell 2023 pp 167 2010 Joseph Peniel E Waiting til the Midnight Hour A Narrative History of Black Power in America New York Henry Holt and 2006 Print a b Interview by Jack Bas and Walter Devries Documenting the American South Oral Histories of the American South University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill December 6 1973 Web 06 Mar 2013 Nishani Frazier 2017 Harambee City the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press pp 139 166 ISBN 9781610756013 OCLC 973832475 Healy 2021 p 46 Healy 2021 pp 46 47 Healy 2021 p 47 Healy 2021 pp 47 48 Nishani Frazier 2017 Harambee City the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press pp 139 140 207 212 ISBN 9781610756013 OCLC 973832475 Nishani Frazier 2017 Harambee City the Congress of Racial Equality in Cleveland and the rise of Black Power populism Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press pp 207 212 ISBN 9781610756013 OCLC 973832475 Healy 2021 p 57 a b Healy 2021 p 50 State s newest judge is a veteran of civil rights movement Durham Morning Herald Associated Press July 9 1990 p B6 Healy 2021 p 52 Healy 2021 pp 61 70 Healy 2021 p 63 Healy 2021 pp 70 71 Healy 2021 p 81 McKissick Floyd B Soul City North Carolina Soul City NC 1974 Print Fowler Glenn Floyd McKissick Civil Rights Maverick Dies at 69 The New York Times 30 April 1991 Web 8 March 2013 Works cited editHealy Thomas 2021 Soul City Race Equality and the Lost Dream of an American Utopia New York City Metropolitan Books ISBN 9781627798624 Suttell Brian 2023 Campus to Counter Civil Rights Activism in Raleigh and Durham North Carolina 1960 1963 Macon Mercer University Press ISBN 978 0 88146 877 9 External links editInventory of the Floyd B McKissick Papers 1940s 1980s in the Southern Historical Collection UNC Chapel Hill Oral History Interviews with Floyd B McKissick Sr 1 2 from Oral Histories of the American South CORE History King Encyclopedia Harambee City Archival site incorporating documents maps audio visual materials related to CORE s work in black power and black economic development Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Floyd McKissick amp oldid 1196058824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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