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Robert C. Weaver

Robert Clifton Weaver (December 29, 1907 – July 17, 1997) was an American economist, academic, and political administrator who served as the first United States secretary of housing and urban development (HUD) from 1966 to 1968, when the department was newly established by President Lyndon B. Johnson. Weaver was the first African American to be appointed to a US cabinet-level position.[1][2]

Robert C. Weaver
1st United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
In office
January 18, 1966 – December 18, 1968
PresidentLyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byHimself (HHFA Administrator)
Succeeded byRobert Coldwell Wood
Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency
In office
February 11, 1961 – January 18, 1966
PresidentJohn F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
Preceded byJack Conway (acting)
Succeeded byHimself (HUD Secretary)
Personal details
Born
Robert Clifton Weaver

(1907-12-29)December 29, 1907
Washington, D.C., US
DiedJuly 17, 1997(1997-07-17) (aged 89)
New York City, US
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Ella V. Haith
(m. 1935; died 1991)
EducationHarvard University (BS, MA, PhD)

Prior to his appointment as cabinet officer, Weaver had served in the administration of President John F. Kennedy. In addition, he had served in New York State government, and in high-level positions in New York City. During the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration, he was one of 45 prominent African Americans appointed to positions and helped make up the Black Cabinet, an informal group of African-American public policy advisers. Weaver directed federal programs during the administration of the New Deal, at the same time completing his doctorate in economics in 1934 at Harvard University.

Background edit

Robert Clifton Weaver was born on December 29, 1907, into a middle-class family in Washington, D.C. His parents were Mortimer Grover Weaver, a postal worker, and Florence (Freeman) Weaver. They encouraged him in his academic studies. His maternal grandfather was Dr. Robert Tanner Freeman, the first African American to graduate from Harvard in dentistry.[1][2]

The young Weaver attended the M Street High School, now known as the Dunbar High School. The high school for blacks at a time of racial segregation had a national reputation for academic excellence. Weaver went on to Harvard University, where he earned a Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degree. He also earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Economics, completing his doctorate in 1934.[1][2]

Career edit

Government edit

 
Weaver with Lyndon Johnson at the White House for his swearing-in ceremony (1966)

Washington edit

In 1934, Weaver was appointed as an aide to United States Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes.[1][3] In 1938, he became special assistant to the US Housing Authority.[1] In 1942, he became administrative assistant to the National Defense Advisory Commission, the War Manpower Commission (1942), and director of Negro Manpower Service.[1]

With a reputation for knowledge about housing issues, in 1934 the young Weaver was invited to join President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Black Cabinet.[1][4] Roosevelt appointed a total of 45 prominent blacks to positions in executive agencies, and called on them as informal advisers on public policy issues related to African Americans, the Great Depression and the New Deal.

Weaver drafted the U.S. Housing Program under Roosevelt, which was established in 1937. The program was intended to provide financial support to local housing departments, as a subsidy toward lowering the rent poor African Americans had to pay. The program decreased the average rent from $19.47 per month to $16.80 per month.[citation needed] Weaver claimed the scope of this program was insufficient, as there were still many African Americans who made less than the average income. They could not afford to pay for both food and housing. In addition, generally restricted to segregated housing, African Americans could not necessarily take advantage of other subsidized housing.[citation needed]

Chicago edit

In 1944, Weaver became director of the Commission on Race Relations in the Office of the Mayor of Chicago.[1] In 1945, he became director of community services for the Chicago-based American Council on Race Relations through 1948.[1]

New York edit

In 1949, Weaver become director of fellowship opportunities for the John Hay Whitney Foundation. In 1955, Weaver the first Black State Cabinet member in New York when he became New York State Rent Commissioner under Governor W. Averell Harriman.[1] In 1960, he became vice chairman of the New York City Housing and Redevelopment Board.[5]

Washington: HUD edit

In 1961, Weaver became administrator of the United States Housing and Home Financing Agency (HHFA).[1][4]

After election, Kennedy tried to establish a new cabinet department to deal with urban issues. It was to be called the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Postwar suburban development, following the construction of highways, and economic restructuring had drawn population and jobs from the cities. The nation was faced with a stock of substandard, aged housing in many cities, and problems of unemployment.[citation needed]

In 1961, while trying to create HUD, Kennedy had done everything short of promising the new position to Weaver. He appointed him Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency (HHFA),[4] a group of agencies which Kennedy wanted to raise to cabinet status.

When Dr. Weaver joined the Kennedy Administration, whose Harvard connections extended to the occupant of the Oval Office, he held more Harvard degrees – three, including a doctorate in economics – than anyone else in the administration's upper ranks.[2]

Some Republicans and southern Democrats opposed the legislation to create the new department. The following year, Kennedy unsuccessfully tried to use his reorganization authority to create the department. As a result, Congress passed legislation prohibiting presidents from using that authority to create a new cabinet department, although the previous Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower administration had created the cabinet-level U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare under that authority.[citation needed]

He contributed the compilation housing bill in 1961. He took part in lobbying for the Senior Citizens Housing Act of 1962.[6]

In 1965, Congress approved the department. At the time, Weaver was still Administrator of the HHFA. In public, President Lyndon B. Johnson reiterated Weaver's status as a potential nominee but would not promise him the position. In private, Johnson had strong reservations. He often held pro-and-con discussions with Roy Wilkins, executive director of the NAACP.[citation needed]

Johnson wanted a strong proponent for the new department. Johnson worried about Weaver's political sense. Johnson seriously considered other candidates, none of whom was black. He wanted a top administrator, but also someone who was exciting. Johnson was worried about how the new Secretary would interact with congressional representatives from the Solid South; they were overwhelmingly Democrat as most African Americans were still disenfranchised and excluded from the political system. This was expected to change as the federal government enforced civil rights and the provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. As candidates, Johnson considered the politician Richard Daley, mayor of Chicago; and the philanthropist Laurence Rockefeller.[7]

Ultimately, Johnson believed that Weaver was the best-qualified administrator. His assistant Bill Moyers had rated Weaver highly on potential effectiveness as the new secretary.[citation needed] Moyers noted Weaver's strong accomplishments and ability to create teams. Ten days after receiving the report, the president put forward the nomination, and Weaver was successfully confirmed by the United States Senate.[citation needed]

Weaver served as Secretary of United States Department of Housing and Urban Development from 1966 to 1968.[1]

Weaver had expressed his concerns about African Americans' housing issue before 1930 in his article, "Negroes Need Housing", published by the magazine The Crisis of the NAACP after the Stock Market Crash.[8] He noted there was a great difference between the income of most African Americans and the cost of living; African Americans did not have enough housing supply because of many social factors, including the long economic decline of rural areas in the South. He suggested a government housing program to enable all the African Americans the chance to buy or rent their house.[citation needed]

Academia edit

In 1945, Weaver began teaching at Columbia University.[1]

In 1969, after serving under President Johnson, Weaver became president of Baruch College.[1]

In 1970, Weaver became a distinguished professor of Urban Affairs at Hunter College in New York and taught there until 1978.[1]

Personal life and death edit

In 1935, Robert C. Weaver married Ella V. Haith.[1] They adopted a son, who died in 1962.[9]

Weaver served on the boards of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (1969–1978) and Bowery Savings Bank (1969–1980).[1] He served in advisory capacities to the United States Controller General (1973–1997), the New City Conciliation and Appeals Board (1973–1984), Harvard University School of Design (1978–1983), the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Legal Defense Fund and NAACP executive board committee (1978–1997).[1]

Robert C. Weaver died at age 89 on July 17, 1997, in Manhattan, New York.[1][2]

Honors edit

Weaver received more than 30 honorary university degrees,[1] as well as the following:

Legacy edit

Works edit

Weaver wrote a number of books regarding black issues and urban housing, including:

  • Negro Labor: A National Problem (1946)
  • The Negro Ghetto (1948)
  • The Urban Complex: Human Values in Urban Life (1964)
  • Dilemmas of Urban America (1965)

Herbert Aptheker reviewed The Negro Ghetto in the August 1948 issue of Masses and Mainstream (successor to the New Masses magazine).[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Armstrong, Robin; Pendergast, Sara. Contemporary Black Biography. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e Barron, James (19 July 1997). "Robert C. Weaver, 89, First Black Cabinet Member, Dies". New York Times. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
  3. ^ Chenrow, Fred; Chenrow, Carol (1973). Reading Exercises in Black History, Volume 1. Elizabethtown, PA: The Continental Press, Inc. p. 56. ISBN 08454-2107-7
  4. ^ a b c Time (January 6, 1961). Retrieved May 20, 2011
  5. ^ "Robert C. Weaver (1966–1969) | Miller Center". millercenter.org. 2016-10-04. Retrieved 2021-02-02.
  6. ^ . University of Virginia Miller Center. Archived from the original on 22 May 2015. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  7. ^ Andrew Glass. "Johnson nominates first HUD secretary, Jan. 13, 1966". POLITICO. Retrieved 2021-07-19.
  8. ^ The Crisis (May 1940). "Negroes Need Housing". Google Books. The Crisis Publishing Company. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  9. ^ Barron, James (1997-07-19). "Robert C. Weaver, 89, First Black Cabinet Member, Dies (Published 1997)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-02-02.
  10. ^ "Tejano Walking Trail" (PDF). City of Austin Planning and Development Review Department. 2010. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
  11. ^ Hearings Before the Committee on Commerce, US Senate, 88th Congress, First Session. US GPO. July 1963. pp. 1464–1465. Retrieved 23 May 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Pritchett, Wendell E. (October 1, 2008). Robert Clifton Weaver and the American City: The Life and Times of an Urban Reformer. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 444. ISBN 978-0-226-68448-2.
  • John C. Walker, The Harlem Fox: J. Raymond Jones at Tammany 1920–1970, New York: State University New York Press, 1989.

Primary sources edit

  • "Weaver, Robert Clifton". Infoplease
  • Speech by Robert Weaver given on April 8, 1969. Audio recording from The University of Alabama's Emphasis Symposium on Contemporary Issues

President Johnson discussed Weaver's possible nomination as secretary of HUD with major leaders across the country:

  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Martin Luther King Jr., 15 January 1965, 12:06pm, Citation # 6736, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library
  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Richard Daley, 15 September 1965, 9:40am, Citation # 8870, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library
  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Richard Daley, 1 December 1965, 9:56am, Citation # 9301, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library
  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins, 15 July 1965, 2:40pm, Citation # 8340, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library
  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins, 1 November 1965, 10:11am, Citation # 9101, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library
  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins, 4 November 1965, 10:50am, Citation # 9106, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library
  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins, 5 January 1966, 4:55pm, Citation # 9430, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library
  • Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Thurgood Marshall, 3 January 1965, 10:15am, Citation # 9403, Recordings of Telephone Conversations, Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by
Jack Conway
Acting
Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency
1961–1966
Succeeded by
Himself
as United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
Preceded by
Himself
as Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency
United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
1966–1968
Succeeded by

robert, weaver, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 2010. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert C Weaver news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Robert Clifton Weaver December 29 1907 July 17 1997 was an American economist academic and political administrator who served as the first United States secretary of housing and urban development HUD from 1966 to 1968 when the department was newly established by President Lyndon B Johnson Weaver was the first African American to be appointed to a US cabinet level position 1 2 Robert C Weaver1st United States Secretary of Housing and Urban DevelopmentIn office January 18 1966 December 18 1968PresidentLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byHimself HHFA Administrator Succeeded byRobert Coldwell WoodAdministrator of the Housing and Home Finance AgencyIn office February 11 1961 January 18 1966PresidentJohn F KennedyLyndon B JohnsonPreceded byJack Conway acting Succeeded byHimself HUD Secretary Personal detailsBornRobert Clifton Weaver 1907 12 29 December 29 1907Washington D C USDiedJuly 17 1997 1997 07 17 aged 89 New York City USPolitical partyDemocraticSpouseElla V Haith m 1935 died 1991 wbr EducationHarvard University BS MA PhD Prior to his appointment as cabinet officer Weaver had served in the administration of President John F Kennedy In addition he had served in New York State government and in high level positions in New York City During the Franklin D Roosevelt administration he was one of 45 prominent African Americans appointed to positions and helped make up the Black Cabinet an informal group of African American public policy advisers Weaver directed federal programs during the administration of the New Deal at the same time completing his doctorate in economics in 1934 at Harvard University Contents 1 Background 2 Career 2 1 Government 2 1 1 Washington 2 1 2 Chicago 2 1 3 New York 2 1 4 Washington HUD 2 2 Academia 3 Personal life and death 4 Honors 5 Legacy 6 Works 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksBackground editRobert Clifton Weaver was born on December 29 1907 into a middle class family in Washington D C His parents were Mortimer Grover Weaver a postal worker and Florence Freeman Weaver They encouraged him in his academic studies His maternal grandfather was Dr Robert Tanner Freeman the first African American to graduate from Harvard in dentistry 1 2 The young Weaver attended the M Street High School now known as the Dunbar High School The high school for blacks at a time of racial segregation had a national reputation for academic excellence Weaver went on to Harvard University where he earned a Bachelor of Science and Master of Arts degree He also earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Economics completing his doctorate in 1934 1 2 Career editGovernment edit nbsp Weaver with Lyndon Johnson at the White House for his swearing in ceremony 1966 Washington edit In 1934 Weaver was appointed as an aide to United States Secretary of the Interior Harold L Ickes 1 3 In 1938 he became special assistant to the US Housing Authority 1 In 1942 he became administrative assistant to the National Defense Advisory Commission the War Manpower Commission 1942 and director of Negro Manpower Service 1 With a reputation for knowledge about housing issues in 1934 the young Weaver was invited to join President Franklin D Roosevelt s Black Cabinet 1 4 Roosevelt appointed a total of 45 prominent blacks to positions in executive agencies and called on them as informal advisers on public policy issues related to African Americans the Great Depression and the New Deal Weaver drafted the U S Housing Program under Roosevelt which was established in 1937 The program was intended to provide financial support to local housing departments as a subsidy toward lowering the rent poor African Americans had to pay The program decreased the average rent from 19 47 per month to 16 80 per month citation needed Weaver claimed the scope of this program was insufficient as there were still many African Americans who made less than the average income They could not afford to pay for both food and housing In addition generally restricted to segregated housing African Americans could not necessarily take advantage of other subsidized housing citation needed Chicago edit In 1944 Weaver became director of the Commission on Race Relations in the Office of the Mayor of Chicago 1 In 1945 he became director of community services for the Chicago based American Council on Race Relations through 1948 1 New York edit In 1949 Weaver become director of fellowship opportunities for the John Hay Whitney Foundation In 1955 Weaver the first Black State Cabinet member in New York when he became New York State Rent Commissioner under Governor W Averell Harriman 1 In 1960 he became vice chairman of the New York City Housing and Redevelopment Board 5 Washington HUD edit In 1961 Weaver became administrator of the United States Housing and Home Financing Agency HHFA 1 4 After election Kennedy tried to establish a new cabinet department to deal with urban issues It was to be called the Department of Housing and Urban Development Postwar suburban development following the construction of highways and economic restructuring had drawn population and jobs from the cities The nation was faced with a stock of substandard aged housing in many cities and problems of unemployment citation needed In 1961 while trying to create HUD Kennedy had done everything short of promising the new position to Weaver He appointed him Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency HHFA 4 a group of agencies which Kennedy wanted to raise to cabinet status When Dr Weaver joined the Kennedy Administration whose Harvard connections extended to the occupant of the Oval Office he held more Harvard degrees three including a doctorate in economics than anyone else in the administration s upper ranks 2 Some Republicans and southern Democrats opposed the legislation to create the new department The following year Kennedy unsuccessfully tried to use his reorganization authority to create the department As a result Congress passed legislation prohibiting presidents from using that authority to create a new cabinet department although the previous Republican Dwight D Eisenhower administration had created the cabinet level U S Department of Health Education and Welfare under that authority citation needed He contributed the compilation housing bill in 1961 He took part in lobbying for the Senior Citizens Housing Act of 1962 6 In 1965 Congress approved the department At the time Weaver was still Administrator of the HHFA In public President Lyndon B Johnson reiterated Weaver s status as a potential nominee but would not promise him the position In private Johnson had strong reservations He often held pro and con discussions with Roy Wilkins executive director of the NAACP citation needed Johnson wanted a strong proponent for the new department Johnson worried about Weaver s political sense Johnson seriously considered other candidates none of whom was black He wanted a top administrator but also someone who was exciting Johnson was worried about how the new Secretary would interact with congressional representatives from the Solid South they were overwhelmingly Democrat as most African Americans were still disenfranchised and excluded from the political system This was expected to change as the federal government enforced civil rights and the provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 As candidates Johnson considered the politician Richard Daley mayor of Chicago and the philanthropist Laurence Rockefeller 7 Ultimately Johnson believed that Weaver was the best qualified administrator His assistant Bill Moyers had rated Weaver highly on potential effectiveness as the new secretary citation needed Moyers noted Weaver s strong accomplishments and ability to create teams Ten days after receiving the report the president put forward the nomination and Weaver was successfully confirmed by the United States Senate citation needed Weaver served as Secretary of United States Department of Housing and Urban Development from 1966 to 1968 1 Weaver had expressed his concerns about African Americans housing issue before 1930 in his article Negroes Need Housing published by the magazine The Crisis of the NAACP after the Stock Market Crash 8 He noted there was a great difference between the income of most African Americans and the cost of living African Americans did not have enough housing supply because of many social factors including the long economic decline of rural areas in the South He suggested a government housing program to enable all the African Americans the chance to buy or rent their house citation needed Academia edit In 1945 Weaver began teaching at Columbia University 1 In 1969 after serving under President Johnson Weaver became president of Baruch College 1 In 1970 Weaver became a distinguished professor of Urban Affairs at Hunter College in New York and taught there until 1978 1 Personal life and death editIn 1935 Robert C Weaver married Ella V Haith 1 They adopted a son who died in 1962 9 Weaver served on the boards of Metropolitan Life Insurance Company 1969 1978 and Bowery Savings Bank 1969 1980 1 He served in advisory capacities to the United States Controller General 1973 1997 the New City Conciliation and Appeals Board 1973 1984 Harvard University School of Design 1978 1983 the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP Legal Defense Fund and NAACP executive board committee 1978 1997 1 Robert C Weaver died at age 89 on July 17 1997 in Manhattan New York 1 2 Honors editWeaver received more than 30 honorary university degrees 1 as well as the following 1962 NAACP Spingarn Medal 1 1963 Russworm Award 1 1968 Albert Einstein Commemorative Award 1 Merrick Moore Spaulding Award 1 1975 Public Service Award of the US General Accounting Office 1 1977 Frederick Douglass Award of the New York City Urban League 1 1978 Schomberg Collection Award 1 1985 Fellow American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1987 Equal Opportunity Day Award of the National Urban League 1 Legacy edit2000 Robert C Weaver Federal Building HUD headquarters which Weaver had dedicated in 1968 2006 Robert Clifton Weaver Way NE in Washington DC Undated Robert Weaver Avenue Robert Weaver Circle in Austin Texas 10 Works editWeaver wrote a number of books regarding black issues and urban housing including Negro Labor A National Problem 1946 The Negro Ghetto 1948 The Urban Complex Human Values in Urban Life 1964 Dilemmas of Urban America 1965 Herbert Aptheker reviewed The Negro Ghetto in the August 1948 issue of Masses and Mainstream successor to the New Masses magazine 11 See also editList of African American United States Cabinet members J Raymond Jones Harlem ClubhouseReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Armstrong Robin Pendergast Sara Contemporary Black Biography Retrieved 25 May 2020 a b c d e Barron James 19 July 1997 Robert C Weaver 89 First Black Cabinet Member Dies New York Times Retrieved 15 April 2010 Chenrow Fred Chenrow Carol 1973 Reading Exercises in Black History Volume 1 Elizabethtown PA The Continental Press Inc p 56 ISBN 08454 2107 7 a b c New Administration Ornaments on the Tree Time January 6 1961 Retrieved May 20 2011 Robert C Weaver 1966 1969 Miller Center millercenter org 2016 10 04 Retrieved 2021 02 02 American President A Reference Resource University of Virginia Miller Center Archived from the original on 22 May 2015 Retrieved 22 May 2015 Andrew Glass Johnson nominates first HUD secretary Jan 13 1966 POLITICO Retrieved 2021 07 19 The Crisis May 1940 Negroes Need Housing Google Books The Crisis Publishing Company Retrieved 22 May 2015 Barron James 1997 07 19 Robert C Weaver 89 First Black Cabinet Member Dies Published 1997 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 02 02 Tejano Walking Trail PDF City of Austin Planning and Development Review Department 2010 Retrieved 15 April 2010 Hearings Before the Committee on Commerce US Senate 88th Congress First Session US GPO July 1963 pp 1464 1465 Retrieved 23 May 2020 Further reading editPritchett Wendell E October 1 2008 Robert Clifton Weaver and the American City The Life and Times of an Urban Reformer Chicago University of Chicago Press p 444 ISBN 978 0 226 68448 2 John C Walker The Harlem Fox J Raymond Jones at Tammany 1920 1970 New York State University New York Press 1989 Primary sources edit Weaver Robert Clifton Infoplease Speech by Robert Weaver given on April 8 1969 Audio recording from The University of Alabama s Emphasis Symposium on Contemporary IssuesPresident Johnson discussed Weaver s possible nomination as secretary of HUD with major leaders across the country Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Martin Luther King Jr 15 January 1965 12 06pm Citation 6736 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Richard Daley 15 September 1965 9 40am Citation 8870 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Richard Daley 1 December 1965 9 56am Citation 9301 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins 15 July 1965 2 40pm Citation 8340 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins 1 November 1965 10 11am Citation 9101 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins 4 November 1965 10 50am Citation 9106 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Roy Wilkins 5 January 1966 4 55pm Citation 9430 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential Library Telephone Conversation between President Johnson and Thurgood Marshall 3 January 1965 10 15am Citation 9403 Recordings of Telephone Conversations Lyndon B Johnson Presidential LibraryExternal links editAppearances on C SPANPolitical officesPreceded byJack ConwayActing Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency1961 1966 Succeeded byHimselfas United States Secretary of Housing and Urban DevelopmentPreceded byHimselfas Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development1966 1968 Succeeded byRobert Wood Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert C Weaver amp oldid 1175754415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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