Sunday, 13 September 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " MICKEY LELAND " WAS AN ANTI-POVERTY ACTIVIST WHO LATER BECAME A CONGRESSMAN FROM TEXAS 18th DISTRICT AND CHAIR OF THE CONGRESSIONAL BLACK CAUCUS AND A DEMOCRAT : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

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         Mickey Leland


George Thomas Leland
Mickey Leland.jpg
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas's 18th district
In office
January 3, 1979 – August 7, 1989
Preceded byBarbara Jordan
Succeeded byCraig Washington
Personal details
BornNovember 27, 1944
Lubbock, Texas,
United States
DiedAugust 7, 1989 (aged 44)
Gambela, Ethiopia
Political partyDemocratic
George Thomas "Mickey" Leland (November 27, 1944 – August 7, 1989) was an anti-poverty activist who later became acongressman from the Texas 18th District and chair of the Congressional Black Caucus. He was a Democrat.
Born in LubbockTexas, Leland attended Wheatley High School in Houston, Texas[1] and obtained a bachelor's from Texas Southern University in Houston.
In 1972, Texas for the first time allowed its State House of Representatives and Senate seats to be elected as single-member districts. Soon after the decision, five minority candidates (dubbed the "People's Five"), including eventual winners Leland, Craig Washington and Benny Reyes ran for district seats in the Texas House of Representatives, a first for a state that, although Barbara Jordan had been a state senator, had not seen any African-American state representatives since Reconstruction. Leland remained in the state legislature until he was elected to Congress in 1979. He remained in Congress until his death, being reelected to theUnited States House of Representatives every two years.

Mickey Leland International Terminal D at Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport is named after Leland.
Leland was an effective advocate on hunger and public health issues. In 1984 Leland established the congressional select committee on Hunger and initiated a number of programs designed to assuage the famine crises that plagued Ethiopia and Sudan through much of the 1980s. Leland pioneered many afro-centric cultural norms in Washington which included wearing a dashiki and African style hats.[2]
In 1989 Leland died[3] in a plane crash in GambelaEthiopia during a mission to Fugnido, Ethiopia. A total of fifteen people, including Leland, died in the crash. His friend and former fellow Texas legislator, Craig Washington, ran for and was elected to his unexpired Congressional term in December 1989.
Since Mr. Leland's death, a number of buildings, initiatives, etc. have been renamed to honor Mr. Leland:

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