McKissick, Floyd B. (Floyd Bixler), 1922-1991
- Authoritative Name:
- McKissick, Floyd B. (Floyd Bixler), 1922-1991
- Biography:
- "Floyd B. McKissick (1922-1991), the son of Ernest Boyce and Magnolia Thompson McKissick, was born in Asheville, N.C., on 9 March 1922. He earned his undergraduate and law degrees from North Carolina Central University. During the course of his educational pursuits, he also became the first Black man to attend the Law School at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. McKissick was a noted attorney, businessman and civil rights champion. Through his professional career in North Carolina and elsewhere, he had affiliations with some of America's most prominent and influential personalities. He served as national chairman of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and later became national director of that organization. McKissick also held an advisory role with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and he was the founder and president of McKissick Enterprises. He was a much-sought-after speaker, as well as the author of Three-Fifths of a Man (1969) and numerous other writings. During the early 1970s, McKissick founded Soul City near Warrenton, N.C. The new township was designed to promote economic empowerment of African Americans and was often referred to as the "first Freestanding Community in modern history." -- Inventory of the Floyd B. McKissick Papers, 1940s-1980s, Manuscripts Department, Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and African American Resources Collection, North Carolina Central University
- Associated Subjects:
- McKissick, Floyd B. (Floyd Bixler), 1922-1991
- Archival Collections And Reference Resources:
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82 items in 8 collections (expand all)
- Educator Resources:
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1 items in 1 collections (expand all)