- Advertisement -spot_img

David Dinkins, New York City’s First Black Mayor, Dead At 93

- Advertisement -spot_img

Must read

NEW York City’s first Black mayor, David Dinkins, has died at the age of 93. Police responded to Dinkins’ home Monday evening, just after 9 p.m. after a 911 call came in.

He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Dinkins was the 106th mayor of the city and the first, and so far, only Black person to hold the office.


Dinkins went from the New York State Assembly to becoming the Manhattan Borough President.

The pinnacle of his career was becoming mayor of New York City, making history in the process.

The Democrat ran against Republican Rudy Giuliani in 1989 and defeated him. They were matched against each other again in 1993 – that time, Giuliani won.

Giuliani tweeted his condolences to Dinkins’ family.
Dinkins would lead the nation’s largest city through some of its toughest times economically, politically and socially in the early 1990s.

As an historic figure himself, it was his job to welcome the history making Nelson Mandela to New York City soon after Mandela’s release from years in prison after fighting South African apartheid.

Dinkins admitted several times over the years that goal of fostering racial harmony in New York fell short, but in his memoir, he wrote that he believed it was racism that cost him the election to Giuliani in 1993.

One of Dinkins’ great accomplishments was expanding the U.S. Tennis Association in Queens and keeping the U.S. Open in New York for decades to come.

History-making probably wasn’t on Dinkins radar when he grew up in both Trenton, New Jersey, and in Harlem.

His dad, a barber and real estate agent and his mom, a domestic worker separated when Dinkins was just six.

He tried to enlist in the Marine Corps as World War II was ending, but was told the corps had already filled its racial quote of blacks.

He searched the northeast until he found a recruiting station that had not.


For his service, he later earned a Congressional gold medal.

He met his wife Joyce at Howard University and he always referred to her as his bride.

The passing of the former mayor came less than two months after the death of his wife Joyce Dinkins, who died in October.

(SOURCE: ABC7NEWS)

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

CATHSSETTA

spot_img

AVBOB STEP 12

spot_img

Inside Education E-Edition

spot_img

Inside Metros G20 COJ Edition

spot_img

JOZI MY JOZI

spot_img

QCTO

spot_img

Latest article