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{{Short description|American pastor and politician (1908–1972)}}
[[Image:Adam Clayon Powell Jr.jpg|thumb|Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.]]
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2024}}
Rev '''Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.''' ([[November 29]] [[1908]] – [[April 4]] [[1972]]), [[United States|American]] politician, was the first [[African American]] to become a powerful figure in the [[United States Congress]]. He was elected to the [[United States House of Representatives]] from [[Harlem]] in [[1945]], and became chair of the [[U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce|Education and Labor Committee]] in [[1961]]. His tenure as committee chairman saw the passage of important social legislation. His career was ended by a corruption scandal.
{{Infobox officeholder
| name = Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
| image = Adam Clayon Powell Jr.jpg
| office = Member of the<br />[[United States House of Representatives|U.S. House of Representatives]]<br />from [[New York (state)|New York]]
| term_start = January 3, 1945
| term_end = January 3, 1971
| predecessor = [[Walter A. Lynch]]
| successor = [[Charles Rangel]]
| constituency = {{ushr|NY|22|22nd district}} (1945–1953)<br />{{ushr|NY|16|16th district}} (1953–1963)<br />{{ushr|NY|18|18th district}} (1963–1971)
| office1 = Member of the [[New York City Council]]<br />from [[Manhattan]] At-Large
| term_start1 = January 1, 1942
| term_end1 = December 31, 1943
| predecessor1 = ''Multi-member district''
| successor1 = [[Benjamin J. Davis]]
| birth_date = {{birth date|1908|11|29}}
| birth_place = [[New Haven, Connecticut]], U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1972|4|4|1908|11|29}}
| death_place = [[Miami]], [[Florida]], U.S.
| party = [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
| otherparty = [[American Labor Party|American Labor]]
| spouse = {{plainlist|
* {{marriage|[[Isabel Washington Powell|Isabel Washington]]|1933|1945|end=div}}
* {{marriage|[[Hazel Scott]]|1945|1960|end=div}}
* {{marriage|Yvette Flores Diago|1960|1965|end=separated}}
}}
| children = [[Adam Clayton Powell III|Adam III]]<br />[[Adam Clayton Powell IV|Adam IV]]<br />1 adopted
| father = [[Adam Clayton Powell Sr.]]
| education = [[City College of New York]]<br />[[Colgate University]] ([[Bachelor of Arts|BA]])<br />[[Columbia University]] ([[Master of Arts|MA]])<br />[[Shaw University]] ([[Doctor of Divinity|DDiv]])
}}
'''Adam Clayton Powell Jr.''' (November 29, 1908&nbsp;– April 4, 1972)<ref name="Congress bio" /> was an American Baptist pastor and politician who represented the [[Harlem]] neighborhood of [[New York City]] in the [[United States House of Representatives]] from 1945 until 1971. He was the first [[African Americans|African American]] to be elected to Congress from New York, as well as the first from any state in the [[Northeastern United States|Northeast]].<ref name="NYT Remembering" /> Re-elected for nearly three decades, Powell became a powerful national politician of the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]], and served as a national spokesman on civil rights and social issues. He also urged United States presidents to support emerging nations in Africa and Asia as they gained independence after [[colonialism]].
 
In 1961, after 16 years in the House, Powell became chairman of the [[United States House Committee on Education and Labor|Education and Labor Committee]], the most powerful position held by an African American in Congress to that date. As chairman, he supported the passage of important social and civil rights legislation under presidents [[John F. Kennedy]] and [[Lyndon B. Johnson]]. Following allegations of corruption, in 1967 Powell was excluded from his seat by Democratic Representatives-elect of the [[90th United States Congress]], but he was re-elected and regained the seat in the 1969 ruling by the [[Supreme Court of the United States]] in ''[[Powell v. McCormack]]''. He lost his seat in 1970 to [[Charles Rangel]] and retired from electoral politics.
==Early years==
[[Image:Adam Clayton Powell Jr 1942.jpg|thumb|Powell addressing a citizens' committee mass meeting]]
 
==Early life and education==
Powell was born in New Haven,.His father, [[Adam Clayton Powell, Sr.]] was a [[Baptist]] minister and headed the [[Abyssinian Baptist Church]] in [[Harlem]], [[New York City|New York]]. His paternal grandfather was white, as were several of his mother's ancestors. He was educated at public schools, the [[City College of New York]] and [[Colgate University]]. He received an MA degree in religious education from [[Columbia University]] in [[1931]].
Powell was born in 1908 in [[New Haven, Connecticut]], the second child and only son of [[Adam Clayton Powell Sr.]] and Mattie Buster Shaffer, born poor in [[Virginia]] and [[West Virginia]], respectively.<ref name="Powell autobio" /> His sister, Blanche, was 10 years older. His parents were of [[Multiracial|mixed race]] with African and European ancestry (and, according to his father, American Indian on his mother's side).<ref name="Powell autobio">{{cite book |last=Powell |first=A. Clayton Sr. |title=Against the Tide: An Autobiography |___location=New York |publisher=Richard B. Smith |year=1938 |isbn=9780405124686 |url=https://archive.org/details/againsttideautob0000powe/ |url-access=registration |lccn=79-52603}}</ref><ref name="Rushing Racial Identity">{{cite journal |first=Lawrence |last=Rushing |title=The Racial Identity of Adam Clayton Powell Jr.: A Case Study in Racial Ambivalence and Redefinition |date=January 1, 2010
|journal=Afro-Americans in New York Life and History |via=The Free Library |url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+Racial+Identity+of+Adam+Clayton+Powell+Jr.%3A+A+Case+Study+in...-a0221086340 |access-date=October 17, 2011}}</ref> (In his autobiography ''Adam by Adam'', Powell says that his mother had partial German ancestry.)<ref>{{Cite book |last=Powell |first=Adam Clayton Jr. |title=Adam By Adam: The Autobiography of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. |date=1971 |publisher=Kensington Publishing Corporation |isbn=0806515384}}</ref> They and their ancestors were classified as [[mulatto]] in 19th-century censuses.<ref name="Rushing Racial Identity" /> Powell's paternal grandmother's ancestors had been [[free people of color|free persons of color]] for generations before the [[American Civil War|Civil War]].<ref name="Rushing Racial Identity" /><ref name="Hook">[http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Franklin/033-0022_Hook-Powell-Moorman_Farm_1995_Final_Nomination.pdf J. Daniel Pezzoni, "Hook-Powell-Moorman Farm": Historic Nomination Form] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170125195925/http://www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Franklin/033-0022_Hook-Powell-Moorman_Farm_1995_Final_Nomination.pdf |date=January 25, 2017 }}, United States Department of the Interior, 1995.</ref><ref name="1860 Census Duning">1860 US Census, "Adam Duning" and family, Franklin County, North Eastern Division, Virginia.</ref> By 1908, Powell Sr. had become a prominent [[Baptists|Baptist]] minister, serving as a pastor in [[Philadelphia]], and as lead pastor at a Baptist church in New Haven.<ref name="WWCA-1932" />
 
Powell Sr. had worked his way out of poverty and through [[Wayland Seminary]], a [[Historically black colleges and universities|historically black college]], and postgraduate study at [[Yale University]] and [[Virginia Theological Seminary]].<ref>Frank Lincoln Mather (editor), ''Who's Who of the Colored Race: A General Biographical Dictionary of Men and Women of African Descent'' (1915), Volume 1, page 222.</ref> In the year of his son's birth in New Haven, Powell Sr. was called as the pastor of the [[Abyssinian Baptist Church]] in the [[Harlem]] neighborhood of New York City. He led the church for decades through major expansion, including fundraising for and the construction of an addition to accommodate the increased membership of the congregation during the years of the [[Great Migration (African American)|Great Migration]], as many African Americans moved north from the South. That congregation grew to a community of 10,000 people.<ref name="WWCA-1932">{{Cite book |editor-last=Yenser |editor-first=Thomas |title=Who's Who in Colored America: A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Persons of African Descent in America |date=1930–1932 |publisher=Who's Who in Colored America |edition=Third |___location=Brooklyn, New York}}</ref>
During the [[Great Depression|Depression]] years, Powell, a handsome and charismatic figure, became a prominent [[civil rights]] leader in the Harlem area of [[Manhattan]] and developed a formidable public following in Harlem community through his crusades for jobs and housing. He organized mass meetings, rent strikes and public campaigns, forcing companies and utilities, Harlem Hospital and the [[1939]] [[World's Fair]] either to hire or to begin promoting black employees. One of his crowning achievements was his leading of boycotts against stores on 125th Street because of their job discrimination.
 
Due to his father's achievements, Powell grew up in a wealthy household in New York City. Because of some of his European ancestry, Adam was born with hazel eyes, light skin and blond hair, such that he could pass for [[White people|white]]. However, he did not play with that racial ambiguity until college.<ref name="Rushing Racial Identity" /> He attended [[Townsend Harris High School]], then studied at [[City College of New York]] before starting at [[Colgate University]] as a [[freshman]]. The four other African American students at Colgate at the time were all athletes. For a time, Powell briefly passed as white, using his appearance to escape racial strictures at college. The other black students were dismayed to discover what he had done.<ref name="Rushing Racial Identity" /><ref>{{Cite book |last=Haygood |first=Wil |title=King of the Cats: The Life and Times of Adam Clayton Powell Jr. |publisher=[[HarperCollins|HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.]] |year=2006 |isbn=0060842415 |chapter=Chapter One |access-date=February 8, 2012 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/kingofcatsli00hayg |chapter-url-access=registration}}</ref>
In [[1937]] he succeeded his father as pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church. In [[1941]] he was elected to the [[New York City Council]] as the city's first Black council representative with the aid of New York City's use of the [[Single Transferable Vote]].{{ref|NewYork}}
Encouraged by his father to become a minister, Powell became more serious about his studies at Colgate, where he earned his [[bachelor's degree]] in 1930.<ref>{{Cite book |url=http://www.colgate.edu/portaldata/imagegallerywww/aa3f5f9f-446a-4848-8fdd-1cbff25bbff1/ImageGallery/MC_brochure_FNL.pdf |title=Multiculturalism at Colgate |date=November 2011 |publisher=Office of Admissions, Colgate University |___location=Hamilton, New York |access-date=February 8, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150601185852/http://www.colgate.edu/portaldata/imagegallerywww/aa3f5f9f-446a-4848-8fdd-1cbff25bbff1/ImageGallery/MC_brochure_FNL.pdf |archive-date=June 1, 2015 |url-status=dead }}</ref> After returning to New York, Powell began his graduate work and in 1931 earned an [[Master of Arts|M.A.]] in religious education from [[Columbia University]]. He became a member of [[Alpha Phi Alpha]], the first African-American, intercollegiate Greek-lettered fraternity.<ref>Brown, Tamara L.; Parks, Gregory S.; Phillips, Clarenda M. (February 17, 2012). "African American Fraternities and Sororities: The Legacy and the Vision". University Press of Kentucky.</ref>
 
Later, apparently trying to bolster his black identity, Powell would say that his paternal grandparents were born into [[slavery]].<ref name="Rushing Racial Identity" /> However, his paternal grandmother, Sally Dunning, was at least the third generation of [[free people of color]] in her family. In the 1860 census, she is listed as a free [[mulatto]], as were her mother, grandmother, and siblings.<ref name="1860 Census Duning" /> Sally never identified the father of Adam Clayton Powell Sr., born in 1865. She appeared to have named her son after her older brother Adam Dunning, listed on the 1860 census as a farmer and the head of their household.<ref name="1860 Census Duning" /> In 1867, Sally Dunning married Anthony Bush, a mulatto [[freedman]]. All the family members were listed under the surname Dunning in the 1870 census.
"Mass action is the most powerful force on earth," Mr. Powell once said, adding, "As long as it is within the law, it's not wrong if the law is wrong, change the law." According to analysts, he landed in Washington as Congressman armed with a mandate from the grassroots to make a difference.
 
The family changed its surname to Powell when they moved to [[Kanawha County, West Virginia]], as part of their new life there.<ref name="Hook" /><ref>1870 Census, "Anthony Dunning" and family, Franklin County, Bonbrook PO, Virginia; and 1880 Census, "Anthony Powell" and family, Cabin Creek, [[Kanawha County, West Virginia]].</ref> According to Charles V. Hamilton, a 1991 biographer of Powell, Anthony Bush "decided to take the name Powell as a new identity",<ref>{{harvnb|Hamilton|1991}}</ref> and this is how they were recorded in the 1880 census.<ref>1880 Census, "Anthony Powell" and family, Cabin Creek, Kanawha County, West Virginia.</ref>
==Congressman==
[[Image: 0758201958.jpg|right|thumb|The autobiography of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.]]
 
Adam Jr.'s mother, Mattie Buster Shaffer, was African-American with possibly some German ancestry. Her parents had been slaves in Virginia and were freed after the Civil War. Powell's parents married in West Virginia, where they met. Numerous freedmen had migrated there in the late 19th century for work.<ref name="Rushing Racial Identity" />
In 1944 Powell was elected as a [[United States Democratic Party|Democrat]] to the House of Representatives, representing the 22nd congressional district, which included [[Harlem]]. He was the first black Congressman from [[New York State|New York]], and the first from any [[Northern United States|Northern]] state other than [[Illinois]].
 
In Harlem, Adam Clayton Powell Jr. lived on [[Sugar Hill, Manhattan|Sugar Hill]] at [[The Garrison Apartments, 435 Convent Avenue]], Apartment 3, which had also been his father's home until his death in 1953.<ref>{{Cite book |last=James |first=Davida Siwisa |title=Hamilton Heights and Sugar Hill : Alexander Hamilton's Old Harlem Neighborhood Through the Centuries. |publisher=Empire State Editions |year=2024 |isbn=9781531506148 |___location=New York |page=171 |language=English}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=July 4, 1956 |title=Fighter for Civil Rights: Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1956/07/04/86629903.html?pageNumber=12 |access-date=July 24, 2024 |work=New York Times |page=12}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |date=October 30, 1956 |title=General Election Candidate List, Democratic Party, 16th District Daily News |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/455213938 |access-date=July 24, 2024 |work=Daily News |page=29}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=May 1, 1950 |title=United States Census, 1950 |url=https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QHN-LQHW-9KB7?view=index&action=view |access-date=July 24, 2024 |website=FamilySearch.org}}</ref>
As one of only two black Congressmen, Powell challenged the informal ban on black representatives using Capitol facilities reserved for members only. He took black constituents to dine with him in the "whites only" House restaurant. He clashed with the many [[Racial segregation|segregationists]] in his own party.
 
==Career==
In [[1956]] Powell broke party ranks and supported [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] for reelection, saying that the Democratic platform's civil rights plank was too weak.
[[File:Adam Clayton Powell Jr 1942.jpg|thumb|left|Powell addressing a citizens' committee mass meeting]]
 
After ordination, Powell began assisting his father with charitable services at the church and as a preacher. He greatly increased the volume of meals and clothing provided to the needy, and began to learn more about the lives of the working class and poor in Harlem.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
In [[1958]] he survived a determined effort by the [[Tammany Hall]] machine to oust him in the Democratic [[primary election]].
 
During the [[Great Depression in the United States|Great Depression]] in the 1930s, Powell, a handsome and charismatic figure, became a [[Civil rights movement (1896–1954)|civil rights]] leader in Harlem. He recounted these experiences in a 1964 interview with [[Robert Penn Warren]] for the book ''[[Who Speaks for the Negro?]]''<ref name="warren">{{cite web |publisher=Robert Penn Warren Center for the Humanities |title=Adam Clayton Powell Jr. |url=http://whospeaks.library.vanderbilt.edu/interview/adam-clayton-powell-jr |website=Robert Penn Warren's Who Speaks for the Negro? Archive |access-date=February 11, 2015}}</ref> He developed a formidable public following in the community through his crusades for jobs and affordable housing. As chairman of the Coordinating Committee for Employment, Powell used numerous methods of community organizing to bring political pressure on major businesses to open their doors to black employees at professional levels. He organized mass meetings, [[rent strike]]s, and public campaigns to force companies, utilities, and [[Harlem Hospital]], which operated in the community, to hire black workers at skill levels higher than the lowest positions, to which they had formerly been restricted by informal discrimination.<ref name="warren" /><ref name="Current Biography 1942">''Current Biography'' 1942, pp. 675–676.</ref>
In [[1960]], Powell forced [[Bayard Rustin]] to resign from the [[Southern Christian Leadership Conference|SCLC]] by threatening to discuss Rustin's [[homosexuality]] charge in Congress.
 
For instance, during the [[1939 New York World's Fair]], Powell organized a picket line at the Fair's offices in the [[Empire State Building]]. As a result, the Fair hired more black employees, increasing their numbers from about 200 to 732.<ref name="Current Biography 1942" /> In 1941, Powell led a bus boycott in Harlem, where blacks constituted the majority of passengers but held few of the jobs; the [[New York City Transit Authority]] hired 200 black workers and set the precedent for more. Powell also led a fight to have drugstores operating in Harlem hire black pharmacists. He encouraged local residents to shop only where blacks were also hired to work.<ref name="Current Biography 1942" /> "Mass action is the most powerful force on earth", Powell once said, adding, "As long as it is within the law, it's not wrong; if the law is wrong, change the law".<ref>{{cite book |last= |first= |date=June 25, 2022 |title=Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations |url=https://www.bartleby.com/73/303.html |url-status= |___location= |publisher= |isbn= |archive-url= |archive-date=}}</ref>
In 1961, after 15 years in Congress, Powell became chairman of the powerful Education and Labor Committee. In this position he presided over federal programs for [[minimum wage]] increases, education and training for the deaf, vocational training and standards for wages and work hours, as well as aid to elementary and secondary education. He orchestrated passage of the backbone of President John Kennedy's "New Freedom" legislation. He would also become instrumental in the passage of President Lyndon B. Johnson's "Great Society" social programs.
 
In 1937, Powell succeeded his father as pastor of the [[Abyssinian Baptist Church]].<ref>Brian Stanley, ''Christianity in the Twentieth Century: A World History'', Princeton University Press, USA, 2019, p. 346.</ref> Powell Jr remained pastor of the church until 1972.
Powell Jr.'s committee passed a record number of bills for a single session. That record still remains unbroken. As one of the great modern legislators, Powell Jr. would steer some 50 bills through Congress.
 
In 1942 he founded ''People's Voice'', a newspaper designed for "a progressive African American audience, and it educated and enlightened readers on everything from local gatherings and events to U.S. civil rights issues to the political and economic struggles of the peoples of Africa. Reporters and writers for the papers included influential African Americans such as Powell himself, Powell's sister-in-law and actress [[Fredi Washington]], and journalist [[Marvel Cooke]]." It also served as a mouthpiece for his views. After he was elected to Congress in 1944, other people led the paper, but it finally closed in 1948, after being accused of communist connections.<ref>[http://hsp.org/sites/default/files/legacy_files/migrated/findingaid3086peoplesvoice.pdf ''People's Voice''], Historical Society of Philadelphia</ref>
He passed legislation that made lynching a federal crime and bills that desegregated public schools and the U.S. military. He challenged the Southern practice of charging Blacks a [[poll tax]] to vote, and stopped racist congressmen from saying the word "nigger" in sessions of Congress.
 
==Political career==
By the mid-1960s Powell was being increasingly criticised for mismanagement of the committee budget, taking trips abroad at public expense, including travel to his retreat on the Bahamian isle of [[Bimini]], and missing sittings of his committee. He was also under fire in his district, where his refusal to pay a slander judgment made him subject to arrest. He spent increasing amounts of time in [[Florida]] and displayed his wealth more than was wise for a Congressman representing a poor district.
 
===New York City Council===
In January of [[1967]], following allegations that Powell had misappropriated Committee funds for his personal use and other corruption allegations, the House Democratic Caucus stripped Powell of his committee chairmanship. The full House refused to seat him until completion of an investigation by the Judiciary Committee. In March the House voted 307 to 116 to exclude him. Powell won the special election in April to fill the vacancy caused by his exclusion, but did not take his seat.
In 1941, with the aid of New York City's use of the [[single transferable vote]], Powell was elected to the [[New York City Council]] as the city's first black Council member.{{ref|NewYork}} He received 65,736 votes, the third-best total among the six successful Council candidates.<ref>''Current Biography'' 1942, p. 676.</ref>
 
===Congress===
Powell sued in ''[[Powell v. McCormack]]'' to retain his seat. In June of [[1969]] the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] ruled that the House had acted unconstitutionally when it excluded Powell, a duly elected member, and he returned to the House, but without his seniority. Again his absenteeism was increasingly noted.
[[File:President John F. Kennedy and Others at Bill-signing.jpg|thumb|right|Powell with [[President of the United States|President]] [[John F. Kennedy]], [[Joseph S. Clark Jr.]], and [[Elmer J. Holland]] in 1962]]
In 1944, Powell ran for the United States Congress on a platform of civil rights for African Americans: support for "fair employment practices, and a ban on [[Poll taxes in the United States|poll taxes]] and [[lynching]]." Requiring poll taxes for voter registration and voting was a device used by [[the Southern United States|southern states]] in new constitutions adopted from 1890 to 1908 to [[Disenfranchisement after the Reconstruction Era|disenfranchise most blacks]] and many poor whites, to exclude them from politics.<ref>[https://ssrn.com/abstract=224731 Richard H. Pildes, "Democracy, Anti-Democracy, and the Canon"], ''Constitutional Commentary'', Vol. 17, 2000, Accessed March 10, 2008.</ref><ref>J. Morgan Kousser. ''The Shaping of Southern Politics: Suffrage Restriction and the Establishment of the One-Party South'', New Haven: Yale University Press, 1974.</ref> Poll taxes in the United States, together with the social and economic intimidation of [[Jim Crow laws]], were maintained in the South into the 1960s to keep blacks excluded from politics and politically powerless. Although often associated with states of the former [[Confederate States of America]], poll taxes were also in place in some northern and western states, including [[California]], [[Connecticut]], [[Maine]], [[Massachusetts]], [[Minnesota]], [[New Hampshire]], [[Ohio]], [[Pennsylvania]], [[Vermont]] and [[Wisconsin]].<ref>{{cite book |author=State of Maine Special Tax Commission |title=Report of the Special Tax Commission of Maine |url=https://archive.org/details/reportspecialta00commgoog |oclc=551368287 |publisher=Burleigh & Flynt |date=1890 |___location=Maine |pages=[https://archive.org/details/reportspecialta00commgoog/page/n47 39]–41 }}</ref>
 
Powell was elected as a Democrat and defeated Republican candidate [[Sara Pelham Speaks]] to represent the Congressional District that included Harlem.<ref name="BAIC">[http://baic.house.gov/member-profiles/profile.html?intID=33 "Adam Clayton Powell Jr."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120120142055/http://baic.house.gov/member-profiles/profile.html?intID=33 |date=January 20, 2012 }}, Black Americans in Congress, US House of Representatives, accessed October 24, 2011.</ref> He was the first black Congressman elected from [[New York (state)|New York State]].
In June of [[1970]] he was defeated in the Democratic primary by [[Charles B. Rangel]], who has represented the area ever since. Powell failed to get on the ballot for the November election as an independent. He resigned as minister at the Abyssinian Baptist Church and moved to [[Bimini]]. In April of [[1972]] he became gravely ill and was flown to a Miami hospital. He died there on April 4, at the age of 63. A few days later his ashes were carried aloft by a plane and scattered over his beloved Bimini.
 
As the historian [[Charles V. Hamilton]] wrote in his 1992 political biography of Powell,
==Personal==
<blockquote>Here was a person who [in the 1940s] would at least 'speak out.'&nbsp;... That would be different&nbsp;... Many Negroes were angry that no Northern liberals would get up on the floor of Congress and challenge the [[Racial segregation in the United States|segregationists]].&nbsp;... Powell certainly promised to do that&nbsp;...<ref name="Dunbar" /></blockquote>
[[Image: Powellalbum.jpg|right|thumb|A rare spoken word album by Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., featuring his famous catchphrase.]]
His first wife was nightclub entertainer Isabelle Washington (sister of actress [[Fredi Washington]]). Together they adopted a son, Preston.
 
<blockquote>[In] the 1940s and 1950s, he was, indeed, virtually alone&nbsp;... And precisely because of that, he was exceptionally crucial. In many instances during those earlier times, if ''he'' did not speak out, the issue would not have been raised.&nbsp;... For example, only ''he'' could (or would dare to) challenge Congressman [[John E. Rankin|Rankin]] of Mississippi on the House floor in the 1940s for using the word "nigger". He certainly did not change Rankin's mind or behavior, but he gave solace to millions who longed for a little retaliatory defiance.<ref name="Dunbar">[http://beck.library.emory.edu/southernchanges/article.php?id=sc14-4_006 Leslie Dunbar, Review: "Using the Dilemma": ''Adam Clayton Powell Jr. The Political Biography of an American Dilemma''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419211133/http://beck.library.emory.edu/southernchanges/article.php?id=sc14-4_006 |date=April 19, 2012 }}, by Charles V. Hamilton (Atheneum, 1991), in ''Southern Changes'', Vol. 14, No. 4, 1992, pp. 27–29, accessed October 22, 2011.</ref></blockquote>
Powell and his second wife, the singer [[Hazel Scott]], had a son, Adam Clayton Powell III. ACP III is a visiting professor at the [[Annenberg School for Communication]] at the [[University of Southern California]].
 
Powell was banned from the White House after calling President Truman's wife [[Bess Truman]] the "Last Lady of the Land" because she attended a reception for the [[Daughters of the American Revolution]] after the organization had refused to allow the black pianist [[Hazel Scott]], Powell's wife, to perform at the [[DAR Constitution Hall]] and Truman's attendance was seen as an endorsement of this racism.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Caroli |first=Betty Boyd | authorlink=Betty Boyd Caroli |url=https://archive.org/details/firstladiesfromm0000caro |url-access=registration |title=First Ladies: From Martha Washington to Michelle Obama |publisher=Oxford University Press, USA |year=2010 |isbn=978-0-19-539285-2 |page=214}}</ref>
Powell and his third wife, Puerto Rican Yvette Diago Powell, had a son [[Adam Clayton Powell IV (politician)|Adam Clayton Powell Diago]]. This son changed his name to Adam Clayton Powell IV (and started confusion because his nephew, who is only 8 years younger than he, already had the name of ACP IV) when he became a member of the New York State Assembly.
 
As one of only two black Congressmen (the other being [[William L. Dawson (politician)|William Levi Dawson]])<ref>[http://baic.house.gov/historical-essays/essay.html?intID=6 Black Americans in Congress, courtesy of the House of Representatives] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100408001535/http://baic.house.gov/historical-essays/essay.html?intID=6 |date=April 8, 2010 }}.</ref> until 1955, Powell challenged the informal ban on black representatives using Capitol facilities previously reserved for white members.<ref name="BAIC" /> He took black constituents to dine with him in the "Whites Only" House restaurant. He clashed with the many [[Racial segregation in the United States|segregationists]] from the South in his party.
ACP Jr's second son, ACP III, named his son [[Adam Clayton Powell IV (professor)|Adam Clayton Powell IV]]. This ACP IV is a professor of engineering at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]]. This ACP IV's brother is [[Sherman S. Powell]], a recently retired Major in the United States Army.
 
Powell worked closely with [[Clarence Mitchell Jr.]], the representative of the [[NAACP|National Association for the Advancement of Colored People]] (NAACP) in Washington, D.C., to try to gain justice in federal programs. Biographer Hamilton described the NAACP as "the quarterback that threw the ball to Powell, who, to his credit, was more than happy to catch and run with it."<ref name="Dunbar" /> He developed a strategy known as the "Powell Amendments". "On bill after bill that proposed federal expenditures, Powell would offer 'our customary amendment', requiring that federal funds be denied to any jurisdiction that maintained segregation; Liberals would be embarrassed, Southern politicians angered."<ref name=" Dunbar" /> This principle would later become integrated into [[Civil Rights Act of 1964#Title VI|Title VI]] of the [[Civil Rights Act of 1964]].
To distinguish the two Adam Clayton Powell IVs, they are known as ''the Honorable Adam Clayton Powell IV'' and ''Professor Adam Clayton Powell IV''.
 
Powell was also willing to act independently; in 1956, he broke party ranks and supported President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] for re-election, saying the civil rights plank in the Democratic Party platform was too weak. In 1958, he survived a determined effort by the [[Tammany Hall]] Democratic Party machine in New York to oust him in the [[Partisan primary|primary election]]. In 1960, Powell, hearing of planned civil rights marches at the Democratic Convention, which could embarrass the party or candidate, threatened to accuse Rev. [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] of having a homosexual relationship with [[Bayard Rustin]] unless the marches were canceled. Rustin, one of King's political advisers, was an openly [[Homosexuality|gay]] man. King agreed to cancel the planned events and Rustin resigned from the [[Southern Christian Leadership Conference]].<ref>{{cite book |last=Hamilton |first=Charles V. |title=Adam Clayton Powell Jr.: The Political Biography of an American Dilemma |___location=New York |publisher=Atheneum, Macmillan Publishing Company |year=1991 |page=336 |url=https://archive.org/details/adamclaytonpowel00hami |url-access=registration |isbn=0-689-12062-1 |lccn=90-28505}}</ref>
Powell was a member of [[Alpha Phi Alpha]], the first intercollegiate [[Greek alphabet|Greek-letter]] [[Fraternities and sororities|fraternity]] established for African Americans.
 
===Global work===
Powell was the subject of the 2002 cable television film KEEP THE FAITH, BABY starring Harry Lennix as Powell and Vanessa L. Williams as his second wife, jazz pianist Hazel Scott. The film debuted on February 17, 2002 on premium cable network Showtime and was a production of Showtime and Paramount Network Television. It garnered three NAACP Image Award nominations for Outstanding Television Movie, Outstanding Television Actor in a TV Movie (Lennix) and Outstanding Television Actress in a TV Movie (Williams). It won two NAMIC Vision Awards (cable executives) for Best Drama and Best Actor (Lennix). Williams also earned a Best Actress in a TV Movie Golden Satellite Award from the International Press Association. The film was the brainchild of the Hon. Adam Clayton Powell, IV and his campaign manager Geoffrey L. Garfield, who lead the team as Producer. Powell, IV and his half brother Adam, III, were credited as Co-Producers of the biopic.
[[File:Adam Clayton Powell with Lyndon Johnson.jpg|thumb|right|Powell with President [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] in the [[Oval Office]], 1965.]]
[[File:U.S. Congressman Adam C. Powell.jpg|thumb|Powell speaking at a Human Rights Symposium in 1970.]]
Powell also paid attention to the issues of developing nations in Africa and Asia, making trips overseas. He urged presidential policymakers to pay attention to nations seeking independence from colonial powers and support aid to them. During the [[Cold War]], many of them sought neutrality between the United States and the [[Soviet Union]]. He made speeches on the House Floor to celebrate the anniversaries of the independence of nations such as [[Ghana]], [[Indonesia]], and [[Sierra Leone]].<ref name="BAIC" />
 
In 1955, against the [[United States Department of State|State Department's]] advice, Powell attended the [[Bandung Conference|Asian–African Conference]] in Bandung, Indonesia, as an observer. He made a positive international impression in public addresses that balanced his concerns of his nation's race relations problems with a spirited defense of the United States as a whole against Communist criticisms. Powell returned to the United States to a warm bipartisan reception for his performance, and he was invited to meet with President Dwight D. Eisenhower.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
 
With this influence, Powell suggested to the State Department that the current manner of competing with the Soviet Union in the realm of fine arts such as international symphony orchestra and ballet company tours was ineffective. Instead, he advised that the United States should focus on the popular arts, such as sponsoring international tours of leading [[jazz]] musicians, which could draw attention to an indigenous American art form and featured musicians who often performed in mixed race bands. The State Department approved the idea. The first such tour with [[Dizzy Gillespie]] proved to be an outstanding success abroad and prompted similarly popular tours featuring other musicians for many years.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kaplan |first=Fred |title=1959: The Year that Changed Everything |year=2009 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |pages=127–128}}</ref>
 
===Committee chairmanship and legislation===
In 1961, after 15 years in Congress, Powell advanced to chairman of the powerful [[United States House Committee on Education and Labor]]. In this position, he presided over federal social programs for [[minimum wage]] and [[Medicaid]] (established later under Johnson); he expanded the minimum wage to include retail workers; and worked for equal pay for women; he supported education and training for the deaf, nursing education, and vocational training; he led legislation for standards for wages and work hours; as well as for aid for elementary and secondary education, and school libraries.<ref name="BAIC" /> Powell's committee proved extremely effective in enacting major parts of [[John F. Kennedy|President Kennedy's]] "[[New Frontier]]" and [[Lyndon B. Johnson|President Johnson's]] "[[Great Society]]" social programs and the [[War on Poverty]]. It successfully reported to Congress "49 pieces of bedrock legislation", as President Johnson put it in a May 18, 1966, letter congratulating Powell on the fifth anniversary of his chairmanship.<ref>{{harvnb|Hamilton|1991|page=24}}</ref>
 
Powell was instrumental in passing legislation that made lynching a federal crime, as well as bills that desegregated public schools. He challenged the Southern practice of charging Blacks a poll tax to vote. Poll taxes for federal elections were prohibited by the 24th Amendment, passed in 1964.<ref>{{cite news |title=24th Amendment, Banning Poll Tax, Has Been Ratified |agency=United Press International |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1964/01/24/97163589.pdf |newspaper=The New York Times |date=January 24, 1964 |access-date=July 4, 2011}}</ref> Voter registration and electoral practices were not changed substantially in most of the South until after passage of the [[Voting Rights Act of 1965]], which provided federal oversight of voter registration and elections, and enforcement of the constitutional right to vote. In some areas where discrimination was severe, such as Mississippi, it took years for African Americans to register and vote in numbers related to their proportion in the population, but they have since maintained a high rate of registration and voting.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=V4__EYITWk4C&q=Effects+of+southern+black+disfranchisement+on+1912+presidential+election&pg=PA128 |title=The Two Reconstructions: The Struggle for Black Enfranchisement |first=Richard M. |last=Valelly |date=2009 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0226845272 |access-date=May 2, 2020 |via=Google Books}}</ref>
 
===Political controversy===
By the mid-1960s, Powell was increasingly being criticized for mismanaging his committee's budget, taking trips abroad at public expense, and missing meetings of his committee.<ref name="NYT Remembering" /> When under scrutiny by the press and other members of Congress for personal conduct—he had taken two young women at government expense with him on overseas travel—he responded:<blockquote>I wish to state very emphatically... that I will always do just what every other Congressman and committee chairman has done and is doing and will do."<ref name="Dunbar" /> </blockquote> Opponents led criticism in his District, where his refusal to pay a 1963 [[Defamation|slander]] judgment in the amount of $150,000, made him subject to arrest; he also spent increasing amounts of time in Florida.<ref name="NYT Remembering">[http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/28/remembering-adam-clayton-powell-jr Jonathan P. Hicks, "Remembering Adam Clayton Powell Jr."], ''The New York Times'', November 28, 2008, accessed February 3, 2016.</ref>
 
==== Select House Committee to investigate Representative Adam Clayton Powell ====
In January 1967, the [[United States House of Representatives Democratic Caucus|House Democratic Caucus]] stripped Powell of his committee chairmanship. A series of hearings on Powell's misconduct had been held by the 89th Congress in December 1966 that produced the evidence that the House Democratic Caucus cited in taking this action. A Select House Committee was established upon the House's reconvening for the 90th Congress to further investigate Powell's misconduct to determine if he should be allowed to take his seat. This committee was appointed by the Speaker of the House. Its chairman was [[Emanuel Celler]] of New York and its members were [[James C. Corman]], [[Claude Pepper]], [[John Conyers]], [[Andrew Jacobs Jr.]], [[Arch A. Moore Jr.]], [[Charles M. Teague]], [[Clark MacGregor]], and [[Vernon W. Thomson]]. This committee's inquiry centered on the following issues: "1. Mr. Powell's age, citizenship, and inhabitancy [sic]; 2. The status of legal proceedings to which Mr. Powell was a party in the State of New York and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico with particular reference to the instances in which he has been held in contempt of court; and 3. Matters of Mr. Powell's alleged official misconduct since January 3, 1961."<ref name="Report of Select Committee">{{Cite book |author=United States House of Representatives |url=https://ethics.house.gov/sites/ethics.house.gov/files/Rep.Powell.pdf |title=Report of Select Committee according to H. Res. 1, Ninetieth Congress First Session on H. Res. 1, Hearings February 8, 14, 16, 1967 |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |year=1967 |___location=Washington, D.C.}}</ref>
 
Hearings of the Select House Committee to investigate Rep. Adam Clayton Powell were held over three days in February 1967. Powell was in attendance only on the first day of these hearings, February 8. Neither he nor his legal counsel requested that the select committee summon any witnesses. According to the official Congressional report on these committee hearings, Powell and his counsel's official position was that "the Committee had no authority to consider the misconduct charges."<ref name="Report of Select Committee" />
 
The select committee found that Powell met residency requirements for Congressional representatives under the Constitution, but that Powell had asserted an unconstitutional immunity from earlier rulings against him in criminal cases tried in the New York State Supreme Court. The committee also found that Powell had committed numerous acts of financial misconduct. These included the appropriation of Congressional funds for his personal use, the use of funds meant for the House Education and Labor Committee to pay the salary of a housekeeper at his property on [[Bimini]] in [[The Bahamas]], purchasing airline tickets for himself, family, and friends from the funds of the House Education and Labor Committee, as well as making false reports on expenditures of foreign currency while heading of the House Education and Labor Committee.<ref name="Report of Select Committee" />
 
The members of the Select Committee had different opinions on the fate of Powell's seat. Pepper was strongly in favor of recommending that Powell not be seated at all, while Conyers, the only African American Representative on the Select Committee, felt that any punishment beyond severe censure was inappropriate. In fact, in the committee's official report, Conyers asserted that Powell's conduct during the two investigations of his conduct was not contrary to the dignity of the House of Representatives, as had been suggested by the investigation. Conyers also suggested that cases of misconduct brought before the House of Representatives never exceed censure. In the end, the Select House Committee to investigate Rep. Adam Clayton Powell recommended that Powell be seated but stripped of his seniority and forced to pay a fine of $40,000, citing article I, section 5, clause 2 of the Constitution, which gives each house of Congress the ability to punish members for improper conduct.<ref name="Report of Select Committee" />
 
The full House refused to seat him until the completion of the investigation. Powell urged his supporters to "keep the faith, baby," while the investigation was underway. On March 1, the House voted 307 to 116 to exclude him, despite the recommendation of the Select Committee. Powell said, "On this day, the day of March, in my opinion, is the end of the United States of America as the land of the free and the home of the brave."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.upi.com/Audio/Year_in_Review/Events-of-1967/Elections/12303074818188-11/ |title=Elections |work=UPI |access-date=February 4, 2016}}</ref>
 
Powell won the Special Election to fill the vacancy caused by his exclusion, receiving 86% of the vote.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://history.house.gov/People/Listing/P/POWELL,-Adam-Clayton,-Jr--(P000477)/|title=Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr. {{!}} US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives|website=history.house.gov|language=en|access-date=April 17, 2020}}</ref> But he did not take his seat, as he was filing a separate suit. He sued in ''[[Powell v. McCormack]]'' to retain his seat. In November 1968, Powell was re-elected. On January 3, 1969, he was seated as a member of the [[91st United States Congress|91st Congress]], but he was fined $25,000 and denied seniority.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Madden |first=Richard L. |title=Powell Seated, Fined $25,000 and Denied Seniority |newspaper=The New York Times |page=1 |date=January 4, 1969}}</ref> In June 1969, in ''[[Powell v. McCormack]]'', the [[Supreme Court of the United States]] ruled that the House had acted unconstitutionally when it excluded Powell, as he had been duly elected by his constituents.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-supreme-court/395/486.html |title=FindLaw's United States Supreme Court case and opinions. |website=Findlaw |access-date=May 2, 2020}}</ref>
 
Powell's increasing absenteeism was observed by constituents, which contributed, in June 1970, to his defeat in the Democratic primary for reelection to his seat by [[Charles Rangel|Charles B. Rangel]].<ref name=" NYT Remembering" /> Powell failed to garner enough signatures for inclusion on the November ballot as an Independent, and Rangel won that (and following) general elections.<ref name="NYT Remembering" /> In the fall of 1970, Powell moved to his retreat on [[Bimini]] in [[The Bahamas]], also resigning as minister at the Abyssinian Baptist Church.
 
==Marriage and family==
[[File:Yvette Diago Powell (Yvette Marjorie Flores), wife of U.S. Representative Adam Clayton Powell Jr., at a hearing in front of a House committee investigating charges against her husband, Washington, D.C portrait portrait (cropped).jpg|thumb|Yvette Diago Powell at a House committee hearing investigating charges against her husband in 1967]]
In 1933, Powell married [[Isabel Washington]] (1908–2007), an African American singer and nightclub entertainer. She was the sister of actress [[Fredi Washington]]. Powell adopted Washington's son, Preston, from her first marriage.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1994/06/30/obituaries/fredi-washington-90-actress-broke-ground-for-black-artists.html Sheila Rule, "Fredi Washington, 90, Actress; Broke Ground for Black Artists"], ''The New York Times'', accessed December 14, 2008.</ref>
 
After their divorce, in 1945, Powell married the jazz pianist and singer [[Hazel Scott]]. They had a son named [[Adam Clayton Powell III]]. In the early 21st century, Adam Clayton Powell III became Vice Provost for Globalization at the [[University of Southern California]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://uscnews.usc.edu/university/kenneth_mcgillivray_named_vice_provost.html |title=USC News |access-date=February 4, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120402014048/http://uscnews.usc.edu/university/kenneth_mcgillivray_named_vice_provost.html |archive-date=April 2, 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="Diago" />
 
Powell divorced again, and in 1960 married Yvette Flores Diago from [[Puerto Rico]]. They had a son, whom they named Adam Clayton Powell Diago, using the mother's surname as a second surname, according to Hispanic tradition.<ref name="Diago">Andy Newman. [https://archive.nytimes.com/query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage-9C03E1D71739F937A25757C0A9669D8B63.html "City Room; If Your Name Is Powell, Take a Number"]. ''The New York Times''. April 14, 2010. Retrieved July 26, 2014.</ref> In 1980, this son changed his name to [[Adam Clayton Powell IV]], dropping "Diago" from his name when he moved to the mainland United States from Puerto Rico to attend [[Howard University]].<ref group=lower-alpha name=IV>Adam Clayton Powell IV's half-nephew, who is eight years his junior, is also named Adam Clayton Powell IV and is a materials scientist.</ref><ref name="Diago" /> Adam Clayton Powell IV, also known as A. C. Powell IV, was elected to the New York City Council in 1991 in a special election; he served for two terms.<ref>{{cite news|last=Mckinley |first=James C. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/10/28/nyregion/in-harlem-race-big-name-vs-political-clan.html |title=In Harlem Race, Big Name vs. Political Clan |work=The New York Times |date=October 28, 1991 |access-date=January 17, 2010}}</ref> He also was elected as a New York state Assemblyman (D-East Harlem) for three terms and had a son named Adam Clayton Powell V.<ref name="Diago" /> In 1994, and again in 2010, Adam Clayton Powell IV unsuccessfully challenged incumbent Rep. Charles B. Rangel for the Democratic nomination in his father's former congressional district.<ref name="Diago" />
 
==Family scandal==
In 1967, a U.S. Congressional committee subpoenaed Yvette Diago, the former third wife of Powell Jr. and the mother of Adam Clayton Powell IV. They were investigating potential "theft of state funds" related to her having been on Powell Jr.'s payroll but not doing any work.<ref name="Time Investigations">{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,899407,00.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080220083611/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,899407,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=February 20, 2008 |magazine=Time |title=Investigations: Adam & Yvette |date=February 24, 1967 |access-date=April 23, 2010}}</ref><ref name="Stock footage clip">[https://www.efootage.com/videos/42441/yvette-diago-powell-1967 Video: Reporter asks Adam Clayton Powell's wife Yvette Diago if she'll answer questions], February 15, 1967.</ref> Yvette Diago admitted to the committee that she had been on the Congressional payroll of her former husband, Adam Clayton Powell Jr., from 1961 until 1967, although she had moved back to Puerto Rico in 1961.<ref name="Stock footage clip" /><ref name="Recordings of LBJ">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ha3uOUiEoYUC&q=yvette+diago+payroll&pg=PA366 |title=The Presidential Recordings of Lyndon B Johnson |author1=Max Holland |author2=Robert David Johnson |author3=David Shreve |author4=Kent B. Germany |year=2007 |publisher=WW Norton $ Co. Ltd. |access-date=August 10, 2011|isbn=978-0393062861 }}</ref> As reported by ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine, Yvette Diago had continued living in Puerto Rico and "performed no work at all," yet was kept on the payroll. Her salary was increased to $20,578 and she was paid until January 1967, when she was exposed and fired.<ref name="Time Investigations" /><ref name="Stock footage clip" /><ref name="Recordings of LBJ" /><ref>Wil Haygood, ''King of the Cats: The Life and Times of Adam Clayton Powell Jr.'' (1993) pp. 251–252, 286–289, 327–333, 364–365.</ref>
 
==Death==
In April 1972, Powell became gravely ill and was flown to a Miami hospital from his home in [[Bimini]]. He died there on April 4, 1972, at the age of 63, from [[acute prostatitis]], according to contemporary newspaper accounts. After his funeral at the [[Abyssinian Baptist Church]] in Harlem, his son, Adam III, poured his ashes from a plane over the waters of Bimini.<ref name="Congress bio">{{Cite web|url=http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=p000477 |title=Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr. – Biographical Information |website=bioguide.congress.gov |publisher=United States Congress |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170126213439/http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=p000477 |archive-date=January 26, 2017 |url-status=live |access-date=January 26, 2017 }}</ref>
 
==Legacy==
[[File:Adam-clayton-powell-office.jpg|thumb|right|[[Adam Clayton Powell Jr. State Office Building]] at [[Seventh Avenue (Manhattan)|Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard]] and [[125th Street (Manhattan)|125th Street]] in Harlem.]]
[[Seventh Avenue (Manhattan)|Seventh Avenue]] north of [[Central Park]] through Harlem has been renamed as Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://untappedcities.com/2015/11/30/history-of-nyc-streets-adam-clayton-powell-jr-boulevard-seventh-avenue-in-harlem/ |title=History of NYC Streets: Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard (Seventh Avenue in Harlem) |last=Reuben |first=Jeff |date=November 30, 2015 |website=Untapped Cities |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170126213717/http://untappedcities.com/2015/11/30/history-of-nyc-streets-adam-clayton-powell-jr-boulevard-seventh-avenue-in-harlem/ |archive-date=January 26, 2017 |url-status=live |access-date=January 26, 2017 }}</ref> One of the landmarks along this street is the [[Adam Clayton Powell Jr. State Office Building]],<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Garland |first=Phyl |year=1990 |title=I Remember Adam |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oswDAAAAMBAJ&q=i+remember+adam+ebony&pg=PA56 |journal=Ebony |pages=56}}</ref> named for Powell in 1983.<ref>{{cite news |first1=Laurie |last1=Johnston |first2=Susan Heller |last2=Anderson |title=Name Change to Honor A Harlem Hero |date=July 20, 1983 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1983/07/20/nyregion/new-york-day-by-day-name-change-to-honor-a-harlem-hero.html |work=The New York Times |page=B3 |access-date=June 21, 2009 }}</ref>
 
In addition, two New York City schools were named after him, [[List of public elementary schools in New York City#Empowerment Schools: citywide|PS 153]], at 1750 Amsterdam Ave., and a middle school, IS 172 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. School of Social Justice, at 509 W. 129th St. It closed in 2009. In 2011, the new Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Paideia Academy opened in [[Chicago]]'s [[South Shore, Chicago|South Shore neighborhood]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.pbcchicago.com/content/projects/project_detail.asp?pID=CPS-34 |title=Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Paideia Academy |publisher=Public Building Commission of Chicago |access-date=January 26, 2017}}</ref>
 
Investigations into Powell's misconduct have been cited as an impetus for a permanent ethics committee in the House of Representatives as well as a permanent code of conduct for House Members and their staff.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Straus |first=Jacob |title=House Committee on Ethics: A Brief History of Its Evolution and Jurisdiction |publisher=Congressional Research Service |year=2011}}</ref>
 
==Representation in other media==
Powell was the subject of the 2002 cable television film ''Keep the Faith, Baby'', starring [[Harry Lennix]] as Powell and [[Vanessa Williams]] as his second wife, jazz pianist [[Hazel Scott]].<ref name="NYT review TV Keep The Faith" /> The film debuted on February 17, 2002, on premium cable network [[Showtime (TV network)|Showtime]].<ref name="NYT review TV Keep The Faith">{{Cite news |author=Neil Genzlinger |date=February 15, 2002 |title=TV Weekend; A Charismatic Congressman and the Trail He Blazed|newspaper=The New York Times |page=E37 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/15/movies/tv-weekend-a-charismatic-congressman-and-the-trail-he-blazed.html |access-date=January 28, 2021}}</ref> It garnered three [[NAACP]] Image Award nominations for Outstanding Television Movie, Outstanding Actor in a Television Movie (Lennix), and Outstanding Actress in a TV Movie (Williams). It won two National Association of Minorities in Cable (NAMIC) Vision Awards for Best Drama and Best Actor in a Television Film (Lennix), the International Press Association's Best Actress in a Television Film Award (Williams), and Reel.com's Best Actor in a Television Film (Lennix).<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0251568/awards |title=Keep the Faith, Baby |website=IMDb |access-date=May 2, 2020}}</ref> The film's producers were Geoffrey L. Garfield, Powell IV's long-time campaign manager; Monty Ross, a confidant of [[Spike Lee]]; son Adam Clayton Powell III; and Hollywood veteran Harry J. Ufland. The film was written by Art Washington and directed by [[Doug McHenry]].<ref name="NYT review TV Keep The Faith" />
 
Powell is portrayed by [[Giancarlo Esposito]] in the 2019 [[Epix]] cable series ''[[Godfather of Harlem]]''.<ref>{{cite web|last=Andreeva|first=Nellie|title='Godfather Of Harlem': Giancarlo Esposito To Star In Epix Drama Series|url=https://deadline.com/2018/10/giancarlo-esposito-cast-godfather-of-harlem-epix-series-1202474984/|work=[[Deadline Hollywood]]|date=October 2, 2018|access-date=October 2, 2018|archive-date=October 3, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181003015355/https://deadline.com/2018/10/giancarlo-esposito-cast-godfather-of-harlem-epix-series-1202474984/|url-status=live}}</ref>
 
Powell is featured by Paul Deo in his 2017 Harlem mural ''Planet Harlem''.
 
[[Jeffrey Wright]] portrayed Powell in the 2023 [[Netflix]] film ''[[Rustin (film)|Rustin]]''.<ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://time.com/6337107/bayard-rustin-civil-rights-organizing-blueprint-netflix/ |title=How Netflix's Rustin Creates a New Blueprint for Films About the Civil Rights Era |magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |date=November 17, 2023 |access-date=November 17, 2023}}</ref> As the story unfolds, the Powell character slowly comes around to a more positive view of the controversial [[Bayard Rustin]] character, who is portrayed as a Powell foe as the [[March on Washington]] is created.
 
Powell is referenced in the [[Vic Chesnutt]] song '' Woodrow Wilson ''<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://genius.com/Vic-chesnutt-woodrow-wilson-lyrics |title=Woodrow Wilson Vic Chessnut |website=Genius |access-date=Nov 30, 2024}}</ref>
 
==Works==
* (1945) ''Marching Blacks, An Interpretive History of the Rise of the Black Common Man''
* (1962) ''The New Image in Education: A Prospectus for the Future by the Chairman of the Committee on Education and Labor''
* (1967) ''Keep the Faith, Baby!''
* (1971) ''Adam by Adam: The Autobiography of Adam Clayton Powell Jr.''
 
==See also==
{{Portal|Biography}}
*[[African Americans in the United States Congress]]
* ''[[Adam Clayton Powell (film)|Adam Clayton Powell]]'', a 1989 documentary film
*[[American Civil Rights Movement (1896-1954)]]
* [[J. Raymond Jones]]
*[[African-American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968)]]
* [[TimelineList of the African-American CivilUnited RightsStates Movementrepresentatives]]
* [[List of federal political scandals in the United States]]
* [[List of United States representatives expelled, censured, or reprimanded]]
* [[Timeline of the civil rights movement]]
* [[Unseated members of the United States Congress]]
 
==Notes==
{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}
 
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}
*{{cite book | title = Adam by Adam: The Autobiography of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr | author = Adam Clayton Powell, Jr | publisher = Kensington Publishing | year = 2002 | id = ISBN 0-7582-0195-8 }}
 
*{{cite book | title = Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.: The Political Biography of an American Dilemma | author = Charles V. Hamilton | publisher = Cooper Square Publishers | year = 2002 | id = ISBN 0-8154-1184-7 }}
==Further reading==
*{{cite book | title = Congressional Committee Chairmen: Three Who Made an Evolution | author = Andrée E. Reeves | publisher = University Press of Kentucky | year = 2990 | id = ISBN 0-8131-1816-6 }}
* Capeci, Dominic J. "From Different Liberal Perspectives: Fiorello H. La Guardia, Adam Clayton Powell Jr., and Civil Rights in New York City, 1941–1943." ''Journal of Negro History'' (1977): 160–173. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2717176 in JSTOR]
* Hamilton, Charles V. ''Adam Clayton Powell Jr.: The Political Biography of an American Dilemma'' (Atheneum, 1991).
* Haygood, Wil. ''King of the Cats: The Life and Times of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.'' (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1993)
* Paris, Peter J. ''Black Leaders in Conflict: Joseph H. Jackson, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Adam Clayton Powell Jr.'' (Pilgrim Press, 1978)
* [[David Paterson|Paterson, David]] ''[[Black, Blind, & In Charge: A Story of Visionary Leadership and Overcoming Adversity]]''. New York, New York, 2020
* John C. Walker, The Harlem Fox: [[J. Raymond Jones]] at Tammany 1920:1970, New York: State University New York Press, 1989.
 
===Primary sources===
* Powell Jr., Adam Clayton. ''Adam by Adam: The Autobiography of Adam Clayton Powell Jr'' (Kensington Books, 2002)
 
==External links==
{{Biographical Directory of Congress|P000477}}
*[http://www.adamclaytonpowell.com/ Adam Clayton Powell website], maintained to promote the movie biopic, ''Keep the Faith, Baby''.
* [http://history.house.gov/People/Listing/P/POWELL,-Adam-Clayton,-Jr--%28P000477%29/ United States House of Representatives biography of Powell]
*[http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&vol=395&invol=486 Supreme Court Decision in Powell v. McCormack]
* [https://www.c-span.org/video/?23633-1/adam-clayton-powell-jr-political-dilemma ''Booknotes'' interview with Charles Hamilton on ''Adam Clayton Powell Jr.: The Political Biography of an American Dilemma'', January 5, 1992.]
* [http://purl.lib.ua.edu/82837 Speech by Adam Clayton Powell given on April 10, 1969.] Audio recording, from [http://purl.lib.ua.edu/18388 The University of Alabama's Emphasis Symposium on Contemporary Issues]
* [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+Racial+Identity+of+Adam+Clayton+Powell+Jr.%3A+A+Case+Study+in...-a0221086340 Rushing, Lawrence, "The Racial Identity of Adam Clayton Powell Jr: A Case Study in Racial Ambivalence and Redefinition"], ''Afro-Americans in New York Life and History'', January 1, 2010
* The story of the Powell family is retold in the 1949 radio drama "[https://archive.org/details/DestinationFreedom/DF_49-10-09_ep065-Father_to_Son.mp3 Father to Son]", a presentation from ''[[Destination Freedom]]'', written by [[Richard Durham]]
 
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[[Category{{DEFAULTSORT:1908 births|Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.]]}}
[[Category:19721908 deaths|Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.births]]
[[Category:1972 deaths]]
[[Category:African Americans in the United States Congress|Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.]]
[[Category:African-American activists]]
[[Category:Alpha Phi Alpha brothers|Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.]]
[[Category:20th-century Baptists]]
[[Category:American political scandals|Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.]]
[[Category:Baptists|Powell,Activists Adamfrom Clayton, Jr.Connecticut]]
[[Category:ColgateActivists Universityfrom alumni|Powell,New AdamYork Clayton, Jr.(state)]]
[[Category:ColumbiaAfrican-American UniversityNew alumni|Powell,York AdamCity Clayton,Council Jr.members]]
[[Category:MembersAfrican-American members of the United States House of Representatives from New York|Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.]]
[[Category:NewAfrican-American Yorkpeople Cityin CouncilNew members|Powell, AdamYork Clayton,(state) Jr.politics]]
[[Category:PeopleAmerican fromemigrants Newto Haven,the Connecticut|Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.Bahamas]]
[[Category:African American politicians|Powell,people Adamof Clayton,German Jr.descent]]
[[Category:Harlem,Baptists from New York|Powell, Adam(state)]]
[[Category:Baptist clergy politicians]]
[[Category:Colgate University alumni]]
[[Category:Columbia University alumni]]
[[Category:Democratic Party members of the United States House of Representatives from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Doctors of Divinity]]
[[Category:New York City Council members]]
[[Category:National Baptist Convention, USA ministers]]
[[Category:People from Bimini]]
[[Category:People from Harlem]]
[[Category:Politicians from New Haven, Connecticut]]
[[Category:Powell family (New York)]]
[[Category:Townsend Harris High School alumni]]
[[Category:20th-century New York (state) politicians]]
[[Category:Alpha Phi Alpha members]]
[[Category:20th-century members of the United States House of Representatives]]
[[Category:20th-century African-American politicians]]