[Congressional Bills 107th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Con. Res. 182 Introduced in House (IH)]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. CON. RES. 182
Expressing the sense of Congress that the United States Postal Service
should issue a postage stamp commemorating Congressman Adam Clayton
Powell, Jr.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
June 28, 2001
Mr. Rangel submitted the following concurrent resolution; which was
referred to the Committee on Government Reform
_______________________________________________________________________
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of Congress that the United States Postal Service
should issue a postage stamp commemorating Congressman Adam Clayton
Powell, Jr.
Whereas Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., was a Baptist minister, crusader for civil
rights, and one of the most effective legislators in the history of the
United States Congress;
Whereas Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., was born November 29, 1908, in New Haven,
Connecticut, and raised in the section of New York City known as Harlem,
where his father was pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church, which had
one of the largest congregations in the Nation;
Whereas Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., earned a bachelor's degree from Colgate
University in 1930 and began his crusade for civil rights by leading a
protest against Harlem Hospital for firing 5 African-American doctors
because of their race;
Whereas Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., earned a master's degree in religious
education from Columbia University in 1931 and became pastor of the
Abyssinian Baptist Church after his father's retirement in 1937, where
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., used the pulpit to spur political action;
Whereas in 1941 Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., was elected to the New York City
Council and began publishing and editing a weekly newspaper called ``The
People's Voice'';
Whereas in 1942 Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., became a member of both the New York
State Office of Price Administration and the Manhattan Civilian Defense,
serving until 1944 and 1945, respectively;
Whereas Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., was elected to the United States House of
Representatives in 1944, representing the newly created 22d
Congressional District of New York, which later became the 18th
Congressional District of New York;
Whereas Congressman Powell served on the Committee on Indian Affairs and the
Committee on Invalid Pensions and Labor during his first term, the
Committee on Education and Labor beginning in 1947, and the Committee on
Interior and Insular Affairs from 1955 to 1961;
Whereas Congressman Powell challenged the informal regulations forbidding Black
Members from using the facilities of the Capitol that were reserved
exclusively for Members and admonished the notorious segregationist John
E. Rankin of Mississippi for vocalizing racist epithets against Blacks
on the floor of the House of Representatives;
Whereas Congressman Powell introduced several bills to outlaw lynching, poll
taxes, and discrimination in the armed services, housing, employment,
and transportation;
Whereas Congressman Powell attempted to attach an amendment that would have
denied Federal funding to institutions that practiced discrimination to
so many bills that it became known as the ``Powell Amendment'';
Whereas Congressman Powell campaigned ardently for Democratic Presidential
nominee John F. Kennedy, garnering enough votes from African-Americans
to ensure Kennedy's narrow victory in 1960;
Whereas Congressman Powell became the first African-American to chair the
powerful Committee on Education and Labor in 1961;
Whereas Chairman Powell was instrumental in passing bills that increased the
minimum wage, provided education and training for the deaf, established
standards for wages and hours of work, and authorized the medicare,
medicaid, Head Start, school lunch, vocational training, and student
loan programs;
Whereas Chairman Powell was decisive in passing the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
finally enacting his ``Powell Amendment'';
Whereas Congressman Powell came under attack from long-time enemies and
committee members and was stripped of his chairmanship by the Democratic
Caucus of the House of Representatives on January 9, 1967, and later
excluded from the 90th Congress by a vote of 307 to 116 on March 1,
1967;
Whereas Congressman Powell won a special election on April 11, 1967, to fill his
seat during this exclusion, but did not return to Congress until 1969,
when the Supreme Court ruled that the House of Representatives had acted
unconstitutionally;
Whereas Congressman Powell returned to Congress, but was stripped of his 22-year
seniority;
Whereas Congressman Powell unsuccessfully sought renomination in the June 1970
primary, retired as pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in 1971, and
died in Miami, Florida, on April 4, 1972; and
Whereas Congressman Powell remains one of the greatest civil rights advocates in
the history of the United States: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring),
That it is the sense of the Congress that--
(1) the United States Postal Service should issue a postage
stamp commemorating Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.; and
(2) the Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee should recommend
to the Postmaster General that such a stamp be issued.
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