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Frederic
Morrow with President Eisenhower. Eisenhower Library
E. Frederic
Morrow was the first African American to serve in an executive
position on a presidents staff at the White House.
Morrow was a ministers son who had graduated from
Bowdoin College and was employed by the National Urban
League and the NAACP before entering Army service during
World War II. After the war, he obtained a law degree
from Rutgers University and worked for the public affairs
division at CBS. He was an adviser on business affairs
in the Commerce Department before joining Eisenhowers
staff as Administrative Officer for Special Projects from
1955 to 1961. As the sole African American on a staff
dealing with racial tensions related to integration, Morrow
faced difficult personal and professional struggles at
the White House. The Supreme Courts landmark Brown
v. the Board of Education ruling, the Montgomery bus
boycott, and the Little Rock crisis were the backdrop
for Morrows White House years. On a staff with a
civil-rights policy that was at best cautious, Morrow
was often frustrated and angered. He lived at a time when
qualified African Americans were excluded from high-level
political positions. Morrow as a black "first"
found relations within the presidents "official
family" to be "correct in conduct, but cold."
He published his autobiography, Black Man in the White
House, in 1963 leaving a valuable account of his experience
as a black man working in the presidents inner circle,
including his disappointment with the indecision of Eisenhowers
civil rights policy.
E. Frederic Morrow, Black Man
in the White House, Coward-McCann, 1963.
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